Mentioned in the 1952-01-10-06 Minutes of the Pima County Medical Society, 1904-1954: “A letter from the Sunday Evening Forum asking an announcement of Dr. Douglas M. Kelley's lecture ‘Fact and Fable in Psychiatry’ to be given on Sunday, February 3rd, 8:15 P.M., was read by the Secretary.”
Also mentioned in the 1953-03-05-06 minutes: “Dr. Lindsay E. Beaton, Representative to the Pima County Association for Mental Health, made the following report: ‘We have a letter, sent to Dr. Manning from the Pima County Association for Mental Health, stating that this Association has worked out a plan for obtaining psychiatric treatment facilities for children in Tucson, and that Dr. Douglas Kelley approved this plan, and that it was approved by the Board of Directors of the Mental Health Association and by several physicians...’"
Appears as “Kelly” in the 1953-03-05-07 minutes.
Probably the same person:
J Am Med Assoc, Feb 1958; 166: 955: Kelley, Douglas McGlashan; Berkeley, Calif.; born in Truckee, Aug. 11, 1912; University of California School of Medicine, San Francisco, 1937; professor of criminology at his alma mater; formerly associate professor of neuropsychiatry at the Bowman Gray School of Medicine of Wake Forest College in Winston-Salem, N. C, and director of the Graylyn Hospital; specialist certified by the American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology; fellow of the American Psychiatric Association; member, American Orthopsychiatric Association, California Academy of Science, American Society of Biological Psychiatry, American Anthropological Association, International Association of Chiefs of Police, Alpha Kappa Kappa, and Lambda Alpha Epsilon; served as president of the American Association for the Advancement of Criminology; during World War II a chief consultant in psychology to the U. S. Army in the European Theater, serving as chief psychiatrist of the internal security guard in charge of the Nuernberg defendants; consultant to the law enforcement advisory committee to the Governor of the state of California on sex crimes; committee member on the legal aspects of psychiatry for the American Psychiatric Association; consultant, Atomic Energy Commission on security problems; consultant, State Department of Corrections, Alameda County sheriff's office, city of Berkeley Fireman's Board, city of Berkeley Policeman's Board, Police Board of Fresno and Oakland, and the El Cerrito Police Department; civilian consultant, Travis Air Force Base and consultant, attorney general, state of California; civilian consultant in psychology, Letterman Army Hospital, Presidio, San Francisco; consultant in psychiatry at the Cowell Memorial Hospital and honorary staff member at Hefrick Memorial Hospital; author of "22 Cells in Nuremberg: A Psychiatrist Examines the Nazi Criminals"; died Jan. 1, aged 45.
Also mentioned in the 1953-03-05-06 minutes: “Dr. Lindsay E. Beaton, Representative to the Pima County Association for Mental Health, made the following report: ‘We have a letter, sent to Dr. Manning from the Pima County Association for Mental Health, stating that this Association has worked out a plan for obtaining psychiatric treatment facilities for children in Tucson, and that Dr. Douglas Kelley approved this plan, and that it was approved by the Board of Directors of the Mental Health Association and by several physicians...’"
Appears as “Kelly” in the 1953-03-05-07 minutes.
Probably the same person:
J Am Med Assoc, Feb 1958; 166: 955: Kelley, Douglas McGlashan; Berkeley, Calif.; born in Truckee, Aug. 11, 1912; University of California School of Medicine, San Francisco, 1937; professor of criminology at his alma mater; formerly associate professor of neuropsychiatry at the Bowman Gray School of Medicine of Wake Forest College in Winston-Salem, N. C, and director of the Graylyn Hospital; specialist certified by the American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology; fellow of the American Psychiatric Association; member, American Orthopsychiatric Association, California Academy of Science, American Society of Biological Psychiatry, American Anthropological Association, International Association of Chiefs of Police, Alpha Kappa Kappa, and Lambda Alpha Epsilon; served as president of the American Association for the Advancement of Criminology; during World War II a chief consultant in psychology to the U. S. Army in the European Theater, serving as chief psychiatrist of the internal security guard in charge of the Nuernberg defendants; consultant to the law enforcement advisory committee to the Governor of the state of California on sex crimes; committee member on the legal aspects of psychiatry for the American Psychiatric Association; consultant, Atomic Energy Commission on security problems; consultant, State Department of Corrections, Alameda County sheriff's office, city of Berkeley Fireman's Board, city of Berkeley Policeman's Board, Police Board of Fresno and Oakland, and the El Cerrito Police Department; civilian consultant, Travis Air Force Base and consultant, attorney general, state of California; civilian consultant in psychology, Letterman Army Hospital, Presidio, San Francisco; consultant in psychiatry at the Cowell Memorial Hospital and honorary staff member at Hefrick Memorial Hospital; author of "22 Cells in Nuremberg: A Psychiatrist Examines the Nazi Criminals"; died Jan. 1, aged 45.
Master pnID
AMH-PN1911
Src2 PCMSMin
PCMS-Min
PCMS pnID
pn0518
Residence(s)
Berkeley CA