Mentioned in the 11/11/1947 Minutes of the Pima County Medical Society, 1904-1954: “Dr. Harry Thompson introduced our first guest speaker, Dr. Arthur Kendall, who spoke on ‘Epidemiology of Poliomyelitis.’"
It appears that Dr. Kendell either retired to Oracle, Arizona (or perhaps just wintered in Oracle).
Kendall, Arthur Isaac, PhD, ScD, DrPH; Oracle, Arizona. Contagiousness of Poliomyelitis: Studies in Bacterial Metabolism: CXXI. Southern Medical Journal, 38(9): Sep 1945: 593-595.
J Am Med Assoc, Oct 1942; 120: 461: Illinois. Chicago. Dr. Kendall Retires. -- Arthur I. Kendall, Ph.D., Dr.P.H., research professor of bacteriology at Northwestern University Medical School, retired, effective September 1. Dr. Kendall is 65 years of age. A native of Somerville, Mass., he received the Ph.D. at Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, in 1904 and the Dr.P.H. at Harvard University, Boston, in 1911. Early in his career Dr. Kendall was acting chief of the board of health laboratory of the Isthmian Canal Commission, Panama, fellow of the Rockefeller Institute and instructor in the department of preventive medicine and hygiene at Harvard Medical School. He was professor of bacteriology and director of the Patten Research Foundation at Northwestern from 1912 to 1924 and dean of the medical school from 1916 to 1924. He went to Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, 1924 as professor of bacteriology and public health but returned to Northwestern in 1928 as research professor of bacteriology. In 1918 he was chairman of the yellow fever commission of the International Health Board of the Rockefeller Foundation.
It appears that Dr. Kendell either retired to Oracle, Arizona (or perhaps just wintered in Oracle).
Kendall, Arthur Isaac, PhD, ScD, DrPH; Oracle, Arizona. Contagiousness of Poliomyelitis: Studies in Bacterial Metabolism: CXXI. Southern Medical Journal, 38(9): Sep 1945: 593-595.
J Am Med Assoc, Oct 1942; 120: 461: Illinois. Chicago. Dr. Kendall Retires. -- Arthur I. Kendall, Ph.D., Dr.P.H., research professor of bacteriology at Northwestern University Medical School, retired, effective September 1. Dr. Kendall is 65 years of age. A native of Somerville, Mass., he received the Ph.D. at Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, in 1904 and the Dr.P.H. at Harvard University, Boston, in 1911. Early in his career Dr. Kendall was acting chief of the board of health laboratory of the Isthmian Canal Commission, Panama, fellow of the Rockefeller Institute and instructor in the department of preventive medicine and hygiene at Harvard Medical School. He was professor of bacteriology and director of the Patten Research Foundation at Northwestern from 1912 to 1924 and dean of the medical school from 1916 to 1924. He went to Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, 1924 as professor of bacteriology and public health but returned to Northwestern in 1928 as research professor of bacteriology. In 1918 he was chairman of the yellow fever commission of the International Health Board of the Rockefeller Foundation.
Master pnID
AMH-PN1924
Src2 PCMSMin
PCMS-Min
PCMS pnID
pn0522
Residence(s)
Chicago IL
Oracle