Personal Names in Arizona Medical History

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Margolis, Frederick J.

Pediatrician. Served in the US Public Health Service directing health care on a Navajo Indian reservation (Ft. Defiance, AZ) in the 1950s.
See also:
"Margolis was a doctor who made a difference." Kalamazoo Gazette, 12 February 1991.
OBITUARY: MARGOLIS, Dr. Fredrick J, Pediatrician, Community Activist, Educator, Researcher, Inventor. “ Kalamazoo Gazette, 10 February 1991.
Mah, Linda (2/10/91). "Dr. Margolis, a gentle giant among children, dies at 75." Kalamazoo Gazette.

Marks, A. D.

See History of Arizona medicine; collections of Orville Harry Brown, M.D. [AHSL Special Collections WZ 70 AA7 H673].
Quebbeman, Frances E. Medicine in territorial Arizona. Phoenix : Arizona Historical Foundation, 1966, page 357.

Marlowe, William Henry

1915-1989.
Phillips, Melvin W. Mile hi docs. Prescott, AZ : [M & J Pub. Co.], 1996, pages 260-264.

JAMA, Dec 1989; 262: 3216: MARLOWE, William Henry, 73; Prescott, Ariz; Northwestern University Medical School, 1942; certified by the American Board of Surgery; died March 25,1989.

Marshall, M. Y.

Mentioned in the 4/12/1938 Minutes of the Pima County Medical Society, 1904-1954.
[Compare the Marshall mentioned in the 11/12/1935 minutes.]

J Am Med Assoc, Jul 1919; 73: 41: HONORABLE DISCHARGES, MEDICAL CORPS, U. S. ARMY. ... CALIFORNIA. Bakersfield -- Marshall, M. Y. (C.) [=captain] ...

Martin, (Dr.)

Minutes of the Pima County Medical Society, 1904-1954, page 122 (before the 1/11/1916 minutes)
Some possible candidates:
*Martin, George S. MD
Arizona Medical Board record: George S. Martin MD; license date: 10/24/1913 (q.v.)
*Martin, G.S. (Major) MD of Safford (see Kennedy, p. 19)
*Martin, George W. DO
*Martin, George (pharmacist, “referred to as a doctor”) [highly unlikely]

Martin, Ancil E.

Ear, eye, nose and throat specialist. Arrived in Phoenix in 1892. ArMA president: 1894. Dates: 1861-1926. From ArMA website: Practicing in Arizona from 1892 to 1926, Dr. Martin had several firsts. He was the first ophthalmologist to locate and practice in Arizona. In 1898 Dr. Martin brought the first x-ray apparatus to Arizona. He was the first doctor to report cases of "rabbit septicemia," later to be called tularemia. Tularemia is an infectious disease of wild animals, such as rabbits and squirrels, that is occasionally transmitted to humans. Dr.

Martin, Andrew J.

1915 Pima County state senator. 2/26/1915 Minutes of the Pima County Medical Society, 1904-1954, p. 120.
ASLAPR Arizona Biographical Database: MARTIN Andrew J.; Legislative Vertical Files; 1915; Tucson.

Martin, George Scott

Arizona Medical Board record: George S. Martin MD; license number: 524; license issued: 10/24/1913; medical school: UNIV OF LOUISVILLE SCH OF MED; graduation date: 06/30/1909.
See History of Arizona medicine; collections of Orville Harry Brown, M.D. [AHSL Special Collections WZ 70 AA7 H673].

J Am Med Assoc. 1921;76(2):118-122: CALIFORNIA. New Hospital. Dr.George Scott Martin has opened a new hospital, known as the Riverside Hospital, at Susanville. The hospital has a capacity of fifty beds, and is designed to care for local industrial and private cases.

Martin, George W.

First DO to practice in southern Arizona. 1900 graduate of the Pacific School of Osteopathy in Los Angeles. Moved to Tucson on July 22, 1900. Practiced in 1900-1940s out of his homes in Tucson at 47 West Pennington, 104 North Stone Avenue and 518 East First Street. 1919 member of the Arizona State Board of Medical Examiners. Practiced until 1944.
Johnson, Scott. Something more: osteopathic medicine in southern Arizona. Tucson, Ariz. : Osteopathic Press, 1992, pages vii, 19-20, 24, 73, 106.
PCMS Centennial Program. 10-9-2004.
Nash, Steve. “Medical Progress in Arizona…”