Practiced in Bisbee in 1913 and in Tucson in the 1920s. Johnson, Scott. Something more: osteopathic medicine in southern Arizona. Tucson, Ariz. : Osteopathic Press, 1992, pages 103, 107.
Denison or Dennison? See History of Arizona medicine; collections of Orville Harry Brown, M.D. [AHSL Special Collections WZ 70 AA7 H673]: “Dennison” See Quebbeman: Whedon, Daniel Dennison. Graduate, Long Island College, 1905. Registered July 16, 1906. Residence: Tucson. (p. 378)
J Am Med Assoc, Mar 1907; XLVIII: 1036: Dr. D. D. Whedon, Tucson, has been appointed physician of Pima County. D. D. Whedon, San Diego, Cal.. Trifacial Neuralgia. Southern California Practitioner, Los Angeles. February, 1910, p. 164ff.
Hired to handle the public relations of AMA. Mentioned in the 1949-03-07-02. Wikipedia: “Clem Whitaker and Leone Baxter were a husband-and-wife team that started the first true political consulting firm in the United States of America, named Campaigns, Inc.”
Quebbeman, Frances E. Medicine in territorial Arizona. Phoenix : Arizona Historical Foundation, 1966, page 378: (Also spelled Witte.) Professional card, November 16, 1878, as Dr. Witte, in Tucson; listed as White in previous announcements. Last card in 1879.
Arizona State Schools for the Deaf and the Blind began in 1912 when Arizona became the 48th state in the USA. The Arizona State Constitution established ASDB as the program for educating deaf and blind children and youth in Arizona, and services were initially provided only at the Tucson Campus. Henry White, who founded the Utah School for the Deaf, was the first principal of ASDB. When the school first began it was part of the University of Arizona and was located on the university campus. ASDB moved to the West Speedway campus in 1922 and was separated from the university in 1929.
N S Higgins; John B White. Manuscripts relating to the Apache and "Tontoe" (Yavapai). Washington, D.C. : The Bureau, 1940. Corp Author(s): Smithsonian Institution. Bureau of American Ethnology. 1 Microfilm reel ; 35 mm. Named Person: White, John B. Manuscripts relating to the Apache and "Tontoe" (Yavapai) Responsibility: by John B. White, physican at the San Carlos Reservation, Arizona Territory, 1873-1875. Accession No: OCLC: 55500807
1878-1945. Mentioned in the 11/12/1941 Minutes of the Pima County Medical Society, 1904-1954: “A letter from Dr. T. R. White of Kingman, Arizona, in regard to openings for doctors was read and filed.” Arizona Medical Board record: Toler R. White MD; license number: 416; license date: 4/26/1910; medical school: Memphis Hospital Medical College, Memphis, Tennessee; graduation date: 04/26/1901. See “White, Toler Rector.doc” for additional details. See History of Arizona medicine; collections of Orville Harry Brown, M.D. [AHSL Special Collections WZ 70 AA7 H673].
Beginning about March 14, 1883 a regularly occurring ad for the Grand Central Hotel began appearing in the Arizona Daily Star. Here’s text from the May 18, 1884 ad: “Grand Central Hotel. Dr. W.J. White, Proprietor, on the European Plan. First Class Restaurant Connected with the Hotel. $1.50-$3 per day. Most centrally located hotel in the city … The only hotel in the city with telephone connection with Fort Lowell, free to all officers of the U.S. Army.”