Personal Names in Arizona Medical History

A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | Y | Z | _

Mauldin, John Dooley

See History of Arizona medicine; collections of Orville Harry Brown, M.D. [AHSL Special Collections WZ 70 AA7 H673].

J Am Med Assoc. 1933;101(2):154-155: John Dooley Mauldin, Gainesville, Ga. ; University of Georgia Medical Department, Augusta, 1901 ; member of the
Arizona State Medical Association ; served during the World War ; aged 57 ; died, June 6, in Atlanta, Ga., of cardiorenal vascular disease and arteriosclerosis.

Maury, Franklin Hervey

Ophthalmologist. Transferred from the District of Columbia Medical Society. Mentioned in the 5/10/1938 Minutes of the Pima County Medical Society, 1904-1954. Arizona Medical Board record: Franklin H. Maury MD; license date: 4/6/1938; medical school: TULANE UNIV SCH OF MED, New Orleans, Louisiana; graduation date: 06/08/1932.

J Am Med Assoc, Jan 1941; 116: 153: Dr. Franklin H. Maury, Tucson, was elected president of the Southwest Academy of Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat, which met at the same time, and Dr. Archie E. Cruthirds, Phoenix, Ariz., secretary.

Maxon, Cullon B.

“Maxon” or “Maxson”[?]
See History of Arizona medicine; collections of Orville Harry Brown, M.D. [AHSL Special Collections WZ 70 AA7 H673]: “Maxson”
Quebbeman, Frances E. Medicine in territorial Arizona. Phoenix : Arizona Historical Foundation, 1966, page 358: Cornell Medical College, 1904.

Maxwell, George R.

Signature on October 7, 1938 membership card (for Jerome E. Andes, q.v.) from the Monongalia County (West Virginia) Medical Society. Maxwell was the Society’s Secretary at the time. See 1926-00-32.

JAMA, Aug 1976; 236: 882: MAXWELL, George R., 77, Morgantown, WVa; University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, 1923; certified by the American Board of Internal Medicine; died Dec 29, of myocardial infarction.

George’s brother (most likely):

Maylan, Charles Emil

Dates: January 30, 1886 - April 1981.

Mentioned in the 1952-11-06-05 Minutes of the Pima County Medical Society, 1904-1954: “The Secretary read a letter from Charles Maylan, Ph.D., requesting permission to appear before the Board of Directors to present his psychological approach to troubled minds.”

PhD.[?]; psychologist[?].
Previous name: Emil Adolf Charles Layman. ["Adolf" sometimes appears as "Adolph." "Maylan" an anagram of "Layman."]. Father: Frederick Oppenheim Layman of San Francisco's Telegraph Hill "Layman's Folly" fame.

Mayo, Charles Horace

Mentioned in the 1953-01-08-03 Minutes of the Pima County Medical Society, 1904-1954: [Dr. Manning] "...made the suggestion that it might also be better to have a Program Committee which will work for two years, stating one instance of having contacted Dr. Charles Mayo who could not come this year but might do so the next year, but that he, Dr. Manning, had not felt free to make arrangements for the next Program Chairman." Most likely a reference to one of the Mayo brothers of Mayo Clinic fame (William J. and Charles H.)?

McBratney, Emmett William

Father or other relative of William H. McBratney (q.v.) perhaps?
J Am Med Assoc, Jan 1954; 154: 355: McBratney, Emmett William; Tucson, Ariz.; Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, 1903; an Associate Fellow of the American Medical Association; member of the Missouri State Medical Association; at one time practiced in St. Louis; died in Columbia, Mo., Oct. 24, aged 78.

McCall, Thomas Edgar

[See History of Arizona medicine; collections of Orville Harry Brown, M.D. [AHSL Special Collections WZ 70 AA7 H673]: Does 10:450 refer to this Dr. McCall[?]; the 11:226 probably is a reference to Mrs. Thomas Edgar McCall.

J Am Med Assoc
. 1950;143(3):309: Thomas Edgar McCall, Phoenix, Ariz. ; Kentucky School of Medicine, Louisville, 1893; served during World War I; died March 14, aged 78, of cerebral hemorrhage.