Executive Secretary of the Arizona Society for Crippled Children, Pima County Chapter. Mentioned in the 1952-03-27-04 Minutes of the Pima County Medical Society, 1904-1954.
Appointed superintendent of the Arizona State Hospital Sep 14, 1942. Arizona State Hospital. Milestones; a history of seventy-five years of progress ... 1887-1962. [Phoenix? 1962?], page 10.
J Am Med Assoc, Sep 1942; 120: 213: Arizona. Dr. Seth F. H. Howes, assistant superintendent of the New Hampshire State Hospital at Concord, was appointed superintendent of the Arizona State Hospital, Phoenix, July 11. The position has been open since Dr. Otto L. Bendheim was given a leave of absence to enter military service.
12/9/1924 & 1/13/1925 Minutes of the Pima County Medical Society, 1904-1954: Same Hubbard? Winter visitor?
Identification not certain, but likely: Thomas Hubbard, M.D., Toledo, Ohio. REPORT OF A CASE OF FOREIGN BODY IN LEFT MAIN BRONCHUS FOR TEN YEARS. J Am Med Assoc, Oct 1918; 71: 1380.
Ghost Walk honors Jerome night marshal, Arizona Daily Star, October 17, 2010: ...Jerome's early-20th-century gun-fighting night marshal, Johnny Hudgens... ... Hudgens left Jerome to fight in World War I. He returned after being wounded in France and shortly thereafter married Lilyn Stringer. In 1919, she gave birth to a premature daughter and the Hudgenses became the first parents in Arizona to have a child placed in an incubator.
JAMA, Nov 1963; 186: 618: Huene, Harry James, Phoenix, Ariz.; born in Delaware County, Iowa, June 11, 1880; Northwestern University Medical School, Chicago, 1904; veteran of World War I; for many years practiced in Forsyth, Mont., where he was mayor from 1910 to 1914, a member of the school board for three years, for many years health officer of Rosebud County, and was instrumental in establishing the Rosebud Memorial Hospital; appointed a member of the Veterans Welfare Commission in 1945, resigning in April 1947; on May 1, 1947, joined the regional office of the US Veterans Adm
Name also appears as “Heustis.” 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(16):1119: Marriages. Charles Brown Huestis, Omaha, to Miss Mary Bennett of Brooklyn, at New York, February 21. JAMA. 1969;207(13):2447: Huestis, Charles Brown, Phoenix, Ariz; University of Nebraska, 1920; died Sept 22, aged 73, of coronary artery occlusion.
Practiced in Nogales 1932-1935, in Tucson 1936-1937 and in Mammoth in 1938. Address per 1935 Arizona State Medical Directory: 124 Morley, Nogales. Johnson, Scott. Something more: osteopathic medicine in southern Arizona. Tucson, Ariz. : Osteopathic Press, 1992, page 104. See History of Arizona medicine; collections of Orville Harry Brown, M.D. [AHSL Special Collections WZ 70 AA7 H673].
1871-1946. Came to Arizona in 1911. ArMA president: 1913. Should the “B.F. Huffman” in 1928-02-00 Minutes of the Pima County Medical Society, 1904-1954 have been “G.F.” (as in the following line on that page)? Was there also a “G.T. Huffman” (see 1927-10-00, 1928-12-00-01, 1929-01-00-01, 1929-12-31, 1930-06-01, 1931-01-20-04 and 1939-03-14 minutes) or should all the “G.T.’s” have been “G.F.’s”? Arizona Medical Board record: George F. Huffman MD; license number: 461; licensed date: 01/24/1912; medical school: DRAKE UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF MEDICINE; graduation date: 04/04/1900
Tucson mayor January 2, 1912-January 1915 (i.e., Tucson’s first mayor elected under statehood) Arizona Medical Board record: Ira E. Huffman MD; license number: 323; licensed date: 01/30/1907; medical school: IOWA COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS & SURGEONS, DES MOINES, Iowa; graduation date: 04/23/1901; area of interest: general practice Members of the PCMS 1904-1930. Per Minutes of the Pima County Medical Society, 1904-1954, graduated from Drake University in 1903.
See the 3/9/1921 Minutes of the Pima County Medical Society, 1904-1954.
J Am Med Assoc, May 1914; LXII: 1483: The twenty-third annual meeting of the Arizona Medical Association was held in Tucson, April 21 and 22, under the presidency of Dr. Ira E. Huffmann, Tucson. ... In the afternoon of April 22 the wives of the visiting physicians were entertained at a Spanish luncheon at the residence of Dr. and Mrs. Ira E. Huffmann, and in the evening were entertained by Dr. and Mrs. Meade Clyne.
Mentioned in the 10/27/1931 Minutes of the Pima County Medical Society, 1904-1954. See 1926-00-12 card. Address per 1935 Arizona State Medical Directory: 110 S. Scott St., Tucson. See History of Arizona medicine; collections of Orville Harry Brown, M.D. [AHSL Special Collections WZ 70 AA7 H673].
J Am Med Assoc, Oct 1930; 95: 1279: John William Huffman, Tucson, Ariz., to Miss Florence Kearnes of Evanston, Ill., August 18.
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 349. See also: McClintock, James H. Arizona, Prehistoric, Aboriginal, Pioneer, Modern; the Nation's Youngest Commonwealth within a Land of Ancient Culture. Chicago: The S.J. Clarke Pub. Co., 1916 (aka Arizona, the Youngest State), volume 3 (Biographical), pages 320, 321 [portrait], 323.
Could this be the same person as “Hughes, Clarence B.” (q.v.)[?]
Per PCMS 50th Anniversary program: “Dr. Charles B. Hughes, who began practicing here [Tucson] in 1860, one day rode horseback 40 miles in four hours, from Tucson to Canoa Ranch. There he attended Mrs. Larcena Page, who had been captured by Apaches, injured and left to die. She crawled 16 miles before rescuers found and took her to the ranch.”