Arizona Medical Board record: Charles W. Sult MD; license number: 417; license date: 7/16/1910; medical school: GEORGETOWN UNIV SCH OF MED, Washington, District Of Columbia; graduation date: 07/20/1906; address: 917 N 4th St, Phoenix (Was this the father’s or the son’s address?).
[The father’s and son’s Arizona Medical Board records are conflated.] Address now (3/8/2010) listed in Arizona Medical Board record: 345 Dickinson St, San Diego CA 92103-1912.
See History of Arizona medicine; collections of Orville Harry Brown, M.D. [AHSL Special Collections WZ 70 AA7 H673]: vol. 6, page 224 & vol. 11, page 255 probably refer to "Sr."
Quebbeman, Frances E. Medicine in territorial Arizona. Phoenix : Arizona Historical Foundation, 1966, page 373.
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 139-140.
Born at Wytheville, Virginia July 26, 1879. Graduated from the Georgetown University, Washington, D.C. in 1906. He first practiced his profession in Washington, D.C. and then came to Arizona as physician to the Navajo Indians on account of his wife's health. In July, 1910, he removed to Flagstaff. Source: Who's Who in Arizona. Volume I. 1913 (p. 191).
J Am Med Assoc, Nov 1914; LXIII: 1872: SEWER AND WATER PIPES IN THE SAME TRENCH. To the Editor: -- In a town where it is exceedingly expensive to dig ditches owing to the rocky formation, would it be advisable or objectionable to lay the sewer pipe and the water pipe in the same ditch? Charles W. Sult, M.D., Flagstaff, Ariz.
J Am Med Assoc, May 1931; 96: 1630: Dr. Charles W. Sult, Phoenix, assumed office as health commissioner of Arizona, April 7. He has been practicing medicine in the state for more than twenty years, and is a graduate of Georgetown University School of Medicine, Washington, D. C., class of 1906.
J Am Med Assoc, May 1931; 96: 1802: At the fourth annual meeting of the Arizona Public Health Association, Nogales, May 5-6, Drs. Mary Anna I. Nettle, Parker, spoke on "Indians as a Public Health Problem"; George F. C. Fasting, Tucson, "Identifying Clinical Suspects and Carriers"; Benson Bloom, Tucson, "Clinical Review of a Dysentery Outbreak"; Reginald J. H. Stroud, Temple, "Epidemiology of Epidemic Meningitis"; Alexander C. McKean, Globe, "Outbreak of Meningitis in Gila County," and Charles W. Sult, Phoenix, recently appointed state health officer, on "The State Board of Health Program."
[The father’s and son’s Arizona Medical Board records are conflated.] Address now (3/8/2010) listed in Arizona Medical Board record: 345 Dickinson St, San Diego CA 92103-1912.
See History of Arizona medicine; collections of Orville Harry Brown, M.D. [AHSL Special Collections WZ 70 AA7 H673]: vol. 6, page 224 & vol. 11, page 255 probably refer to "Sr."
Quebbeman, Frances E. Medicine in territorial Arizona. Phoenix : Arizona Historical Foundation, 1966, page 373.
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 139-140.
Born at Wytheville, Virginia July 26, 1879. Graduated from the Georgetown University, Washington, D.C. in 1906. He first practiced his profession in Washington, D.C. and then came to Arizona as physician to the Navajo Indians on account of his wife's health. In July, 1910, he removed to Flagstaff. Source: Who's Who in Arizona. Volume I. 1913 (p. 191).
J Am Med Assoc, Nov 1914; LXIII: 1872: SEWER AND WATER PIPES IN THE SAME TRENCH. To the Editor: -- In a town where it is exceedingly expensive to dig ditches owing to the rocky formation, would it be advisable or objectionable to lay the sewer pipe and the water pipe in the same ditch? Charles W. Sult, M.D., Flagstaff, Ariz.
J Am Med Assoc, May 1931; 96: 1630: Dr. Charles W. Sult, Phoenix, assumed office as health commissioner of Arizona, April 7. He has been practicing medicine in the state for more than twenty years, and is a graduate of Georgetown University School of Medicine, Washington, D. C., class of 1906.
J Am Med Assoc, May 1931; 96: 1802: At the fourth annual meeting of the Arizona Public Health Association, Nogales, May 5-6, Drs. Mary Anna I. Nettle, Parker, spoke on "Indians as a Public Health Problem"; George F. C. Fasting, Tucson, "Identifying Clinical Suspects and Carriers"; Benson Bloom, Tucson, "Clinical Review of a Dysentery Outbreak"; Reginald J. H. Stroud, Temple, "Epidemiology of Epidemic Meningitis"; Alexander C. McKean, Globe, "Outbreak of Meningitis in Gila County," and Charles W. Sult, Phoenix, recently appointed state health officer, on "The State Board of Health Program."
Master pnID
AMH-PN3615
Src1 DP
AHSL-DP
History of Arizona medicine; collections of Orville Harry Brown, M.D. [AHSL Special Collections WZ 70 AA7 H673]
volume 6, page(s) 221-224; volume 11, page(s) 255; volume 12, page(s) 223
OHB Checked
y
Residence(s)
Washington DC
Flagstaff
Phoenix