Showing 90 results

Authority record
Numbers, Alexander Anderson

Dr. Alexander Anderson Numbers was born in Kirkcaldy, Scotland in 1897, to father Andrew Numbers and mother Margaret Thomson Numbers. He emigrated to Canada with his family at the age of 15 and enlisted in the army in 1916 during the Frist World War, serving in France as a stenographer for three and a half years. Coming back from the war in 1919, he spent five years attending night school at Hamilton Collegiate Institute while at the same time working as a stenographer and a bookkeeper during the day. Dr. Numbers studied medicine in the medical school at the University of Toronto from 1924 to 1930 and interned at the Hamilton General Hospital after graduation until September 1931, when he joined a practice in Ancaster and started his own business on King East a year later. During his years of medical practice, Dr. Numbers held posts as chief of medical staff at both the Hamilton Civic Hospitals and St. Peter’s Centre and was honoured by the Hamilton Academy of Medicine as one of the first two recipients of the first distinguished achievement award in recognition of his remarkable career and his leadership in developing the Academy’s archive and museum.

Dr. Numbers died in 1989.

Pedagogue
Corporate body · 1974-1997

"Pedagogue" was a newsletter published by the Program for Educational Development. The newsletter was intended primarily for participants in the educational programs in the Health Sciences Faculty at McMaster University, though it was also received by colleagues throughout the globe.

The title of the newsletter came from the common meaning of "pedagogue" as a teacher and pedagogy referring to the study of the learning-teaching process. Both terms are derived from the root term "ped" meaning foot, and a pedagogue symbolically made footprints for learners to follow. The aim of the newsletter was to document the educational adventures of the faculty and to collectively grow in educational experiences.

The original newsletter logo was a yellow footprint with "Pedagogue" in burgundy title overtop. In 1989, the logo and layout was updated and the footprint removed. The updated logo featured the title in bold justified burgundy letters overtop of thin burgundy lines.

Penn, Marvin

Marvin Penn was born in Winnipeg on September 14, 1913, to Annie and Joseph Penn. Moving to Canada with his family in 1928, he graduated from the University of Manitoba with a degree in Animal Husbandry and then moved to British Columbia to learn hunting fish and mining. After returning to Winnipeg a year later, Penn worked as a fur dresser and joined the Canadian Militia.

In 1936 Penn left Winnipeg for Spain where he joined the International Brigade, serving with the Abraham Lincoln Battalion and later the MacKenzie-Papineau Battalion. Penn participated in four major battles as a soldier and as a first aid man before stationing with the brigade headquarters at the Karl Marx barracks in Barcelona, setting up and supervising a hospital for International Brigadiers.

Penn returned to Canada in 1939 and lived in Toronto from 1943 to 1953, working mostly in the restaurant industry before returning to Winnipeg where he worked in airplane manufacturing during World War Two.Penn worked in the insurance industry and served on the boards of Bnai Brith and Herzlia Academy. He was also a broker of his own business, Penn Agencies and was a member of the Winnipeg Real Estate Board for 35 years. Penn organized a local group for veterans of the Spanish Civil War and was heavily involved with other veteran groups around the world. In 1996, he returned to Spain with other veterans of the Spanish Civil War where he was made an honourary citizen.

Penn passed away in Winnipeg in 2001.

Pernal, Eugenia

Eugenia Pernal was born and raised in Warsaw, Poland, to a successful businessman. She finished the fourth year of high school in 1939, when the war broke out. She went to the medical school in the ghetto for about three or four months before she went to the nursing school on Leszno. She finished her nursing courses within a year and received a diploma in nursing. In the meantime, she worked in Berson and Baumann Children’s Hospital on Sliska. During the massive deportations starting in July 1942, she managed to get out of the ghetto using fake Aryan papers and went to Germany as a Polish girl, where she worked for the French prisoners-of-war in a factory. She married Zygmunt Pernal after the war and settled down in Canada. She died on November 1, 2009 at Toronto Western Hospital.

Corporate body · 2023-current

The Pulse and Palette: An Art Contest is an annual contest created by the Health Sciences Library in Fall of 2023 to engage the McMaster community, and to promote the library’s Graphic Medicine initiatives. The contest invites the McMaster community to showcase their talents and engage others through expressive storytelling. Each participant of the contest submits their art digitally with a corresponding description or story relating to the art piece, which is then featured in an online exhibit where the art is voted on to win a 1st or 2nd prize. The winning art pieces are then promoted via the Health Sciences Library's newsletter "HSL Happenings" and on social media platforms.

Participants are offered the option to deposit their art in the Health Sciences Archives as part of the Pulse and Palette Art Contest collection, where the art and corresponding stories/descriptions can be preserved and made accessible for educational and research purposes.

Rabinowitz, Johanna
Person · 1928-2009

Johanna Rabinowitz (née van der Woerd) was born in the Netherlands and, in her late twenties, came to Canada in 1954 with her sister. Despite being a qualified and registered nurse, she began her Canadian nursing career in Hamilton, Ontario as a nursing assistant at Nora-Frances Henderson Hospital (now Juravinski Hospital). She soon left this position to become a nurse at Mountain Sanatorium. She then moved to Moose Factory, Ontario, near James Bay, to work at Moose Factory General Hospital. She returned to Mountain Sanatorium one and a half years later.

In the summer of 1958, Johanna was one of two nurses who traveled to the eastern Arctic aboard the CGS C.D. Howe as members of the annual Eastern Arctic Patrol. From 1946 to 1968, the Canadian government tasked the Eastern Arctic Patrol with medically examining the Inuit inhabitants of this region, evacuating those infected with tuberculosis to southern Canada for treatment at hospitals and sanatoriums (principally Mountain Sanatorium from 1955 to 1961), and returning home those treated in southern Canada who had recovered.

Johanna later married Dr. Paul Rabinowitz, a physician at Mountain Sanatorium, and was employed with the Victorian Order of Nurses. She died on April 16, 2009 in Grimsby, Ontario at the age of 81.

Roland, Charles G.
https://viaf.org/viaf/42080431 · Person · 1933-2009

Charles (Chuck) Gordon Roland was a physician, writer, medical historian, and the first Hannah Chair for the History of Medicine at McMaster University. Born in Winnipeg, Manitoba in 1933, Dr. Roland studied at the University of Toronto before completing his medical degree at the University of Manitoba. He was a general practitioner in Tillsonburg and Grimsby, Ontario from 1958 to 1964. Following this, Dr. Roland took various roles in teaching, writing, and editing in America, including senior editorship at the Journal of the American Medical Association, lecturing at Northwestern University, and assisting in developing the Mayo Clinic’s medical school, initially holding associate professorship prior to chairing its Department of Biomedical Communications. He became the inaugural Hannah Professor for the History of Medicine at McMaster University in 1977, and retired in 1999. Dr. Roland passed on June 9, 2009, at the age of 76.

Dr. Roland’s research and writing produced a large corpus of work, and he was involved with various associations during his career, including the Toronto Medical History Society and the American Osler Society. Dr. Roland conducted over three hundred oral history interviews pertaining to the history of medicine in wartime, in Canada, and the formation of McMaster University’s School of Medicine. His extensive work regarding wartime medicine in particular produced two monographs about the clandestine Warsaw ghetto medical school, and the experiences of Prisoners-of-War in the Pacific Theater of the Second World War. His other research interests included the medical histories of Canada and Hamilton, and Sir William Osler.

Dr. Roland’s published works include biographies of notable figures in Canadian medical history, Courage under Siege: starvation, disease, and death in the Warsaw ghetto, Long Night’s Journey into Day, bibliographies in the history of Canadian medicine, and many publications related to his research on Sir William Osler. Dr. Roland edited and/or wrote for the Journal of the American Medical Association, Mayo Clinic Proceedings, the Canadian Medical Association Journal, Clinical Cardiology, Canadian Bulletin of Medical History, the Journal of Anesthesia and Analgesia, and various other medical journals.

Roland, Charles Gordon

Charles (Chuck) Gordon Roland was a physician, writer, medical historian, and the first Hannah Chair for the History of Medicine at McMaster University. Born in Winnipeg, Manitoba in 1933, Dr. Roland studied at the University of Toronto before completing his medical degree at the University of Manitoba. He was a general practitioner in Tillsonburg and Grimsby, Ontario from 1958 to 1964. Following this, Dr. Roland took various roles in teaching, writing, and editing in America, including senior editorship at the Journal of the American Medical Association, lecturing at Northwestern University, and assisting in developing the Mayo Clinic’s medical school, initially holding associate professorship prior to chairing its Department of Biomedical Communications. He became the inaugural Hannah Professor for the History of Medicine at McMaster University in 1977, and retired in 1999. Dr. Roland passed on June 9, 2009, at the age of 76.

Dr. Roland’s research and writing produced a large corpus of work, and he was involved with various associations during his career, including the Toronto Medical History Society and the American Osler Society. Dr. Roland conducted over three hundred oral history interviews pertaining to the history of medicine in wartime, in Canada, and the formation of McMaster University’s School of Medicine. His extensive work regarding wartime medicine in particular produced two monographs about the clandestine Warsaw ghetto medical school, and the experiences of Prisoners-of-War in the Pacific Theater of the Second World War. His other research interests included the medical histories of Canada and Hamilton, and Sir William Osler.

Dr. Roland’s published works include biographies of notable figures in Canadian medical history, Courage under Siege: starvation, disease, and death in the Warsaw ghetto, Long Night’s Journey into Day, bibliographies in the history of Canadian medicine, and many publications related to his research on Sir William Osler. Dr. Roland edited and/or wrote for the Journal of the American Medical Association, Mayo Clinic Proceedings, the Canadian Medical Association Journal, Clinical Cardiology, Canadian Bulletin of Medical History, the Journal of Anesthesia and Analgesia, and various other medical journals.

Roland, Connie Lynn Rankin

Connie Lynn Rankin Roland was born in 1935, to father Ray William Rankin, and mother Mildred Dorothy Vincent. Connie spent her childhood and adolescent years in Tillsonburg, where she helped her father with office work in his medical practice. She later became an actor, and in 1979 married medical historian Dr. Charles Gordon Roland, with whom she had seven children.