GIVEN NAMES: Also shown as Jane
5474. George Washington PORTER
FamilySearch showed this additional information:
Death - Date: 13 Apr 1907 Place: Mandota Hospital, Madison, Dane, Wisconsin
He servec as a Judge.
Son of Elisha Sabin and Sophia Hall.
Mary taught schoool at Denver's East High School. She never married.
Mary and her sister Florence lived with Albert Robbins Sabin from 1878 to 1882, and attended Woodstock Academy after their mother's death.
11797. Dr. Florence Rena SABIN
Florence R. Sabin (1871-1953) was notable for a number of firsts. In 1925 she was the first woman to be elected to membership in the Academy. She was also the first woman to become a full professor at Johns Hopkins Medical School, and the first woman president of the American Association of Anatomists. Born in an Colorado mining town, Sabin enrolled in Johns Hopkins Medical School in 1896. The school had opened in 1893 and from the beginning admitted both men and women, in fulfillment of one of the conditions of the gift that made its opening possible. Following graduation from the medical school, Sabin obtained an internship at Johns Hopkins Hospital. Soon after, a Fellowship in the Department of Anatomy at Johns Hopkins Medical School was created for her; by 1917 she was a Professor of Histology at the school. In her research work, Sabin made important contributions to knowledge of the histology of the brain and the development of the lymphatic systems, and to the understanding of the pathology and immunology of tuberculosis. After her return to Colorado in 1938, she became active in public health matters, and played a key role in legislating Colorado's public health program after the end of World War II. A prominent anatomist, she conducted research at Johns Hopkins University and published "An Atlas of Medulla and Midbrain". She was the first woman elected president of the American Association of Anatomists (1924), as well as the first woman elected to the National Academy of Sciences (1925). From 1925 to 1938 she conducted research on tuberculosis at Rockefeller University. She was named Colorado women of the Century and has a statue in Statuary Hall in DC.
She and her sister Mary lived with Albert Robbins Sabin from 1878 to 1882, and attended Woodstock Academy after their mother's death.
In the Colorado Springs Gazzette Sept 27 1912:
Cripple Creek Sept 26: George Miner a mining man shot Tuesday night (sept 24 1912) in a scuffle with Chief of Police Kingston died tonight.The rumor was that he died because of an argument in a card game.
ID: Merged with a record that used the ID TMD6021
GIVEN NAMES: Also shown as Marcus C.