{"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog.json?f%5Bdate_range%5D%5B%5D=1923\u0026f%5Blevel%5D%5B%5D=Subseries\u0026f%5Brepository%5D%5B%5D=University+of+Virginia%2C+Special+Collections+Dept.","next":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog.json?f%5Bdate_range%5D%5B%5D=1923\u0026f%5Blevel%5D%5B%5D=Subseries\u0026f%5Brepository%5D%5B%5D=University+of+Virginia%2C+Special+Collections+Dept.\u0026page=2","last":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog.json?f%5Bdate_range%5D%5B%5D=1923\u0026f%5Blevel%5D%5B%5D=Subseries\u0026f%5Brepository%5D%5B%5D=University+of+Virginia%2C+Special+Collections+Dept.\u0026page=10"},"meta":{"pages":{"current_page":1,"next_page":2,"prev_page":null,"total_pages":10,"limit_value":10,"offset_value":0,"total_count":98,"first_page?":true,"last_page?":false}},"data":[{"id":"viu_repositories_3_resources_1030_c03_c03","type":"Subseries","attributes":{"title":"1920s","breadcrumbs":{"id":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_repositories_3_resources_1030_c03_c03#breadcrumbs","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":{"ref_ssi":"viu_repositories_3_resources_1030_c03_c03","ref_ssm":["viu_repositories_3_resources_1030_c03_c03"],"id":"viu_repositories_3_resources_1030_c03_c03","ead_ssi":"viu_repositories_3_resources_1030","_root_":"viu_repositories_3_resources_1030","_nest_parent_":"viu_repositories_3_resources_1030_c03","parent_ssi":"viu_repositories_3_resources_1030_c03","parent_ssim":["viu_repositories_3_resources_1030","viu_repositories_3_resources_1030_c03"],"parent_ids_ssim":["viu_repositories_3_resources_1030","viu_repositories_3_resources_1030_c03"],"parent_unittitles_ssm":["Charles M. 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Robinson and Principals Architectural Records","Architecture, Modern -- 20th century -- Designs and plans","Architecture, Domestic -- Designs and plans.","Architects and community -- Virginia.","Architects -- Virginia.","Blueprints (reprographic copies)","architectural drawings (visual works)","design drawings","This collection is open for research.","Some of the architectural works are brittle or torn and need to be handled delicately.","Photographic materials need to be handled with proper gloves.","Please note, part of this collection is housed at Ivy Stacks, an off-site storage facility. Requests for materials housed at Ivy Stacks require at least 72 hours' notice.","Folder 93 (drawings for Commission No. 15400) is a custom made oversized folder made from stiff board, and requires specific handling instructions. These instructions are also found on the folder.","To view the drawings untie the knots of the ribbons found on the sides of the folder. After opening the folder, untie knotted ribbon that holds the interior board in place, and then remove the board.","After viewing, place the interior board white side down on top of the curled edge before closing the folder to prevent the blueprint from curling. Then tie horizontal ribbon so the interior board sandwiches the blueprints tightly. Please make sure the blueprint doesn't curl on itself before closing the top flap. Finally, tie the exterior ribbons at the sides of the folder.","This collection has been minimally processed and is available for research. Please note, part of this collection is housed at Ivy Stacks, an off-site storage facility. Requests for materials housed at Ivy Stacks require at least 72 hours' notice.","Due the physical condition of this item, it is housed in a custom made oversized folder made from stiff board, and requires specific handling instructions. These instructions are also found on the folder.","To view the drawings untie the knots of the ribbons found on the sides of the folder. After opening the folder, untie knotted ribbon that holds the interior board in place, and then remove the board.","After viewing, place the interior board white side down on top of the curled edge before closing the folder to prevent the blueprint from curling. Then tie horizontal ribbon so the interior board sandwiches the blueprints tightly. Please make sure the blueprint doesn't curl on itself before closing the top flap. Finally, tie the exterior ribbons at the sides of the folder.","The collection is arranged into four main series: ","Series 1 - Charles M. Robinson records, 1978, 2020, undated","Series 2 -  Office records, 1935-1992, undated","Series 3 - Architectural drawings, 1907-2012","Series 4 - Project photograph files, 1855-1999, undated","Series 2 and 4 are further arranged into large files, and Series 3 is arranged first into subseries, then into files.","The files in Series 2, Office records, are arranged accoring to the significance of the documents to the firm's operations.","In Series 3, Architectural drawings, the subseries are named after each decade, beginning with 1900s and ending with the 2010s. The files below these subseries are project titles arranged in general chronological order grouped together by year.","The files in Series 4, Project photograph files, are arranged alphabetically. ","Charles Morrison Robinson  was born on  March 3, 1867 , in  Hamilton, Loudoun County, Virginia . He was the eldest son of  architect  and builder  James T. Robinson  and  Elizabeth Crockett Robinson . His family relocated to  Welland, Ontario , where he completed his early schooling before beginning architectural training under  D.S. Hopkins  in  Grand Rapids, Michigan , and  John K. Peebles  in  Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania . In  1889 , he formed his first partnership—Smith \u0026 Robinson—in  Altoona, Pennsylvania . He married  Annie Custer  in  1891 , and their son,  Charles Custer Robinson , was born two years later.  ","Following years of practice in Pennsylvania, including partnerships with  George T. Smith ,  R.B. Crockett , and  George Winkler ,  Robinson  returned to  Virginia  in  1906 , establishing Charles M. Robinson, Architect in  Richmond . Robinson became a leading designer for a future comprehensive statewide public school system mandated by Virginia's 1902 Constitution.  ","Between  1906  and  1932 , Robinson's practice produced plans for more than 400 public schools and many university buildings, including commissions in  Richmond ,  Norfolk ,  Newport News ,  Portsmouth , and dozens of rural counties. Robinson's standardized plans were paired with styles ranging from Arts \u0026 Crafts to Collegiate Gothic, Spanish Revival, and Art Deco. His schools featured ample light, logical circulation, and adaptable common spaces. ","In  1908  he won the commission to design the campus of the State Normal School at  Harrisonburg , now James Madison University, designing its first seven buildings and subsequent expansions through 1928. He designed foundational campuses for the institutions now known as the University of Mary Washington, Radford University, and Virginia State University, and oversaw more than sixty major projects for the College of William \u0026 Mary between 1921 and 1931, including the Sunken Garden and numerous residence halls, academic buildings, and the George Preston Blow Gymnasium. ","His practice also extended beyond education. In 1918 he designed the tuberculosis sanitariums (sanatoriums) at  Catawba ,  Burkeville , and  Charlottesville  for the Virginia State Board of Health. In Richmond, he designed civic and commercial structures, including the Times-Dispatch Building, Stuart Circle Hospital, Grace Hospital, St. Elizabeth's Hospital, the Sunday School Building at Ginter Park Methodist Church, and (in partnership with his former apprentice Marcellus Wright, Sr.) the ACCA Shriner Mosque—today the Altria Theater. Residentially, his Laburnum Court development introduced an early twentieth-century model of middle-class housing arranged around a landscaped central park.  ","By the 1920s, Robinson had expanded his firm to include his son Charles Custer Robinson,  Benjamin A. Ruffin , and  John Binford Walford , who became partners in Charles M. Robinson, Architects in 1922. Although Robinson retired to his farm in Hampton in  1926 , he remained professionally active, producing drawings at home and visiting construction sites. Robinson died on  August 20, 1932 , at age 66 in a Norfolk hospital, and the firm was formally dissolved the following day.  ","The practice he founded continued through multiple generations of architects, evolving through successive names—J. Binford Walford, Architect (1932–1946); Walford \u0026 Wright (1946–1962); Wright, Jones \u0026 Wilkerson (1962–1991); Wright, Jones, Wilkerson, Rothschild \u0026 Boynton (1991–1994); and finally Boynton, Rothschild, Rowland (1994–2020). The firm remained active for more than a century before being acquired in 2020.","Reference List:","Arlington County Historical Affairs and Landmark Review Board. (2008, September). Historic District Designation Form. Arlington County Register of Historic Places. https://www.arlingtonva.us/files/sharedassets/public/v/1/projects/documents/wraps_localhistoricdistrictdesignation_wilsonschool_2009.pdf","Ledger-Star, Norfolk, VA. (1932, August 22). Charles M. Robinson Prominent Architect, Dies; Burial Today. Newspapers.com by Ancestry. https://www.newspapers.com/article/ledger-star-charles-m-robinson-prominen/166469428/","Loth, C. (1999). The Virginia Landmarks Register. The University Press of Virginia. https://books.google.com/booksid=NJa_64aH1iMC\u0026q=charles+robinson#v=onepage\u0026q=charles%20robinson\u0026f=false","Morgan, S.W. (2019, September 24). Virginia's Unsung Architect. Richmond Magazine. https://richmondmagazine.com/home/latest/charles-robinson-branch-museum/","Moyer, L. (n.d.). Halls of History. University of Mary Washington Magazine. https://magazine.umw.edu/spring2013/features/halls-of-history/","Preservation Durham. (n.d.). Robinson, Charles M. Open Durham from Preservation Durham. https://www.opendurham.org/people/robinson-charles-m","Robinson, D.B. (n.d.). Charles M. Robinson: A Virginia Architectural History. https://www.charlesmrobinson.com/index.html","United States Department of the Interior National Park Service. (1992, October 31). National Register of Historic Places Multiple Property Documentation Form. Internet rchive Wayback Machine. https://web.archive.org/web/20101111233435/http://www.dhr.virginia.gov/registers/Counties/MultipleCounty/127-0845_PublicSchoolsinRichmondMPS_NPS_final.pdf","Winthrop, R.P. (2015, January 27). Architects of Richmond: Charles M. Robinson. Architecture Richmond. https://architecturerichmond.com/architects-of-richmond-charles-m-robinson/","CONTENT WARNING:\nThis material contains offensive or harmful language. This material contains references to outdated terminology for African Americans, as well as for Native Americans. The terms \"Colored\" and Negro\", in commom parlance when the drawings were created, are used throughout the architectural drawings to refer to Black people. The term \"Indian\" is also used to refer to Native Americans. These terms are primarily found in the titles of architectural drawings. Titles remain as they were found for historical context. The purpose of this note is to give users the opportunity to decide whether they need or want to view these materials, or at least, to mentally or emotionally prepare themselves to view the materials.","Some items in this collection sustained damage from pests and/or mold prior to coming to the Library. Preservation staff has frozen and stabilized the items to prevent further damage from pests or mold and cleaned the items to facilitate handling. 10/20/23","The commission number for this set of drawings is the same as the number for the \"John W. Daniel School, Newport News Schools, VA, 1913\" drawings. However, there is no indication of the projects being related.","The commission number for this set of drawings is the same as the number for the \"Eastville High School, Northampton County, VA, 1913\" drawings. However, there is no indication of the projects being related.","The Charles M. Robinson and Principals Architectural Records consist of materials about Charles M. Robinson, and the office records, architectural and design plans, and project photograph files of the Charles M. Robinson, Architect firm and successor firms. The materials document the business operations of the firms, as well as their role in developing the city of Richmond, VA, and in developing various institutions and organizations across the state of Virginia. The works in this collection also demonstrate the significance of the firm's activities on communities in these areas. It is divided into four series. ","Series 1, Charles M. Robinson Files (1978, 2020, undated; 1 folder), includes copies of documents about Charles M. Robinson, such as a copy of his Architecture License. There is also a copy of a short essay about Robinson's role in the construction of the ACCA Shrine, now known as the Altria Theater. ","Series 2, Office records (circa 1935-1992, undated; 18 folders), includes office records, which are arranged in decreasing order of their significance/functionality to the firm's operations. Most notably are the lists of commissions, index to the architectural drawings, and the commission notes. These records cover the majority of the timeline following Robinson's death. ","Series 3, Architectural drawings (1907-2012, undated; 3 oversized boxes, 93 flat file folders, 4 tubes, 1457 tube boxes), the largest part of this collection, consists of the firm's architectural drawings and design plans, as well as the drawings and plans Robinson created in his role as the official school board architect for several cities and counties in Virginia, and as an architect for the Virginia State Board of Health. They span more than a century beginning in 1907 and ending in 2012 and represent over 1600 projects.   ","Included are drawings, designs, and plans for educational institutions, hospitals, churches, offices, retail stores, private residences, and plots across the state of Virginia. The series also includes topographic maps and site studies. There are original designs, proposed designs, voided designs, additions, alterations, and renovations. The designs are comprehensive, and include work on interiors and exteriors, plumbing and ventilation systems, and landscape works. ","Primary, secondary, and post-secondary schools in locations across Virginia are very well represented by the plans in this collection. More well-known post-secondary educational institutions include the College of William and Mary, James Madison University, Raford University, University of Mary Washington, George Mason University, and Virginia Commonwealth University. However, the number of primary and secondary schools represented in the collection is even greater. ","Of particular significance are the designs and plans the firm created for educational institutions for students from underrepresented, historically oppressed, and marginalized groups. These include the Virginia School for the Deaf and Blind, the Virginia State University, the nation's first fully-state supported four-year post-secondary learning institution for Black Americans, and the HBCUs Norfolk State University and Virginia Union University. ","The works that Robinson completed as an architect for the Virginia State Board of Health include plans and designs for the Catawba, Blue Ridge, and Piedmont Tuberculosis sanitoriums (rehabilitation center, hospice, etc.). Robinson's work in this role also affected the lives of people from underrepresented groups, as the Piedmont institution was developed specifically for the care of Black residents of Virginia. ","Series 4, Project photograph files (circa 1855-1999, undated; 9 boxes, 15 folders), includes many of the project photograph files from the architectural firm. Although there are some items from Robinson's time with the firm, the large majority are dated and document the projects from after his death on August 20, 1932. The photograph file index introduces the rest of the series, which includes prints, negatives, photo documentation from John Binford Walford and Oscar Pendleton Wright's photograph albums, and undated presentation photos. ","Dates: 1907 – 2012, bulk date 1907-1995  ","This series consists of architectural rolls that contain drawings, designs, and plans of educational institutions, hospitals, churches, offices, retail stores, and private residences across the state of Virginia. The series also includes rolls that hold topographic maps, plot and general layouts, and site studies. The drawings comprise original designs, proposed designs, voided designs, additions, alterations, and renovations. The designs are comprehensive, and include work on interiors and exteriors, plumbing and ventilation systems, and landscape works. For a detailed inventory of the drawings, please see the Charles M. Robinson architectural records drawing inventory in the External Documents field.","This collection contains some in-copyright material. Visit our Permissions and Publishing page (https://www.library.virginia.edu/special-collections/services/publishing) for more information about use of Special Collections materials. The library can provide copyright information upon request, but users are responsible for making their own determination about lawful use of collections materials.","Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections Library","Robinson","Robinson, Charles  M. (Morrison), 1867-1932","Charles Morrison Robinson","James T. Robinson","Elizabeth Crockett Robinson","D.S. Hopkins","John K. Peebles","Annie Custer","Charles Custer Robinson","George T. Smith","R.B. Crockett","George Winkler","Benjamin A. 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The library can provide copyright information upon request, but users are responsible for making their own determination about lawful use of collections materials."],"acqinfo_ssim":["Purchased from David Robinson, 2021-03-31"],"access_subjects_ssim":["Architecture, Modern -- 20th century -- Designs and plans","Architecture, Domestic -- Designs and plans.","Architects and community -- Virginia.","Architects -- Virginia.","Blueprints (reprographic copies)","architectural drawings (visual works)","design drawings"],"access_subjects_ssm":["Architecture, Modern -- 20th century -- Designs and plans","Architecture, Domestic -- Designs and plans.","Architects and community -- Virginia.","Architects -- Virginia.","Blueprints (reprographic copies)","architectural drawings (visual works)","design drawings"],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"extent_ssm":["278.62 Cubic Feet 1768 rolls of architectural drawings housed in 1458 tube boxes, 4 tube rolls, 93 oversized flat file folders, and 2 oversized flat boxes. 11 legal document boxes, 1 oversized flat box, and 9 oversized flat folders of records"],"extent_tesim":["278.62 Cubic Feet 1768 rolls of architectural drawings housed in 1458 tube boxes, 4 tube rolls, 93 oversized flat file folders, and 2 oversized flat boxes. 11 legal document boxes, 1 oversized flat box, and 9 oversized flat folders of records"],"genreform_ssim":["Blueprints (reprographic copies)","architectural drawings (visual works)","design drawings"],"date_range_isim":[1855,1856,1857,1858,1859,1860,1861,1862,1863,1864,1865,1866,1867,1868,1869,1870,1871,1872,1873,1874,1875,1876,1877,1878,1879,1880,1881,1882,1883,1884,1885,1886,1887,1888,1889,1890,1891,1892,1893,1894,1895,1896,1897,1898,1899,1900,1901,1902,1903,1904,1905,1906,1907,1908,1909,1910,1911,1912,1913,1914,1915,1916,1917,1918,1919,1920,1921,1922,1923,1924,1925,1926,1927,1928,1929,1930,1931,1932,1933,1934,1935,1936,1937,1938,1939,1940,1941,1942,1943,1944,1945,1946,1947,1948,1949,1950,1951,1952,1953,1954,1955,1956,1957,1958,1959,1960,1961,1962,1963,1964,1965,1966,1967,1968,1969,1970,1971,1972,1973,1974,1975,1976,1977,1978,1979,1980,1981,1982,1983,1984,1985,1986,1987,1988,1989,1990,1991,1992,1993,1994,1995,1996,1997,1998,1999,2000,2001,2002,2003,2004,2005,2006,2007,2008,2009,2010,2011,2012],"accessrestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThis collection is open for research.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eSome of the architectural works are brittle or torn and need to be handled delicately.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003ePhotographic materials need to be handled with proper gloves.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePlease note, part of this collection is housed at Ivy Stacks, an off-site storage facility. Requests for materials housed at Ivy Stacks require at least 72 hours' notice.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eFolder 93 (drawings for Commission No. 15400) is a custom made oversized folder made from stiff board, and requires specific handling instructions. These instructions are also found on the folder.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eTo view the drawings untie the knots of the ribbons found on the sides of the folder. After opening the folder, untie knotted ribbon that holds the interior board in place, and then remove the board.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eAfter viewing, place the interior board white side down on top of the curled edge before closing the folder to prevent the blueprint from curling. Then tie horizontal ribbon so the interior board sandwiches the blueprints tightly. Please make sure the blueprint doesn't curl on itself before closing the top flap. Finally, tie the exterior ribbons at the sides of the folder.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThis collection has been minimally processed and is available for research. Please note, part of this collection is housed at Ivy Stacks, an off-site storage facility. Requests for materials housed at Ivy Stacks require at least 72 hours' notice.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eDue the physical condition of this item, it is housed in a custom made oversized folder made from stiff board, and requires specific handling instructions. These instructions are also found on the folder.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eTo view the drawings untie the knots of the ribbons found on the sides of the folder. After opening the folder, untie knotted ribbon that holds the interior board in place, and then remove the board.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eAfter viewing, place the interior board white side down on top of the curled edge before closing the folder to prevent the blueprint from curling. Then tie horizontal ribbon so the interior board sandwiches the blueprints tightly. Please make sure the blueprint doesn't curl on itself before closing the top flap. Finally, tie the exterior ribbons at the sides of the folder.\u003c/p\u003e"],"accessrestrict_heading_ssm":["Conditions Governing Access","Physical Access","Conditions Governing Access","Physical Access"],"accessrestrict_tesim":["This collection is open for research.","Some of the architectural works are brittle or torn and need to be handled delicately.","Photographic materials need to be handled with proper gloves.","Please note, part of this collection is housed at Ivy Stacks, an off-site storage facility. Requests for materials housed at Ivy Stacks require at least 72 hours' notice.","Folder 93 (drawings for Commission No. 15400) is a custom made oversized folder made from stiff board, and requires specific handling instructions. These instructions are also found on the folder.","To view the drawings untie the knots of the ribbons found on the sides of the folder. After opening the folder, untie knotted ribbon that holds the interior board in place, and then remove the board.","After viewing, place the interior board white side down on top of the curled edge before closing the folder to prevent the blueprint from curling. Then tie horizontal ribbon so the interior board sandwiches the blueprints tightly. Please make sure the blueprint doesn't curl on itself before closing the top flap. Finally, tie the exterior ribbons at the sides of the folder.","This collection has been minimally processed and is available for research. Please note, part of this collection is housed at Ivy Stacks, an off-site storage facility. Requests for materials housed at Ivy Stacks require at least 72 hours' notice.","Due the physical condition of this item, it is housed in a custom made oversized folder made from stiff board, and requires specific handling instructions. These instructions are also found on the folder.","To view the drawings untie the knots of the ribbons found on the sides of the folder. After opening the folder, untie knotted ribbon that holds the interior board in place, and then remove the board.","After viewing, place the interior board white side down on top of the curled edge before closing the folder to prevent the blueprint from curling. Then tie horizontal ribbon so the interior board sandwiches the blueprints tightly. Please make sure the blueprint doesn't curl on itself before closing the top flap. Finally, tie the exterior ribbons at the sides of the folder."],"arrangement_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe collection is arranged into four main series: \u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eSeries 1 - Charles M. Robinson records, 1978, 2020, undated\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eSeries 2 -  Office records, 1935-1992, undated\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eSeries 3 - Architectural drawings, 1907-2012\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eSeries 4 - Project photograph files, 1855-1999, undated\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eSeries 2 and 4 are further arranged into large files, and Series 3 is arranged first into subseries, then into files.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eThe files in Series 2, Office records, are arranged accoring to the significance of the documents to the firm's operations.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eIn Series 3, Architectural drawings, the subseries are named after each decade, beginning with 1900s and ending with the 2010s. The files below these subseries are project titles arranged in general chronological order grouped together by year.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eThe files in Series 4, Project photograph files, are arranged alphabetically. \u003c/p\u003e"],"arrangement_heading_ssm":["Arrangement"],"arrangement_tesim":["The collection is arranged into four main series: ","Series 1 - Charles M. Robinson records, 1978, 2020, undated","Series 2 -  Office records, 1935-1992, undated","Series 3 - Architectural drawings, 1907-2012","Series 4 - Project photograph files, 1855-1999, undated","Series 2 and 4 are further arranged into large files, and Series 3 is arranged first into subseries, then into files.","The files in Series 2, Office records, are arranged accoring to the significance of the documents to the firm's operations.","In Series 3, Architectural drawings, the subseries are named after each decade, beginning with 1900s and ending with the 2010s. The files below these subseries are project titles arranged in general chronological order grouped together by year.","The files in Series 4, Project photograph files, are arranged alphabetically. "],"bioghist_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003e\u003cpersname\u003eCharles Morrison Robinson\u003c/persname\u003e was born on \u003cdate\u003eMarch 3, 1867\u003c/date\u003e, in \u003cgeogname\u003eHamilton, Loudoun County, Virginia\u003c/geogname\u003e. He was the eldest son of \u003coccupation\u003earchitect\u003c/occupation\u003e and builder \u003cpersname\u003eJames T. Robinson\u003c/persname\u003e and \u003cpersname\u003eElizabeth Crockett Robinson\u003c/persname\u003e. His family relocated to \u003cgeogname\u003eWelland, Ontario\u003c/geogname\u003e, where he completed his early schooling before beginning architectural training under \u003cpersname\u003eD.S. Hopkins\u003c/persname\u003e in \u003cgeogname\u003eGrand Rapids, Michigan\u003c/geogname\u003e, and \u003cpersname\u003eJohn K. Peebles\u003c/persname\u003e in \u003cgeogname\u003ePittsburgh, Pennsylvania\u003c/geogname\u003e. In \u003cdate\u003e1889\u003c/date\u003e, he formed his first partnership—Smith \u0026amp; Robinson—in \u003cgeogname\u003eAltoona, Pennsylvania\u003c/geogname\u003e. He married \u003cpersname\u003eAnnie Custer\u003c/persname\u003e in \u003cdate\u003e1891\u003c/date\u003e, and their son, \u003cpersname\u003eCharles Custer Robinson\u003c/persname\u003e, was born two years later.  \u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eFollowing years of practice in Pennsylvania, including partnerships with \u003cpersname\u003eGeorge T. Smith\u003c/persname\u003e, \u003cpersname\u003eR.B. Crockett\u003c/persname\u003e, and \u003cpersname\u003eGeorge Winkler\u003c/persname\u003e, \u003cfamname\u003eRobinson\u003c/famname\u003e returned to \u003cgeogname\u003eVirginia\u003c/geogname\u003e in \u003cdate\u003e1906\u003c/date\u003e, establishing Charles M. Robinson, Architect in \u003cgeogname\u003eRichmond\u003c/geogname\u003e. Robinson became a leading designer for a future comprehensive statewide public school system mandated by Virginia's 1902 Constitution.  \u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBetween \u003cdate\u003e1906\u003c/date\u003e and \u003cdate\u003e1932\u003c/date\u003e, Robinson's practice produced plans for more than 400 public schools and many university buildings, including commissions in \u003cgeogname\u003eRichmond\u003c/geogname\u003e, \u003cgeogname\u003eNorfolk\u003c/geogname\u003e, \u003cgeogname\u003eNewport News\u003c/geogname\u003e, \u003cgeogname\u003ePortsmouth\u003c/geogname\u003e, and dozens of rural counties. Robinson's standardized plans were paired with styles ranging from Arts \u0026amp; Crafts to Collegiate Gothic, Spanish Revival, and Art Deco. His schools featured ample light, logical circulation, and adaptable common spaces. \u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eIn \u003cdate\u003e1908\u003c/date\u003e he won the commission to design the campus of the State Normal School at \u003cgeogname\u003eHarrisonburg\u003c/geogname\u003e, now James Madison University, designing its first seven buildings and subsequent expansions through 1928. He designed foundational campuses for the institutions now known as the University of Mary Washington, Radford University, and Virginia State University, and oversaw more than sixty major projects for the College of William \u0026amp; Mary between 1921 and 1931, including the Sunken Garden and numerous residence halls, academic buildings, and the George Preston Blow Gymnasium. \u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eHis practice also extended beyond education. In 1918 he designed the tuberculosis sanitariums (sanatoriums) at \u003cgeogname\u003eCatawba\u003c/geogname\u003e, \u003cgeogname\u003eBurkeville\u003c/geogname\u003e, and \u003cgeogname\u003eCharlottesville\u003c/geogname\u003e for the Virginia State Board of Health. In Richmond, he designed civic and commercial structures, including the Times-Dispatch Building, Stuart Circle Hospital, Grace Hospital, St. Elizabeth's Hospital, the Sunday School Building at Ginter Park Methodist Church, and (in partnership with his former apprentice Marcellus Wright, Sr.) the ACCA Shriner Mosque—today the Altria Theater. Residentially, his Laburnum Court development introduced an early twentieth-century model of middle-class housing arranged around a landscaped central park.  \u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBy the 1920s, Robinson had expanded his firm to include his son Charles Custer Robinson, \u003cpersname\u003eBenjamin A. Ruffin\u003c/persname\u003e, and \u003cpersname\u003eJohn Binford Walford\u003c/persname\u003e, who became partners in Charles M. Robinson, Architects in 1922. Although Robinson retired to his farm in Hampton in \u003cdate\u003e1926\u003c/date\u003e, he remained professionally active, producing drawings at home and visiting construction sites. Robinson died on \u003cdate\u003eAugust 20, 1932\u003c/date\u003e, at age 66 in a Norfolk hospital, and the firm was formally dissolved the following day.  \u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eThe practice he founded continued through multiple generations of architects, evolving through successive names—J. Binford Walford, Architect (1932–1946); Walford \u0026amp; Wright (1946–1962); Wright, Jones \u0026amp; Wilkerson (1962–1991); Wright, Jones, Wilkerson, Rothschild \u0026amp; Boynton (1991–1994); and finally Boynton, Rothschild, Rowland (1994–2020). The firm remained active for more than a century before being acquired in 2020.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eReference List:\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eArlington County Historical Affairs and Landmark Review Board. (2008, September). Historic District Designation Form. Arlington County Register of Historic Places. https://www.arlingtonva.us/files/sharedassets/public/v/1/projects/documents/wraps_localhistoricdistrictdesignation_wilsonschool_2009.pdf\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eLedger-Star, Norfolk, VA. (1932, August 22). Charles M. Robinson Prominent Architect, Dies; Burial Today. Newspapers.com by Ancestry. https://www.newspapers.com/article/ledger-star-charles-m-robinson-prominen/166469428/\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eLoth, C. (1999). The Virginia Landmarks Register. The University Press of Virginia. https://books.google.com/booksid=NJa_64aH1iMC\u0026amp;q=charles+robinson#v=onepage\u0026amp;q=charles%20robinson\u0026amp;f=false\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eMorgan, S.W. (2019, September 24). Virginia's Unsung Architect. Richmond Magazine. https://richmondmagazine.com/home/latest/charles-robinson-branch-museum/\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eMoyer, L. (n.d.). Halls of History. University of Mary Washington Magazine. https://magazine.umw.edu/spring2013/features/halls-of-history/\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003ePreservation Durham. (n.d.). Robinson, Charles M. Open Durham from Preservation Durham. https://www.opendurham.org/people/robinson-charles-m\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eRobinson, D.B. (n.d.). Charles M. Robinson: A Virginia Architectural History. https://www.charlesmrobinson.com/index.html\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eUnited States Department of the Interior National Park Service. (1992, October 31). National Register of Historic Places Multiple Property Documentation Form. Internet rchive Wayback Machine. https://web.archive.org/web/20101111233435/http://www.dhr.virginia.gov/registers/Counties/MultipleCounty/127-0845_PublicSchoolsinRichmondMPS_NPS_final.pdf\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eWinthrop, R.P. (2015, January 27). Architects of Richmond: Charles M. Robinson. Architecture Richmond. https://architecturerichmond.com/architects-of-richmond-charles-m-robinson/\u003c/p\u003e"],"bioghist_heading_ssm":["Biographical / Historical"],"bioghist_tesim":["Charles Morrison Robinson  was born on  March 3, 1867 , in  Hamilton, Loudoun County, Virginia . He was the eldest son of  architect  and builder  James T. Robinson  and  Elizabeth Crockett Robinson . His family relocated to  Welland, Ontario , where he completed his early schooling before beginning architectural training under  D.S. Hopkins  in  Grand Rapids, Michigan , and  John K. Peebles  in  Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania . In  1889 , he formed his first partnership—Smith \u0026 Robinson—in  Altoona, Pennsylvania . He married  Annie Custer  in  1891 , and their son,  Charles Custer Robinson , was born two years later.  ","Following years of practice in Pennsylvania, including partnerships with  George T. Smith ,  R.B. Crockett , and  George Winkler ,  Robinson  returned to  Virginia  in  1906 , establishing Charles M. Robinson, Architect in  Richmond . Robinson became a leading designer for a future comprehensive statewide public school system mandated by Virginia's 1902 Constitution.  ","Between  1906  and  1932 , Robinson's practice produced plans for more than 400 public schools and many university buildings, including commissions in  Richmond ,  Norfolk ,  Newport News ,  Portsmouth , and dozens of rural counties. Robinson's standardized plans were paired with styles ranging from Arts \u0026 Crafts to Collegiate Gothic, Spanish Revival, and Art Deco. His schools featured ample light, logical circulation, and adaptable common spaces. ","In  1908  he won the commission to design the campus of the State Normal School at  Harrisonburg , now James Madison University, designing its first seven buildings and subsequent expansions through 1928. He designed foundational campuses for the institutions now known as the University of Mary Washington, Radford University, and Virginia State University, and oversaw more than sixty major projects for the College of William \u0026 Mary between 1921 and 1931, including the Sunken Garden and numerous residence halls, academic buildings, and the George Preston Blow Gymnasium. ","His practice also extended beyond education. In 1918 he designed the tuberculosis sanitariums (sanatoriums) at  Catawba ,  Burkeville , and  Charlottesville  for the Virginia State Board of Health. In Richmond, he designed civic and commercial structures, including the Times-Dispatch Building, Stuart Circle Hospital, Grace Hospital, St. Elizabeth's Hospital, the Sunday School Building at Ginter Park Methodist Church, and (in partnership with his former apprentice Marcellus Wright, Sr.) the ACCA Shriner Mosque—today the Altria Theater. Residentially, his Laburnum Court development introduced an early twentieth-century model of middle-class housing arranged around a landscaped central park.  ","By the 1920s, Robinson had expanded his firm to include his son Charles Custer Robinson,  Benjamin A. Ruffin , and  John Binford Walford , who became partners in Charles M. Robinson, Architects in 1922. Although Robinson retired to his farm in Hampton in  1926 , he remained professionally active, producing drawings at home and visiting construction sites. Robinson died on  August 20, 1932 , at age 66 in a Norfolk hospital, and the firm was formally dissolved the following day.  ","The practice he founded continued through multiple generations of architects, evolving through successive names—J. Binford Walford, Architect (1932–1946); Walford \u0026 Wright (1946–1962); Wright, Jones \u0026 Wilkerson (1962–1991); Wright, Jones, Wilkerson, Rothschild \u0026 Boynton (1991–1994); and finally Boynton, Rothschild, Rowland (1994–2020). The firm remained active for more than a century before being acquired in 2020.","Reference List:","Arlington County Historical Affairs and Landmark Review Board. (2008, September). Historic District Designation Form. Arlington County Register of Historic Places. https://www.arlingtonva.us/files/sharedassets/public/v/1/projects/documents/wraps_localhistoricdistrictdesignation_wilsonschool_2009.pdf","Ledger-Star, Norfolk, VA. (1932, August 22). Charles M. Robinson Prominent Architect, Dies; Burial Today. Newspapers.com by Ancestry. https://www.newspapers.com/article/ledger-star-charles-m-robinson-prominen/166469428/","Loth, C. (1999). The Virginia Landmarks Register. The University Press of Virginia. https://books.google.com/booksid=NJa_64aH1iMC\u0026q=charles+robinson#v=onepage\u0026q=charles%20robinson\u0026f=false","Morgan, S.W. (2019, September 24). Virginia's Unsung Architect. Richmond Magazine. https://richmondmagazine.com/home/latest/charles-robinson-branch-museum/","Moyer, L. (n.d.). Halls of History. University of Mary Washington Magazine. https://magazine.umw.edu/spring2013/features/halls-of-history/","Preservation Durham. (n.d.). Robinson, Charles M. Open Durham from Preservation Durham. https://www.opendurham.org/people/robinson-charles-m","Robinson, D.B. (n.d.). Charles M. Robinson: A Virginia Architectural History. https://www.charlesmrobinson.com/index.html","United States Department of the Interior National Park Service. (1992, October 31). National Register of Historic Places Multiple Property Documentation Form. Internet rchive Wayback Machine. https://web.archive.org/web/20101111233435/http://www.dhr.virginia.gov/registers/Counties/MultipleCounty/127-0845_PublicSchoolsinRichmondMPS_NPS_final.pdf","Winthrop, R.P. (2015, January 27). Architects of Richmond: Charles M. Robinson. Architecture Richmond. https://architecturerichmond.com/architects-of-richmond-charles-m-robinson/"],"odd_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eCONTENT WARNING:\nThis material contains offensive or harmful language. This material contains references to outdated terminology for African Americans, as well as for Native Americans. The terms \"Colored\" and Negro\", in commom parlance when the drawings were created, are used throughout the architectural drawings to refer to Black people. The term \"Indian\" is also used to refer to Native Americans. These terms are primarily found in the titles of architectural drawings. Titles remain as they were found for historical context. The purpose of this note is to give users the opportunity to decide whether they need or want to view these materials, or at least, to mentally or emotionally prepare themselves to view the materials.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSome items in this collection sustained damage from pests and/or mold prior to coming to the Library. Preservation staff has frozen and stabilized the items to prevent further damage from pests or mold and cleaned the items to facilitate handling. 10/20/23\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe commission number for this set of drawings is the same as the number for the \"John W. Daniel School, Newport News Schools, VA, 1913\" drawings. However, there is no indication of the projects being related.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe commission number for this set of drawings is the same as the number for the \"Eastville High School, Northampton County, VA, 1913\" drawings. However, there is no indication of the projects being related.\u003c/p\u003e"],"odd_heading_ssm":["Content Warning","Conservation and Preservation","General","General"],"odd_tesim":["CONTENT WARNING:\nThis material contains offensive or harmful language. This material contains references to outdated terminology for African Americans, as well as for Native Americans. The terms \"Colored\" and Negro\", in commom parlance when the drawings were created, are used throughout the architectural drawings to refer to Black people. The term \"Indian\" is also used to refer to Native Americans. These terms are primarily found in the titles of architectural drawings. Titles remain as they were found for historical context. The purpose of this note is to give users the opportunity to decide whether they need or want to view these materials, or at least, to mentally or emotionally prepare themselves to view the materials.","Some items in this collection sustained damage from pests and/or mold prior to coming to the Library. Preservation staff has frozen and stabilized the items to prevent further damage from pests or mold and cleaned the items to facilitate handling. 10/20/23","The commission number for this set of drawings is the same as the number for the \"John W. Daniel School, Newport News Schools, VA, 1913\" drawings. However, there is no indication of the projects being related.","The commission number for this set of drawings is the same as the number for the \"Eastville High School, Northampton County, VA, 1913\" drawings. However, there is no indication of the projects being related."],"prefercite_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eMSS 16518, Charles M. Robinson and Principals Architectural Records, Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections Library, University of Virginia.\u003c/p\u003e"],"prefercite_tesim":["MSS 16518, Charles M. Robinson and Principals Architectural Records, Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections Library, University of Virginia."],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe Charles M. Robinson and Principals Architectural Records consist of materials about Charles M. Robinson, and the office records, architectural and design plans, and project photograph files of the Charles M. Robinson, Architect firm and successor firms. The materials document the business operations of the firms, as well as their role in developing the city of Richmond, VA, and in developing various institutions and organizations across the state of Virginia. The works in this collection also demonstrate the significance of the firm's activities on communities in these areas. It is divided into four series. \u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eSeries 1, Charles M. Robinson Files (1978, 2020, undated; 1 folder), includes copies of documents about Charles M. Robinson, such as a copy of his Architecture License. There is also a copy of a short essay about Robinson's role in the construction of the ACCA Shrine, now known as the Altria Theater. \u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eSeries 2, Office records (circa 1935-1992, undated; 18 folders), includes office records, which are arranged in decreasing order of their significance/functionality to the firm's operations. Most notably are the lists of commissions, index to the architectural drawings, and the commission notes. These records cover the majority of the timeline following Robinson's death. \u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eSeries 3, Architectural drawings (1907-2012, undated; 3 oversized boxes, 93 flat file folders, 4 tubes, 1457 tube boxes), the largest part of this collection, consists of the firm's architectural drawings and design plans, as well as the drawings and plans Robinson created in his role as the official school board architect for several cities and counties in Virginia, and as an architect for the Virginia State Board of Health. They span more than a century beginning in 1907 and ending in 2012 and represent over 1600 projects.   \u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eIncluded are drawings, designs, and plans for educational institutions, hospitals, churches, offices, retail stores, private residences, and plots across the state of Virginia. The series also includes topographic maps and site studies. There are original designs, proposed designs, voided designs, additions, alterations, and renovations. The designs are comprehensive, and include work on interiors and exteriors, plumbing and ventilation systems, and landscape works. \u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003ePrimary, secondary, and post-secondary schools in locations across Virginia are very well represented by the plans in this collection. More well-known post-secondary educational institutions include the College of William and Mary, James Madison University, Raford University, University of Mary Washington, George Mason University, and Virginia Commonwealth University. However, the number of primary and secondary schools represented in the collection is even greater. \u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eOf particular significance are the designs and plans the firm created for educational institutions for students from underrepresented, historically oppressed, and marginalized groups. These include the Virginia School for the Deaf and Blind, the Virginia State University, the nation's first fully-state supported four-year post-secondary learning institution for Black Americans, and the HBCUs Norfolk State University and Virginia Union University. \u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eThe works that Robinson completed as an architect for the Virginia State Board of Health include plans and designs for the Catawba, Blue Ridge, and Piedmont Tuberculosis sanitoriums (rehabilitation center, hospice, etc.). Robinson's work in this role also affected the lives of people from underrepresented groups, as the Piedmont institution was developed specifically for the care of Black residents of Virginia. \u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eSeries 4, Project photograph files (circa 1855-1999, undated; 9 boxes, 15 folders), includes many of the project photograph files from the architectural firm. Although there are some items from Robinson's time with the firm, the large majority are dated and document the projects from after his death on August 20, 1932. The photograph file index introduces the rest of the series, which includes prints, negatives, photo documentation from John Binford Walford and Oscar Pendleton Wright's photograph albums, and undated presentation photos. \u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eDates: 1907 – 2012, bulk date 1907-1995  \u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eThis series consists of architectural rolls that contain drawings, designs, and plans of educational institutions, hospitals, churches, offices, retail stores, and private residences across the state of Virginia. The series also includes rolls that hold topographic maps, plot and general layouts, and site studies. The drawings comprise original designs, proposed designs, voided designs, additions, alterations, and renovations. The designs are comprehensive, and include work on interiors and exteriors, plumbing and ventilation systems, and landscape works. For a detailed inventory of the drawings, please see the Charles M. Robinson architectural records drawing inventory in the External Documents field.\u003c/p\u003e"],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents"],"scopecontent_tesim":["The Charles M. Robinson and Principals Architectural Records consist of materials about Charles M. Robinson, and the office records, architectural and design plans, and project photograph files of the Charles M. Robinson, Architect firm and successor firms. The materials document the business operations of the firms, as well as their role in developing the city of Richmond, VA, and in developing various institutions and organizations across the state of Virginia. The works in this collection also demonstrate the significance of the firm's activities on communities in these areas. It is divided into four series. ","Series 1, Charles M. Robinson Files (1978, 2020, undated; 1 folder), includes copies of documents about Charles M. Robinson, such as a copy of his Architecture License. There is also a copy of a short essay about Robinson's role in the construction of the ACCA Shrine, now known as the Altria Theater. ","Series 2, Office records (circa 1935-1992, undated; 18 folders), includes office records, which are arranged in decreasing order of their significance/functionality to the firm's operations. Most notably are the lists of commissions, index to the architectural drawings, and the commission notes. These records cover the majority of the timeline following Robinson's death. ","Series 3, Architectural drawings (1907-2012, undated; 3 oversized boxes, 93 flat file folders, 4 tubes, 1457 tube boxes), the largest part of this collection, consists of the firm's architectural drawings and design plans, as well as the drawings and plans Robinson created in his role as the official school board architect for several cities and counties in Virginia, and as an architect for the Virginia State Board of Health. They span more than a century beginning in 1907 and ending in 2012 and represent over 1600 projects.   ","Included are drawings, designs, and plans for educational institutions, hospitals, churches, offices, retail stores, private residences, and plots across the state of Virginia. The series also includes topographic maps and site studies. There are original designs, proposed designs, voided designs, additions, alterations, and renovations. The designs are comprehensive, and include work on interiors and exteriors, plumbing and ventilation systems, and landscape works. ","Primary, secondary, and post-secondary schools in locations across Virginia are very well represented by the plans in this collection. More well-known post-secondary educational institutions include the College of William and Mary, James Madison University, Raford University, University of Mary Washington, George Mason University, and Virginia Commonwealth University. However, the number of primary and secondary schools represented in the collection is even greater. ","Of particular significance are the designs and plans the firm created for educational institutions for students from underrepresented, historically oppressed, and marginalized groups. These include the Virginia School for the Deaf and Blind, the Virginia State University, the nation's first fully-state supported four-year post-secondary learning institution for Black Americans, and the HBCUs Norfolk State University and Virginia Union University. ","The works that Robinson completed as an architect for the Virginia State Board of Health include plans and designs for the Catawba, Blue Ridge, and Piedmont Tuberculosis sanitoriums (rehabilitation center, hospice, etc.). Robinson's work in this role also affected the lives of people from underrepresented groups, as the Piedmont institution was developed specifically for the care of Black residents of Virginia. ","Series 4, Project photograph files (circa 1855-1999, undated; 9 boxes, 15 folders), includes many of the project photograph files from the architectural firm. Although there are some items from Robinson's time with the firm, the large majority are dated and document the projects from after his death on August 20, 1932. The photograph file index introduces the rest of the series, which includes prints, negatives, photo documentation from John Binford Walford and Oscar Pendleton Wright's photograph albums, and undated presentation photos. ","Dates: 1907 – 2012, bulk date 1907-1995  ","This series consists of architectural rolls that contain drawings, designs, and plans of educational institutions, hospitals, churches, offices, retail stores, and private residences across the state of Virginia. The series also includes rolls that hold topographic maps, plot and general layouts, and site studies. The drawings comprise original designs, proposed designs, voided designs, additions, alterations, and renovations. The designs are comprehensive, and include work on interiors and exteriors, plumbing and ventilation systems, and landscape works. For a detailed inventory of the drawings, please see the Charles M. Robinson architectural records drawing inventory in the External Documents field."],"userestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThis collection contains some in-copyright material. Visit our Permissions and Publishing page (https://www.library.virginia.edu/special-collections/services/publishing) for more information about use of Special Collections materials. The library can provide copyright information upon request, but users are responsible for making their own determination about lawful use of collections materials.\u003c/p\u003e"],"userestrict_heading_ssm":["Conditions Governing Use"],"userestrict_tesim":["This collection contains some in-copyright material. Visit our Permissions and Publishing page (https://www.library.virginia.edu/special-collections/services/publishing) for more information about use of Special Collections materials. The library can provide copyright information upon request, but users are responsible for making their own determination about lawful use of collections materials."],"names_ssim":["Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections Library","Robinson","Robinson, Charles  M. (Morrison), 1867-1932","Charles Morrison Robinson","James T. Robinson","Elizabeth Crockett Robinson","D.S. Hopkins","John K. Peebles","Annie Custer","Charles Custer Robinson","George T. Smith","R.B. Crockett","George Winkler","Benjamin A. Ruffin","John Binford Walford"],"corpname_ssim":["Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections Library"],"famname_ssim":["Robinson"],"names_coll_ssim":["Robinson, Charles  M. (Morrison), 1867-1932"],"persname_ssim":["Robinson, Charles  M. (Morrison), 1867-1932","Charles Morrison Robinson","James T. Robinson","Elizabeth Crockett Robinson","D.S. Hopkins","John K. Peebles","Annie Custer","Charles Custer Robinson","George T. Smith","R.B. Crockett","George Winkler","Benjamin A. Ruffin","John Binford Walford"],"language_ssim":["English"],"descrules_ssm":["Describing Archives: A Content Standard"],"total_component_count_is":1707,"online_item_count_is":0,"component_level_isim":[0],"sort_isi":0,"timestamp":"2026-05-28T16:05:34.006Z"}]}},"label":"Breadcrumbs"}}},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_repositories_3_resources_1030_c03_c03"}},{"id":"viu_viu00917_c01_c01_c01","type":"Subseries","attributes":{"title":"A. Accounts Payable, numbered sequence,\n                     1-10","breadcrumbs":{"id":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_viu00917_c01_c01_c01#breadcrumbs","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":{"ref_ssi":"viu_viu00917_c01_c01_c01","ref_ssm":["viu_viu00917_c01_c01_c01"],"id":"viu_viu00917_c01_c01_c01","ead_ssi":"viu_viu00917","_root_":"viu_viu00917","_nest_parent_":"viu_viu00917_c01_c01","parent_ssi":"viu_viu00917_c01_c01","parent_ssim":["viu_viu00917","viu_viu00917_c01","viu_viu00917_c01_c01"],"parent_ids_ssim":["viu_viu00917","viu_viu00917_c01","viu_viu00917_c01_c01"],"parent_unittitles_ssm":["Papers of the Low Moor Iron Company \n         1873-1927","Bound Volumes","Accounts"],"parent_unittitles_tesim":["Papers of the Low Moor Iron Company \n         1873-1927","Bound Volumes","Accounts"],"text":["Papers of the Low Moor Iron Company \n         1873-1927","Bound Volumes","Accounts","A. Accounts Payable, numbered sequence,\n                     1-10","18 volumes"],"title_filing_ssi":"A. Accounts Payable, numbered sequence,\n                     1-10","title_ssm":["A. Accounts Payable, numbered sequence,\n                     1-10"],"title_tesim":["A. Accounts Payable, numbered sequence,\n                     1-10"],"unitdate_other_ssim":["1902-1923"],"normalized_date_ssm":["1902/1923"],"normalized_title_ssm":["A. Accounts Payable, numbered sequence,\n                     1-10"],"component_level_isim":[3],"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"collection_ssim":["Papers of the Low Moor Iron Company \n         1873-1927"],"physdesc_tesim":["18 volumes"],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"child_component_count_isi":0,"level_ssm":["Subseries"],"level_ssim":["Subseries"],"sort_isi":3,"date_range_isim":[1902,1903,1904,1905,1906,1907,1908,1909,1910,1911,1912,1913,1914,1915,1916,1917,1918,1919,1920,1921,1922,1923],"_nest_path_":"/components#0/components#0/components#0","timestamp":"2026-05-21T12:10:02.328Z","collection":{"numFound":1,"start":0,"numFoundExact":true,"docs":[{"id":"viu_viu00917","ead_ssi":"viu_viu00917","_root_":"viu_viu00917","_nest_parent_":"viu_viu00917","ead_source_url_ssi":"data/uva-sc/viu00917.xml","title_ssm":["Papers of the Low Moor Iron Company \n         1873-1927"],"title_tesim":["Papers of the Low Moor Iron Company \n         1873-1927"],"level_ssm":["collection"],"level_ssim":["Collection"],"unitid_ssm":["662"],"text":["662","Papers of the Low Moor Iron Company \n         1873-1927","95 linear feer + 1200\n         volumes","Stored off-site. Users must request boxes 48 hours in advance of desired use. Neither drop-in nor next-day requests can be fulfilled. For additional information, contact Special Collections. \n","The word \"organization\" is used here with considerable\n         diffidence, for any researcher studying the container list\n         that follows will realize quickly that there is no\n         organization in the usual sense of the word.","As noted under \"Provenance,\" the Low Moor Iron Company\n         papers were subjected to a number of moves; when processing\n         began in the fall of 1976, no discernible scheme of\n         organization could be determined.","The first step was to review the series of coded numbers\n         placed on the bundles of papers before they were moved to\n         the dormitory attic, but these did not provide any sort of\n         useful organization. Next, the spine titles of the original\n         letter boxes were reviewed (they had been copied onto the\n         gray cardboard sheets before the move to the dormitory\n         attic), but they, too, proved useless.","These steps having provided no scheme, and after a\n         considerable hiatus due to a turnover in student processors\n         on the collection, the new student processors were\n         instructed to begin a box-by-box inventory of the contents\n         of the collection. During this inventory, old folders were\n         replaced with acid-free ones, and the original folder\n         headings were copied onto the new ones. Some removal of\n         paper clips was accomplished, and the materials were\n         reviewed and notes taken for the guide.","Some consolidation of materials was accomplished, and in\n         other cases, materials were moved. This work has created\n         some problems in the numbering of the boxes. Thus, the\n         researchers will find boxes marked \"6A\" and \"23C\"; he will\n         also discover that certain box numbers have been entirely\n         omitted. As the box numbers exist only to aid in the\n         location of material, it was not felt that the unusual\n         numbers and the omissions would cause problems in working\n         with the papers.","A certain amount of movement of boxes within the\n         collection, and of materials among boxes, probably would\n         ease use of it. But what processing was accomplished on\n         this project took far longer than had been anticipated, and\n         there was no time in the late spring of 1978, when the\n         processors had to complete their work with the project, to\n         undertake a mass movement of material. Thus, they stand in\n         the order in which we found them at the beginning of the\n         project.","The Low Moor Iron Company, the first producer of pig\n         iron in Virginia according to the company's claims, was a\n         self-contained manufacturing unit producing from its own\n         mines the coal, limestone, and iron ore needed for its iron\n         production. Located in Low Moor near Clifton Forge in\n         Alleghany County in western Virginia, an area rich in\n         mineral deposits, the company was in operation from\n         1872-1930, producing only pig iron; it never attempted to\n         produce finished iron products.","Coal came to the Low Moor furnaces from the Kay Moor\n         Mines at Kay Moor, West Virginia, about thirty miles from\n         Low Moor; limestone was produced from the Low Moor\n         limestone quarries; and iron ore came from the Fenwick,\n         Dolly Ann, Jordan, Rich Patch, Low Moor, and Longdale\n         Mines, most of them within twenty miles of Low Moor at\n         Covington or Clifton Forge.","The towns of Low Moor and Kay Moor were company towns in\n         every respect. Workers lived in company-owned houses,\n         bought food in company stores, worshiped at the company\n         church, saw movies in the company theater, were treated in\n         the company hospital, and were buried in the company\n         cemetery. Workers received part of their pay in scrip that\n         they exchanged for goods and services. According to a\n         statement from the Kay Moor Mines dated November 1904, Kay\n         Moor then employed 338 people, paid them an average wage of\n         $36.26 per month, and issued half of their pay in scrip.\n         Kay Moor had four stores; Low Moor had seven or eight. All\n         of these stores carried large inventories which are\n         detailed in the collection. These inventories are valuable\n         to anyone interested in determining the wants and needs of\n         a coal miner and his family.","In the late 1910's and 1920's Kay Moor had a company\n         theater called the Azure Theater which seated about 300\n         people. There were also plans for a company-owned social\n         center, to have pool tables, a soda fountain, and\n         provisions for dancing and skating. The company was in\n         tough economic straits by the 1920's, however, and there is\n         no evidence that the social center was built. The town of\n         Low Moor was so completely under the company's influence\n         that one of Low Moor Iron Company's assistant managers\n         served as the town sheriff. He often foreclosed on people\n         who did not pay their debts, and drove troublesome people\n         \"out of town on a rail\" as he put it.","The Low Moor Iron Company's fortunes fluctuated during\n         the various business cycles between the years 1880-1930.\n         Low Moor was one of the larger pig iron producers in\n         Virginia, but Virginia pig iron production was not\n         important nationally. Low Moor officials sometimes sold\n         their product themselves, but more often they used agents,\n         the prevalent method at the time. Low Moor Iron Company\n         used a variety of agents through the 1900's. James F. Bryan\n         acted as the exclusive agent for the sale of Kay Moor Coal\n         from September 21, 1903 to September, 1905. From about 1890\n         until about 1910 Dalton Nash and Company were the exclusive\n         eastern agents of Low Moor Iron. After that time the\n         exclusive agency went to Philips Isham and Company located\n         in New York. From about 1890 the western agency was handled\n         chiefly by Thomas Mack and Company. After 1902 Thomas Mack\n         and Company underwent a name change, becoming Walter\n         Wallingford and Company, with offices located in\n         Cincinnati, Pittsburgh, and Chicago.","Perhaps the Low Moor Iron Company's biggest problem over\n         the years was obtaining railroad cars for the\n         transportation of its finished product. Low Moor Iron\n         Company had its own cars for transporting its raw materials\n         among its various facilities. For the long haul necessary\n         for its finished goods, however, it depended upon the\n         services of the Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad, and the\n         relationship was not always a happy one. The Low Moor\n         Company complained many times to the C \u0026 O Railroad\n         about the discrepancies between long-and shorthaul freight\n         rates. Low Moor also had trouble getting cars from the C\n         \u0026 O. In a letter to one of Low Moor Company's agents\n         from an irate customer dated 1898, the customer wrote: \"We\n         wrote you on Saturday and endeavored to question upon your\n         mind the necessity of taking care of us with Low Moor iron.\n         We are on our uppers--there is not a pound of Low Moor iron\n         in the yard. Of the one hundred tons ordered some time ago,\n         not one pound of it has been received.\" This was, according\n         to the Low Moor Iron Company, because they could not get\n         the railroad cars. In a letter from Thomas Mack and Company\n         dated November 26, 1901, to General Manager E. C. Means:\n         \"We are hopeful that the car supply will get better because\n         of the number of orders you have of ours for prompt\n         shipment. Our customers are complaining that they are not\n         getting the iron fast enough. . . . We hope that the\n         railroad will be able to supply you with empty cars.\" In\n         another letter dated 1916 to John B. Guernsey, then acting\n         General Manager of the Low Moor Iron Company, \"We were not\n         supplied with coke cars for today's loading, and\n         consequently we have been practically down of Kay Moor\n         ovens all day.\"","The problem of procuring labor also plagued the Low Moor\n         Company. The company sometimes tried to hire immigrant\n         laborers and send the men directly to Low Moor from New\n         York City. There were problems with this, as is explained\n         in the following letter dated April 7, 1906: \n          To Mr. George Wickes \n             Supt. of Mines \n             Kay Moor, Virginia \n             Dear George, \n             Tony arrived with twenty one men last night. One\n            got away in Jersey two in Washington D.C., four in\n            Charlottesville. Some of the men are very good looking,\n            but taken as a whole they are the worst lot I have ever\n            seen: Irish, German-Jews, and Italians. . . . Our New\n            York transportations to this place have never been a\n            success. Signed, \n             Ed D. Wickes Supt. of Mines Low Moor usually employed labor agencies, one\n         of which was Atwood's Employment Agency. Often the Low Moor\n         Company would request certain nationalities, believing them\n         to be better workers than others. Sometimes the company\n         would request a gang of twenty made up of \"ten Greeks and\n         ten Italians.\" Many of the immigrants fled Low Moor and Kay\n         Moor when they learned that they would have to work\n         underground. There is a fair amount of material on\n         immigrant labor and its procurement in the collection, and\n         it is noted in the description of the box contents.","Low Moor Iron Company not only had trouble procuring\n         labor, but it also had trouble with labor already employed\n         in the mines and at the factory. Labor dissension and\n         strikes troubled the Kay Moor Mines through the 1900's. The\n         great coal strike of 1902 hurt the Low Moor Company's coal\n         mining operation, but by 1903 things were \"nearly back to\n         normal\" according to the mine superintendent. There was\n         still trouble at Kay Moor Mines, however. In a letter dated\n         April 26, 1906, to the treasurer of Low Moor Company, the\n         manager of the mines wrote about the trouble in \"trying to\n         get the agitators out.\" The mines were seventy-five men\n         short of the total labor force needed because many of the\n         coal miners returned to their farms during the spring.\n         There were rumblings of another strike at Kay Moor, the\n         result of which was to be a fourteen percent increase in\n         wages for the Kay Moor Mine workers via an agreement with\n         the United Mine Workers Union in December.","The Low Moor Iron Company grew along with the rest of\n         Virginia industry in the 1890's and 1900's. Starting with\n         only one furnace in the 1870's, it opened a second furnace\n         at Covington, Virginia, in 1891. In 1911 it opened a third\n         furnace, this time at Low Moor. Covington, with its heavy\n         industry, soon became known as the \"Pittsburgh of\n         Virginia.\" Virginia's pig iron production rose from 9,000\n         short tons in 1870 to 544,034 long tons in 1903. Judging\n         from the Low Moor Company's correspondence, the most\n         prosperous period for the company fell between the years\n         1895-1907. In the years between 1907-1917 problems befell\n         the Virginia pig iron industry. In a letter from William W.\n         Hearns, the president of the Virginia based Princess Pig\n         Iron Company, to U. S. Senator Thomas S. Martin, Hearns\n         writes of the problems of the Virginia pig iron industry:\n         \"There is not a blast furnace in Virginia that is making\n         any money from the manufacture of pig iron. The cause of\n         this is there is an exceedingly low price on pig iron in\n         the country at the present time, and the increased cost of\n         manufacturing is due to the increase in wages in all\n         lines.\" With the outbreak of World War I prices rose\n         dramatically, but in a market report to Low Moor dated\n         November 11, 1916, it was stated that: \"In spite of the\n         high prices, it is not a picnic to be in the iron industry.\n         There is a desperate shortage of cars and equipment in the\n         coal and iron districts, and in consequence there are\n         troubles of all kinds to get materials shipped. The\n         situation has grown serious.\"","When America became involved in the First World War, it\n         meant a boost for the Low Moor Iron Company. The government\n         helped it procure labor, and even helped it repair its\n         furnaces. The problem of supplies and cars for their\n         shipments, however, plagued the company more than ever. It\n         had a good deal of trouble getting all the raw materials it\n         needed due chiefly to the \"tight ship\" run by Harry F.\n         Byrd, Sr., U.S. Fuel Administrator for Virginia. After the\n         war very serious problems began to trouble the Low Moor\n         Iron Company. The demand for iron fell precipitously and a\n         short but severe depression ensued from 1919-1922. The\n         depression seemed to hit the iron industry especially hard.\n         Prices took a huge drop due to the lack of demand, and many\n         pre-war contracts had to be revalued. To compound the\n         company's problems, the Kay Moor Mines went on strike in\n         1919. This strike was quickly settled, as the market for\n         coal was so good that the Low Moor Company ceased taking\n         orders temporarily in 1921 as it could not fill the orders\n         it had on hand.","The Low Moor Company furnaces lay idle for some twenty\n         months. Finally, in November 1922 one of Low Moor's\n         furnaces was finally fired up. While prosperity gradually\n         returned to the rest of the country, the Low Moor Iron\n         Company never recovered. Production of pig iron in the\n         Virginia iron industry declined from 544,034 tons in 1903\n         to 148,053 tons in 1923, considered a good year for the\n         industry as a whole. In February 1926 Low Moor officials\n         talked of merging with two other iron companies in order to\n         revive the iron business for the three companies. The\n         merger, however, never occurred. By late 1926 the company\n         was in the process of liquidation. An advertisement in the\n         Charleston, West Virginia, Daily Mail dated April 30, 1927,\n         told of a huge warehouse sale at the Low Moor Iron Company.\n         The advertisement noted \"thousands of screws, pipe\n         fittings, valves, etc.\" The last piece of correspondence\n         from the Low Moor Iron Company in the collection is dated\n         1929. It deals with the sale of a machine.","Why did the iron industry in Virginia decline as it did?\n         Some say that lack of speed, efficiency, and a decent\n         transportation system for Alleghany County caused it. In a\n         letter from C. E. Bertie, secretary of the Virginia Pig\n         Iron Association, to the \n          Manufacturers Record dated 1925, Bertie claimed that it was the\n         tremendous rise in the cost of transportation. Virginia, he\n         claimed, had almost no home market. Over 80% of its normal\n         production was shipped out to other states. The failure of\n         the Interstate Commerce Commission to treat Virginia\n         furnaces as southern furnaces was the cause of much of the\n         trouble. From 1914-1925 there were four blanket increases\n         in freight rates in the country, of which only one applied\n         equally to all localities. Southern furnaces were received\n         only two increases--a 25% increase in 1918 and a 25%\n         increase in 1920--but northern furnaces had had 5%, 15%,\n         25%, and 40% increases in their transportation costs.\n         Virginia furnaces, although recognized as southern\n         furnaces, had had freight rates increased in line with the\n         northern furnaces. Prior to the war Virginia iron reached\n         all points in Ohio, Indiana, Michigan, and Illinois on a\n         competitive basis with southern furnaces. After World War I\n         the advantage was limited to a small portion of\n         southeastern Ohio. All of Indiana, Illinois, and Michigan\n         were now lost to the Virginia producers. The Virginia\n         producer, according to Bertie, felt that the freight rates\n         should be restored to a relationship with southern\n         furnaces. If what Bertie said was true, the other southern\n         states iron industries should not have been in the same\n         desperate economic straits as Virginia's, and statistics\n         should support this. In the 1920's production rose to new\n         heights in Alabama. In Tennessee, however, iron production\n         plunged to new lows during the 1920's. While the south\n         accounted for 10.2% of the entire U. S. production in the\n         years 1919-1924, Virginia accounted for less than 1% during\n         those years. In 1915 Virginia accounted for over 6% of the\n         U.S. iron production. One can see a decline in other areas\n         of the south than Virginia. While the discrepancies in the\n         freight rates may have helped cause the decline, clearly\n         there are other reasons.","During the 1900's there was a discovery of extremely\n         rich iron ore deposits in the mid-west. Much of this ore\n         was on or near the surface, making the mining of it both\n         easy and inexpensive. This in turn lowered production costs\n         of the pig iron. This caused iron production to shift to\n         that region, and resulted in a decline in the Virginia iron\n         industry. There was a sharp increase in iron production in\n         the mid-west through the 1920's. The iron ore in the\n         mid-west may have been of better quality than Virginia, but\n         the iron ore in Virginia was of sufficient quality to\n         produce a good pig iron. The western ore deposits were not\n         as conveniently located as Virginia deposits, but the\n         inexpensiveness of production more than made up for it.","In examining the rise and fall of the Low Moor Iron\n         Company, we can see a situation in which the conditions for\n         the manufacture of iron were nearly ideal. There was plenty\n         of land for expansion and resources for the manufacture of\n         the iron. The major internal problem faced by the Low Moor\n         Iron Company was that of transportation. External\n         developments, however, caused the final demise of the Low\n         Moor Iron Company.","Low Moor Iron Company Personnel:","Executive Staff: Managing Director, Colonel H. M.\n         Goodwin: ca. 1881. General Managers: H. G. Merry: ca.\n         1884-1902; E. C. Means: ca. 1905-1915; J. P. Guernsey: ca.\n         1915 (acting General Manager); F. U. Humbert: ca.\n         1916-1929. Assistant General Manager: E. B. Wilkinson: ca.\n         1909-1915. Treasurers and Assistant Treasurers: Edward Low:\n         ca. 1886-1898; Frank Lyman (in New York): ca. 1898-1919; S.\n         G. Cragill (Asst. Treasurer): ca. 1900-1915; H. A. Dalton:\n         ca. 1921-1929; John Lipscomb (Asst. Treasurer): ca.\n         1918-1928.","Factory and Mine Supervisors: Kay Moor Superintendents:\n         C. C. Cooke: ca. 1918; Ed. D. Wickes: ca. 1906; H. L.\n         Tansell: ca. 1903; A. H. Reed: ca. 1906. Kay Moor Managers:\n         J. W. Monteith: manager of mines. ca. 1918; promoted in\n         1925 to general superintendent in charge of mine plants,\n         coke ovens, shops, repairs, and construction; A. L.\n         Monteith: assistant superintendent of mines, ca. 1918;\n         George T. Wickes: manager of Covington mines, ca.\n         1906-1917; Ross Howell, ca. 1918. Stack Mines\n         Superintendents: J. H. Carpenter: ca. 1906; C. D.\n         Oberschain: ca. 1907; J. L. Harris: ca. 1903; John S. Ham:\n         ca. 1891-1901. Rich Patch Mines Superintendents: John R.\n         Thompson: foreman, ca. 1906. Low Moor assorted other\n         personnel: S. L. Tulley: trainmaster, ca. 1906; B. J.\n         Shenkley: foreman, Low Moor limestone quarries; L. Q. Wood:\n         assistant traffic manager, ca. 1919.","The Low Moor Iron Company ceased operations in 1930;\n            what happened to the records of the company in the years\n            immediately following is not known, but in 1939, the Green\n            Bookman, a Charlottesville bookshop, sold the records to\n            the University of Virginia Library.","The records arrived at the receiving room door of the\n            new Alderman Library on October 16, 1939, in a trailer\n            truck whose load was estimated to weigh about fourteen\n            tons. As the manuscripts staff dug around in the piles of\n            over 1200 account books, and countless boxes of papers they\n            realized that the company had saved almost all of its\n            papers including checks, invoices, vouchers, and receipts,\n            and certain of these records were destroyed as their\n            information was recorded in other records. Once the bulk of\n            the collection had been reduced, the remaining records were\n            transferred to the stack area of the Division of Rare Books\n            and Manuscripts.","By 1958, little storage space remained in Alderman\n            Library, and the Rare Books and Manuscripts Division was\n            especially crowded because of the rapid growth of its\n            collections. After an examination of its storage areas, the\n            division's staff decided to move the Low Moor records to\n            the attic of one of the student dormitories. The collection\n            had had little use chiefly because there was no finding\n            aid. There seemed little likelihood of extensive researcher\n            use until the collection could be processed.","In preparation for the move, the old letter boxes in\n            which much of the collection had arrived in the Library\n            were discarded. The records from each box were placed\n            between sheets of the heavy gray cardboard used to protect\n            unbound newspapers in the Library's stacks, and the spine\n            labels of the old letter boxes were copied onto the\n            cardboard. The resulting bundles were wrapped with brown\n            Kraft paper and tied up with string. The bundles were\n            numbered. Whatever original order the letter boxes may have\n            had was lost by the time they arrived in the Library, and\n            after the bundling, removal to a dormitory attic, and\n            subsequent return to the Library in 1976, all vestiges of\n            the original order were lost.","The bundles remained in the dormitory attic for almost\n            twenty years. Occasional visits were made by the division\n            staff to check on their condition, and on very rare\n            occasions, a researcher was brave enough to ask to be shown\n            the collection. Once the researcher saw the imposing amount\n            of material and the conditions in the attic, interest in\n            using the collection invariably died.","In late 1976 a grant from the National Endowment for the\n            Humanities was obtained to allow the Library to process the\n            Low Moor Iron Company papers, and the papers of Edward L.\n            Stone and the Borderland Coal Company, another large\n            collection of records stored in the same dormitory attic.\n            All of these records and papers were moved back to the\n            Library where the bundles were cleaned and opened. The\n            contents of each were placed in a Hollinger storage box,\n            and all notes on the paper wrappings and on the gray\n            cardboard sheets were recorded.","The more than 1200 bound accounting records of the Low\n            Moor Iron Company were surveyed by the grant project staff.\n            The contents of each volume were noted on a mimeographed\n            form, and later typed on 3 x 5\" cards to create a\n            readily-accessible file for the Manuscripts Reading Room.\n            This information was also typed on pages to be added to\n            this guide.","The Low Moor Iron Company papers consist of\n         approximately 280 four-inch Hollinger archives boxes (ca.\n         95 linear feet) of records, ca. 1885-1927, and some 1200\n         bound volumes of the company's accounting records,\n         1873-1927, of this iron producing company located in Low\n         Moor (four miles southwest of Clifton Forge), Alleghany\n         County, Virginia.","This material consists of records typical of those\n         produced by a firm of this type in the period, but as the\n         company owned its own coal and iron mines and limestone\n         quarries, there is considerable information about the\n         production of these raw materials. Large numbers of the\n         records that deal with the company's employees have\n         survived: time books, payroll books, hands ledgers, and the\n         like. Because these books sometimes include information\n         about the employee's trade or job with the company, and as\n         race is indicated in some of the records, these books\n         should provide date for studies of the structure and upward\n         mobility within the labor force, patterns of\n         ethnic--possibly racial--occupational penetration and\n         mobility, material conditions of the workers, and so on.\n         The papers should permit a range of studies detailing the\n         pattern and evolution of industrial organization in the\n         iron industry, and the evolution of markets and marketing\n         structures for the entire period. Because the company was\n         dependent upon railroads to move its raw materials to the\n         furnaces, and for the marketing of its products, there is\n         considerable information about railroads and their\n         relationship to their customers.","See the \n             \n            University of Virginia Library’s use policy.","English"],"unitid_tesim":["662"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Papers of the Low Moor Iron Company \n         1873-1927"],"collection_title_tesim":["Papers of the Low Moor Iron Company \n         1873-1927"],"collection_ssim":["Papers of the Low Moor Iron Company \n         1873-1927"],"repository_ssm":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"acqinfo_ssim":["This collection was purchased from Green Bookman in\n            1939."],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"physdesc_tesim":["95 linear feer + 1200\n         volumes"],"accessrestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eStored off-site. Users must request boxes 48 hours in advance of desired use. Neither drop-in nor next-day requests can be fulfilled. For additional information, contact Special Collections. \n\u003c/p\u003e"],"accessrestrict_heading_ssm":["Access Restrictions"],"accessrestrict_tesim":["Stored off-site. Users must request boxes 48 hours in advance of desired use. Neither drop-in nor next-day requests can be fulfilled. For additional information, contact Special Collections. \n"],"arrangement_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe word \"organization\" is used here with considerable\n         diffidence, for any researcher studying the container list\n         that follows will realize quickly that there is no\n         organization in the usual sense of the word.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAs noted under \"Provenance,\" the Low Moor Iron Company\n         papers were subjected to a number of moves; when processing\n         began in the fall of 1976, no discernible scheme of\n         organization could be determined.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe first step was to review the series of coded numbers\n         placed on the bundles of papers before they were moved to\n         the dormitory attic, but these did not provide any sort of\n         useful organization. Next, the spine titles of the original\n         letter boxes were reviewed (they had been copied onto the\n         gray cardboard sheets before the move to the dormitory\n         attic), but they, too, proved useless.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThese steps having provided no scheme, and after a\n         considerable hiatus due to a turnover in student processors\n         on the collection, the new student processors were\n         instructed to begin a box-by-box inventory of the contents\n         of the collection. During this inventory, old folders were\n         replaced with acid-free ones, and the original folder\n         headings were copied onto the new ones. Some removal of\n         paper clips was accomplished, and the materials were\n         reviewed and notes taken for the guide.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSome consolidation of materials was accomplished, and in\n         other cases, materials were moved. This work has created\n         some problems in the numbering of the boxes. Thus, the\n         researchers will find boxes marked \"6A\" and \"23C\"; he will\n         also discover that certain box numbers have been entirely\n         omitted. As the box numbers exist only to aid in the\n         location of material, it was not felt that the unusual\n         numbers and the omissions would cause problems in working\n         with the papers.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eA certain amount of movement of boxes within the\n         collection, and of materials among boxes, probably would\n         ease use of it. But what processing was accomplished on\n         this project took far longer than had been anticipated, and\n         there was no time in the late spring of 1978, when the\n         processors had to complete their work with the project, to\n         undertake a mass movement of material. Thus, they stand in\n         the order in which we found them at the beginning of the\n         project.\u003c/p\u003e"],"arrangement_heading_ssm":["Organization"],"arrangement_tesim":["The word \"organization\" is used here with considerable\n         diffidence, for any researcher studying the container list\n         that follows will realize quickly that there is no\n         organization in the usual sense of the word.","As noted under \"Provenance,\" the Low Moor Iron Company\n         papers were subjected to a number of moves; when processing\n         began in the fall of 1976, no discernible scheme of\n         organization could be determined.","The first step was to review the series of coded numbers\n         placed on the bundles of papers before they were moved to\n         the dormitory attic, but these did not provide any sort of\n         useful organization. Next, the spine titles of the original\n         letter boxes were reviewed (they had been copied onto the\n         gray cardboard sheets before the move to the dormitory\n         attic), but they, too, proved useless.","These steps having provided no scheme, and after a\n         considerable hiatus due to a turnover in student processors\n         on the collection, the new student processors were\n         instructed to begin a box-by-box inventory of the contents\n         of the collection. During this inventory, old folders were\n         replaced with acid-free ones, and the original folder\n         headings were copied onto the new ones. Some removal of\n         paper clips was accomplished, and the materials were\n         reviewed and notes taken for the guide.","Some consolidation of materials was accomplished, and in\n         other cases, materials were moved. This work has created\n         some problems in the numbering of the boxes. Thus, the\n         researchers will find boxes marked \"6A\" and \"23C\"; he will\n         also discover that certain box numbers have been entirely\n         omitted. As the box numbers exist only to aid in the\n         location of material, it was not felt that the unusual\n         numbers and the omissions would cause problems in working\n         with the papers.","A certain amount of movement of boxes within the\n         collection, and of materials among boxes, probably would\n         ease use of it. But what processing was accomplished on\n         this project took far longer than had been anticipated, and\n         there was no time in the late spring of 1978, when the\n         processors had to complete their work with the project, to\n         undertake a mass movement of material. Thus, they stand in\n         the order in which we found them at the beginning of the\n         project."],"bioghist_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe Low Moor Iron Company, the first producer of pig\n         iron in Virginia according to the company's claims, was a\n         self-contained manufacturing unit producing from its own\n         mines the coal, limestone, and iron ore needed for its iron\n         production. Located in Low Moor near Clifton Forge in\n         Alleghany County in western Virginia, an area rich in\n         mineral deposits, the company was in operation from\n         1872-1930, producing only pig iron; it never attempted to\n         produce finished iron products.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCoal came to the Low Moor furnaces from the Kay Moor\n         Mines at Kay Moor, West Virginia, about thirty miles from\n         Low Moor; limestone was produced from the Low Moor\n         limestone quarries; and iron ore came from the Fenwick,\n         Dolly Ann, Jordan, Rich Patch, Low Moor, and Longdale\n         Mines, most of them within twenty miles of Low Moor at\n         Covington or Clifton Forge.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe towns of Low Moor and Kay Moor were company towns in\n         every respect. Workers lived in company-owned houses,\n         bought food in company stores, worshiped at the company\n         church, saw movies in the company theater, were treated in\n         the company hospital, and were buried in the company\n         cemetery. Workers received part of their pay in scrip that\n         they exchanged for goods and services. According to a\n         statement from the Kay Moor Mines dated November 1904, Kay\n         Moor then employed 338 people, paid them an average wage of\n         $36.26 per month, and issued half of their pay in scrip.\n         Kay Moor had four stores; Low Moor had seven or eight. All\n         of these stores carried large inventories which are\n         detailed in the collection. These inventories are valuable\n         to anyone interested in determining the wants and needs of\n         a coal miner and his family.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIn the late 1910's and 1920's Kay Moor had a company\n         theater called the Azure Theater which seated about 300\n         people. There were also plans for a company-owned social\n         center, to have pool tables, a soda fountain, and\n         provisions for dancing and skating. The company was in\n         tough economic straits by the 1920's, however, and there is\n         no evidence that the social center was built. The town of\n         Low Moor was so completely under the company's influence\n         that one of Low Moor Iron Company's assistant managers\n         served as the town sheriff. He often foreclosed on people\n         who did not pay their debts, and drove troublesome people\n         \"out of town on a rail\" as he put it.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe Low Moor Iron Company's fortunes fluctuated during\n         the various business cycles between the years 1880-1930.\n         Low Moor was one of the larger pig iron producers in\n         Virginia, but Virginia pig iron production was not\n         important nationally. Low Moor officials sometimes sold\n         their product themselves, but more often they used agents,\n         the prevalent method at the time. Low Moor Iron Company\n         used a variety of agents through the 1900's. James F. Bryan\n         acted as the exclusive agent for the sale of Kay Moor Coal\n         from September 21, 1903 to September, 1905. From about 1890\n         until about 1910 Dalton Nash and Company were the exclusive\n         eastern agents of Low Moor Iron. After that time the\n         exclusive agency went to Philips Isham and Company located\n         in New York. From about 1890 the western agency was handled\n         chiefly by Thomas Mack and Company. After 1902 Thomas Mack\n         and Company underwent a name change, becoming Walter\n         Wallingford and Company, with offices located in\n         Cincinnati, Pittsburgh, and Chicago.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePerhaps the Low Moor Iron Company's biggest problem over\n         the years was obtaining railroad cars for the\n         transportation of its finished product. Low Moor Iron\n         Company had its own cars for transporting its raw materials\n         among its various facilities. For the long haul necessary\n         for its finished goods, however, it depended upon the\n         services of the Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad, and the\n         relationship was not always a happy one. The Low Moor\n         Company complained many times to the C \u0026amp; O Railroad\n         about the discrepancies between long-and shorthaul freight\n         rates. Low Moor also had trouble getting cars from the C\n         \u0026amp; O. In a letter to one of Low Moor Company's agents\n         from an irate customer dated 1898, the customer wrote: \"We\n         wrote you on Saturday and endeavored to question upon your\n         mind the necessity of taking care of us with Low Moor iron.\n         We are on our uppers--there is not a pound of Low Moor iron\n         in the yard. Of the one hundred tons ordered some time ago,\n         not one pound of it has been received.\" This was, according\n         to the Low Moor Iron Company, because they could not get\n         the railroad cars. In a letter from Thomas Mack and Company\n         dated November 26, 1901, to General Manager E. C. Means:\n         \"We are hopeful that the car supply will get better because\n         of the number of orders you have of ours for prompt\n         shipment. Our customers are complaining that they are not\n         getting the iron fast enough. . . . We hope that the\n         railroad will be able to supply you with empty cars.\" In\n         another letter dated 1916 to John B. Guernsey, then acting\n         General Manager of the Low Moor Iron Company, \"We were not\n         supplied with coke cars for today's loading, and\n         consequently we have been practically down of Kay Moor\n         ovens all day.\"\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe problem of procuring labor also plagued the Low Moor\n         Company. The company sometimes tried to hire immigrant\n         laborers and send the men directly to Low Moor from New\n         York City. There were problems with this, as is explained\n         in the following letter dated April 7, 1906: \n         \u003cblockquote\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eTo Mr. George Wickes \n            \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003eSupt. of Mines \n            \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003eKay Moor, Virginia \n            \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e\u003c/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eDear George, \n            \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003eTony arrived with twenty one men last night. One\n            got away in Jersey two in Washington D.C., four in\n            Charlottesville. Some of the men are very good looking,\n            but taken as a whole they are the worst lot I have ever\n            seen: Irish, German-Jews, and Italians. . . . Our New\n            York transportations to this place have never been a\n            success.\u003c/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eSigned, \n            \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003eEd D. Wickes Supt. of Mines\u003c/p\u003e\n\u003c/blockquote\u003eLow Moor usually employed labor agencies, one\n         of which was Atwood's Employment Agency. Often the Low Moor\n         Company would request certain nationalities, believing them\n         to be better workers than others. Sometimes the company\n         would request a gang of twenty made up of \"ten Greeks and\n         ten Italians.\" Many of the immigrants fled Low Moor and Kay\n         Moor when they learned that they would have to work\n         underground. There is a fair amount of material on\n         immigrant labor and its procurement in the collection, and\n         it is noted in the description of the box contents.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLow Moor Iron Company not only had trouble procuring\n         labor, but it also had trouble with labor already employed\n         in the mines and at the factory. Labor dissension and\n         strikes troubled the Kay Moor Mines through the 1900's. The\n         great coal strike of 1902 hurt the Low Moor Company's coal\n         mining operation, but by 1903 things were \"nearly back to\n         normal\" according to the mine superintendent. There was\n         still trouble at Kay Moor Mines, however. In a letter dated\n         April 26, 1906, to the treasurer of Low Moor Company, the\n         manager of the mines wrote about the trouble in \"trying to\n         get the agitators out.\" The mines were seventy-five men\n         short of the total labor force needed because many of the\n         coal miners returned to their farms during the spring.\n         There were rumblings of another strike at Kay Moor, the\n         result of which was to be a fourteen percent increase in\n         wages for the Kay Moor Mine workers via an agreement with\n         the United Mine Workers Union in December.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe Low Moor Iron Company grew along with the rest of\n         Virginia industry in the 1890's and 1900's. Starting with\n         only one furnace in the 1870's, it opened a second furnace\n         at Covington, Virginia, in 1891. In 1911 it opened a third\n         furnace, this time at Low Moor. Covington, with its heavy\n         industry, soon became known as the \"Pittsburgh of\n         Virginia.\" Virginia's pig iron production rose from 9,000\n         short tons in 1870 to 544,034 long tons in 1903. Judging\n         from the Low Moor Company's correspondence, the most\n         prosperous period for the company fell between the years\n         1895-1907. In the years between 1907-1917 problems befell\n         the Virginia pig iron industry. In a letter from William W.\n         Hearns, the president of the Virginia based Princess Pig\n         Iron Company, to U. S. Senator Thomas S. Martin, Hearns\n         writes of the problems of the Virginia pig iron industry:\n         \"There is not a blast furnace in Virginia that is making\n         any money from the manufacture of pig iron. The cause of\n         this is there is an exceedingly low price on pig iron in\n         the country at the present time, and the increased cost of\n         manufacturing is due to the increase in wages in all\n         lines.\" With the outbreak of World War I prices rose\n         dramatically, but in a market report to Low Moor dated\n         November 11, 1916, it was stated that: \"In spite of the\n         high prices, it is not a picnic to be in the iron industry.\n         There is a desperate shortage of cars and equipment in the\n         coal and iron districts, and in consequence there are\n         troubles of all kinds to get materials shipped. The\n         situation has grown serious.\"\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eWhen America became involved in the First World War, it\n         meant a boost for the Low Moor Iron Company. The government\n         helped it procure labor, and even helped it repair its\n         furnaces. The problem of supplies and cars for their\n         shipments, however, plagued the company more than ever. It\n         had a good deal of trouble getting all the raw materials it\n         needed due chiefly to the \"tight ship\" run by Harry F.\n         Byrd, Sr., U.S. Fuel Administrator for Virginia. After the\n         war very serious problems began to trouble the Low Moor\n         Iron Company. The demand for iron fell precipitously and a\n         short but severe depression ensued from 1919-1922. The\n         depression seemed to hit the iron industry especially hard.\n         Prices took a huge drop due to the lack of demand, and many\n         pre-war contracts had to be revalued. To compound the\n         company's problems, the Kay Moor Mines went on strike in\n         1919. This strike was quickly settled, as the market for\n         coal was so good that the Low Moor Company ceased taking\n         orders temporarily in 1921 as it could not fill the orders\n         it had on hand.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe Low Moor Company furnaces lay idle for some twenty\n         months. Finally, in November 1922 one of Low Moor's\n         furnaces was finally fired up. While prosperity gradually\n         returned to the rest of the country, the Low Moor Iron\n         Company never recovered. Production of pig iron in the\n         Virginia iron industry declined from 544,034 tons in 1903\n         to 148,053 tons in 1923, considered a good year for the\n         industry as a whole. In February 1926 Low Moor officials\n         talked of merging with two other iron companies in order to\n         revive the iron business for the three companies. The\n         merger, however, never occurred. By late 1926 the company\n         was in the process of liquidation. An advertisement in the\n         Charleston, West Virginia, Daily Mail dated April 30, 1927,\n         told of a huge warehouse sale at the Low Moor Iron Company.\n         The advertisement noted \"thousands of screws, pipe\n         fittings, valves, etc.\" The last piece of correspondence\n         from the Low Moor Iron Company in the collection is dated\n         1929. It deals with the sale of a machine.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eWhy did the iron industry in Virginia decline as it did?\n         Some say that lack of speed, efficiency, and a decent\n         transportation system for Alleghany County caused it. In a\n         letter from C. E. Bertie, secretary of the Virginia Pig\n         Iron Association, to the \n         \u003cbibref type=\"simple\" href=\"\"\u003e\u003ctitle type=\"simple\" href=\"\"\u003eManufacturers Record\u003c/title\u003e\u003c/bibref\u003edated 1925, Bertie claimed that it was the\n         tremendous rise in the cost of transportation. Virginia, he\n         claimed, had almost no home market. Over 80% of its normal\n         production was shipped out to other states. The failure of\n         the Interstate Commerce Commission to treat Virginia\n         furnaces as southern furnaces was the cause of much of the\n         trouble. From 1914-1925 there were four blanket increases\n         in freight rates in the country, of which only one applied\n         equally to all localities. Southern furnaces were received\n         only two increases--a 25% increase in 1918 and a 25%\n         increase in 1920--but northern furnaces had had 5%, 15%,\n         25%, and 40% increases in their transportation costs.\n         Virginia furnaces, although recognized as southern\n         furnaces, had had freight rates increased in line with the\n         northern furnaces. Prior to the war Virginia iron reached\n         all points in Ohio, Indiana, Michigan, and Illinois on a\n         competitive basis with southern furnaces. After World War I\n         the advantage was limited to a small portion of\n         southeastern Ohio. All of Indiana, Illinois, and Michigan\n         were now lost to the Virginia producers. The Virginia\n         producer, according to Bertie, felt that the freight rates\n         should be restored to a relationship with southern\n         furnaces. If what Bertie said was true, the other southern\n         states iron industries should not have been in the same\n         desperate economic straits as Virginia's, and statistics\n         should support this. In the 1920's production rose to new\n         heights in Alabama. In Tennessee, however, iron production\n         plunged to new lows during the 1920's. While the south\n         accounted for 10.2% of the entire U. S. production in the\n         years 1919-1924, Virginia accounted for less than 1% during\n         those years. In 1915 Virginia accounted for over 6% of the\n         U.S. iron production. One can see a decline in other areas\n         of the south than Virginia. While the discrepancies in the\n         freight rates may have helped cause the decline, clearly\n         there are other reasons.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eDuring the 1900's there was a discovery of extremely\n         rich iron ore deposits in the mid-west. Much of this ore\n         was on or near the surface, making the mining of it both\n         easy and inexpensive. This in turn lowered production costs\n         of the pig iron. This caused iron production to shift to\n         that region, and resulted in a decline in the Virginia iron\n         industry. There was a sharp increase in iron production in\n         the mid-west through the 1920's. The iron ore in the\n         mid-west may have been of better quality than Virginia, but\n         the iron ore in Virginia was of sufficient quality to\n         produce a good pig iron. The western ore deposits were not\n         as conveniently located as Virginia deposits, but the\n         inexpensiveness of production more than made up for it.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIn examining the rise and fall of the Low Moor Iron\n         Company, we can see a situation in which the conditions for\n         the manufacture of iron were nearly ideal. There was plenty\n         of land for expansion and resources for the manufacture of\n         the iron. The major internal problem faced by the Low Moor\n         Iron Company was that of transportation. External\n         developments, however, caused the final demise of the Low\n         Moor Iron Company.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLow Moor Iron Company Personnel:\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eExecutive Staff: Managing Director, Colonel H. M.\n         Goodwin: ca. 1881. General Managers: H. G. Merry: ca.\n         1884-1902; E. C. Means: ca. 1905-1915; J. P. Guernsey: ca.\n         1915 (acting General Manager); F. U. Humbert: ca.\n         1916-1929. Assistant General Manager: E. B. Wilkinson: ca.\n         1909-1915. Treasurers and Assistant Treasurers: Edward Low:\n         ca. 1886-1898; Frank Lyman (in New York): ca. 1898-1919; S.\n         G. Cragill (Asst. Treasurer): ca. 1900-1915; H. A. Dalton:\n         ca. 1921-1929; John Lipscomb (Asst. Treasurer): ca.\n         1918-1928.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eFactory and Mine Supervisors: Kay Moor Superintendents:\n         C. C. Cooke: ca. 1918; Ed. D. Wickes: ca. 1906; H. L.\n         Tansell: ca. 1903; A. H. Reed: ca. 1906. Kay Moor Managers:\n         J. W. Monteith: manager of mines. ca. 1918; promoted in\n         1925 to general superintendent in charge of mine plants,\n         coke ovens, shops, repairs, and construction; A. L.\n         Monteith: assistant superintendent of mines, ca. 1918;\n         George T. Wickes: manager of Covington mines, ca.\n         1906-1917; Ross Howell, ca. 1918. Stack Mines\n         Superintendents: J. H. Carpenter: ca. 1906; C. D.\n         Oberschain: ca. 1907; J. L. Harris: ca. 1903; John S. Ham:\n         ca. 1891-1901. Rich Patch Mines Superintendents: John R.\n         Thompson: foreman, ca. 1906. Low Moor assorted other\n         personnel: S. L. Tulley: trainmaster, ca. 1906; B. J.\n         Shenkley: foreman, Low Moor limestone quarries; L. Q. Wood:\n         assistant traffic manager, ca. 1919.\u003c/p\u003e"],"bioghist_heading_ssm":["Biographical/Historical Information"],"bioghist_tesim":["The Low Moor Iron Company, the first producer of pig\n         iron in Virginia according to the company's claims, was a\n         self-contained manufacturing unit producing from its own\n         mines the coal, limestone, and iron ore needed for its iron\n         production. Located in Low Moor near Clifton Forge in\n         Alleghany County in western Virginia, an area rich in\n         mineral deposits, the company was in operation from\n         1872-1930, producing only pig iron; it never attempted to\n         produce finished iron products.","Coal came to the Low Moor furnaces from the Kay Moor\n         Mines at Kay Moor, West Virginia, about thirty miles from\n         Low Moor; limestone was produced from the Low Moor\n         limestone quarries; and iron ore came from the Fenwick,\n         Dolly Ann, Jordan, Rich Patch, Low Moor, and Longdale\n         Mines, most of them within twenty miles of Low Moor at\n         Covington or Clifton Forge.","The towns of Low Moor and Kay Moor were company towns in\n         every respect. Workers lived in company-owned houses,\n         bought food in company stores, worshiped at the company\n         church, saw movies in the company theater, were treated in\n         the company hospital, and were buried in the company\n         cemetery. Workers received part of their pay in scrip that\n         they exchanged for goods and services. According to a\n         statement from the Kay Moor Mines dated November 1904, Kay\n         Moor then employed 338 people, paid them an average wage of\n         $36.26 per month, and issued half of their pay in scrip.\n         Kay Moor had four stores; Low Moor had seven or eight. All\n         of these stores carried large inventories which are\n         detailed in the collection. These inventories are valuable\n         to anyone interested in determining the wants and needs of\n         a coal miner and his family.","In the late 1910's and 1920's Kay Moor had a company\n         theater called the Azure Theater which seated about 300\n         people. There were also plans for a company-owned social\n         center, to have pool tables, a soda fountain, and\n         provisions for dancing and skating. The company was in\n         tough economic straits by the 1920's, however, and there is\n         no evidence that the social center was built. The town of\n         Low Moor was so completely under the company's influence\n         that one of Low Moor Iron Company's assistant managers\n         served as the town sheriff. He often foreclosed on people\n         who did not pay their debts, and drove troublesome people\n         \"out of town on a rail\" as he put it.","The Low Moor Iron Company's fortunes fluctuated during\n         the various business cycles between the years 1880-1930.\n         Low Moor was one of the larger pig iron producers in\n         Virginia, but Virginia pig iron production was not\n         important nationally. Low Moor officials sometimes sold\n         their product themselves, but more often they used agents,\n         the prevalent method at the time. Low Moor Iron Company\n         used a variety of agents through the 1900's. James F. Bryan\n         acted as the exclusive agent for the sale of Kay Moor Coal\n         from September 21, 1903 to September, 1905. From about 1890\n         until about 1910 Dalton Nash and Company were the exclusive\n         eastern agents of Low Moor Iron. After that time the\n         exclusive agency went to Philips Isham and Company located\n         in New York. From about 1890 the western agency was handled\n         chiefly by Thomas Mack and Company. After 1902 Thomas Mack\n         and Company underwent a name change, becoming Walter\n         Wallingford and Company, with offices located in\n         Cincinnati, Pittsburgh, and Chicago.","Perhaps the Low Moor Iron Company's biggest problem over\n         the years was obtaining railroad cars for the\n         transportation of its finished product. Low Moor Iron\n         Company had its own cars for transporting its raw materials\n         among its various facilities. For the long haul necessary\n         for its finished goods, however, it depended upon the\n         services of the Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad, and the\n         relationship was not always a happy one. The Low Moor\n         Company complained many times to the C \u0026 O Railroad\n         about the discrepancies between long-and shorthaul freight\n         rates. Low Moor also had trouble getting cars from the C\n         \u0026 O. In a letter to one of Low Moor Company's agents\n         from an irate customer dated 1898, the customer wrote: \"We\n         wrote you on Saturday and endeavored to question upon your\n         mind the necessity of taking care of us with Low Moor iron.\n         We are on our uppers--there is not a pound of Low Moor iron\n         in the yard. Of the one hundred tons ordered some time ago,\n         not one pound of it has been received.\" This was, according\n         to the Low Moor Iron Company, because they could not get\n         the railroad cars. In a letter from Thomas Mack and Company\n         dated November 26, 1901, to General Manager E. C. Means:\n         \"We are hopeful that the car supply will get better because\n         of the number of orders you have of ours for prompt\n         shipment. Our customers are complaining that they are not\n         getting the iron fast enough. . . . We hope that the\n         railroad will be able to supply you with empty cars.\" In\n         another letter dated 1916 to John B. Guernsey, then acting\n         General Manager of the Low Moor Iron Company, \"We were not\n         supplied with coke cars for today's loading, and\n         consequently we have been practically down of Kay Moor\n         ovens all day.\"","The problem of procuring labor also plagued the Low Moor\n         Company. The company sometimes tried to hire immigrant\n         laborers and send the men directly to Low Moor from New\n         York City. There were problems with this, as is explained\n         in the following letter dated April 7, 1906: \n          To Mr. George Wickes \n             Supt. of Mines \n             Kay Moor, Virginia \n             Dear George, \n             Tony arrived with twenty one men last night. One\n            got away in Jersey two in Washington D.C., four in\n            Charlottesville. Some of the men are very good looking,\n            but taken as a whole they are the worst lot I have ever\n            seen: Irish, German-Jews, and Italians. . . . Our New\n            York transportations to this place have never been a\n            success. Signed, \n             Ed D. Wickes Supt. of Mines Low Moor usually employed labor agencies, one\n         of which was Atwood's Employment Agency. Often the Low Moor\n         Company would request certain nationalities, believing them\n         to be better workers than others. Sometimes the company\n         would request a gang of twenty made up of \"ten Greeks and\n         ten Italians.\" Many of the immigrants fled Low Moor and Kay\n         Moor when they learned that they would have to work\n         underground. There is a fair amount of material on\n         immigrant labor and its procurement in the collection, and\n         it is noted in the description of the box contents.","Low Moor Iron Company not only had trouble procuring\n         labor, but it also had trouble with labor already employed\n         in the mines and at the factory. Labor dissension and\n         strikes troubled the Kay Moor Mines through the 1900's. The\n         great coal strike of 1902 hurt the Low Moor Company's coal\n         mining operation, but by 1903 things were \"nearly back to\n         normal\" according to the mine superintendent. There was\n         still trouble at Kay Moor Mines, however. In a letter dated\n         April 26, 1906, to the treasurer of Low Moor Company, the\n         manager of the mines wrote about the trouble in \"trying to\n         get the agitators out.\" The mines were seventy-five men\n         short of the total labor force needed because many of the\n         coal miners returned to their farms during the spring.\n         There were rumblings of another strike at Kay Moor, the\n         result of which was to be a fourteen percent increase in\n         wages for the Kay Moor Mine workers via an agreement with\n         the United Mine Workers Union in December.","The Low Moor Iron Company grew along with the rest of\n         Virginia industry in the 1890's and 1900's. Starting with\n         only one furnace in the 1870's, it opened a second furnace\n         at Covington, Virginia, in 1891. In 1911 it opened a third\n         furnace, this time at Low Moor. Covington, with its heavy\n         industry, soon became known as the \"Pittsburgh of\n         Virginia.\" Virginia's pig iron production rose from 9,000\n         short tons in 1870 to 544,034 long tons in 1903. Judging\n         from the Low Moor Company's correspondence, the most\n         prosperous period for the company fell between the years\n         1895-1907. In the years between 1907-1917 problems befell\n         the Virginia pig iron industry. In a letter from William W.\n         Hearns, the president of the Virginia based Princess Pig\n         Iron Company, to U. S. Senator Thomas S. Martin, Hearns\n         writes of the problems of the Virginia pig iron industry:\n         \"There is not a blast furnace in Virginia that is making\n         any money from the manufacture of pig iron. The cause of\n         this is there is an exceedingly low price on pig iron in\n         the country at the present time, and the increased cost of\n         manufacturing is due to the increase in wages in all\n         lines.\" With the outbreak of World War I prices rose\n         dramatically, but in a market report to Low Moor dated\n         November 11, 1916, it was stated that: \"In spite of the\n         high prices, it is not a picnic to be in the iron industry.\n         There is a desperate shortage of cars and equipment in the\n         coal and iron districts, and in consequence there are\n         troubles of all kinds to get materials shipped. The\n         situation has grown serious.\"","When America became involved in the First World War, it\n         meant a boost for the Low Moor Iron Company. The government\n         helped it procure labor, and even helped it repair its\n         furnaces. The problem of supplies and cars for their\n         shipments, however, plagued the company more than ever. It\n         had a good deal of trouble getting all the raw materials it\n         needed due chiefly to the \"tight ship\" run by Harry F.\n         Byrd, Sr., U.S. Fuel Administrator for Virginia. After the\n         war very serious problems began to trouble the Low Moor\n         Iron Company. The demand for iron fell precipitously and a\n         short but severe depression ensued from 1919-1922. The\n         depression seemed to hit the iron industry especially hard.\n         Prices took a huge drop due to the lack of demand, and many\n         pre-war contracts had to be revalued. To compound the\n         company's problems, the Kay Moor Mines went on strike in\n         1919. This strike was quickly settled, as the market for\n         coal was so good that the Low Moor Company ceased taking\n         orders temporarily in 1921 as it could not fill the orders\n         it had on hand.","The Low Moor Company furnaces lay idle for some twenty\n         months. Finally, in November 1922 one of Low Moor's\n         furnaces was finally fired up. While prosperity gradually\n         returned to the rest of the country, the Low Moor Iron\n         Company never recovered. Production of pig iron in the\n         Virginia iron industry declined from 544,034 tons in 1903\n         to 148,053 tons in 1923, considered a good year for the\n         industry as a whole. In February 1926 Low Moor officials\n         talked of merging with two other iron companies in order to\n         revive the iron business for the three companies. The\n         merger, however, never occurred. By late 1926 the company\n         was in the process of liquidation. An advertisement in the\n         Charleston, West Virginia, Daily Mail dated April 30, 1927,\n         told of a huge warehouse sale at the Low Moor Iron Company.\n         The advertisement noted \"thousands of screws, pipe\n         fittings, valves, etc.\" The last piece of correspondence\n         from the Low Moor Iron Company in the collection is dated\n         1929. It deals with the sale of a machine.","Why did the iron industry in Virginia decline as it did?\n         Some say that lack of speed, efficiency, and a decent\n         transportation system for Alleghany County caused it. In a\n         letter from C. E. Bertie, secretary of the Virginia Pig\n         Iron Association, to the \n          Manufacturers Record dated 1925, Bertie claimed that it was the\n         tremendous rise in the cost of transportation. Virginia, he\n         claimed, had almost no home market. Over 80% of its normal\n         production was shipped out to other states. The failure of\n         the Interstate Commerce Commission to treat Virginia\n         furnaces as southern furnaces was the cause of much of the\n         trouble. From 1914-1925 there were four blanket increases\n         in freight rates in the country, of which only one applied\n         equally to all localities. Southern furnaces were received\n         only two increases--a 25% increase in 1918 and a 25%\n         increase in 1920--but northern furnaces had had 5%, 15%,\n         25%, and 40% increases in their transportation costs.\n         Virginia furnaces, although recognized as southern\n         furnaces, had had freight rates increased in line with the\n         northern furnaces. Prior to the war Virginia iron reached\n         all points in Ohio, Indiana, Michigan, and Illinois on a\n         competitive basis with southern furnaces. After World War I\n         the advantage was limited to a small portion of\n         southeastern Ohio. All of Indiana, Illinois, and Michigan\n         were now lost to the Virginia producers. The Virginia\n         producer, according to Bertie, felt that the freight rates\n         should be restored to a relationship with southern\n         furnaces. If what Bertie said was true, the other southern\n         states iron industries should not have been in the same\n         desperate economic straits as Virginia's, and statistics\n         should support this. In the 1920's production rose to new\n         heights in Alabama. In Tennessee, however, iron production\n         plunged to new lows during the 1920's. While the south\n         accounted for 10.2% of the entire U. S. production in the\n         years 1919-1924, Virginia accounted for less than 1% during\n         those years. In 1915 Virginia accounted for over 6% of the\n         U.S. iron production. One can see a decline in other areas\n         of the south than Virginia. While the discrepancies in the\n         freight rates may have helped cause the decline, clearly\n         there are other reasons.","During the 1900's there was a discovery of extremely\n         rich iron ore deposits in the mid-west. Much of this ore\n         was on or near the surface, making the mining of it both\n         easy and inexpensive. This in turn lowered production costs\n         of the pig iron. This caused iron production to shift to\n         that region, and resulted in a decline in the Virginia iron\n         industry. There was a sharp increase in iron production in\n         the mid-west through the 1920's. The iron ore in the\n         mid-west may have been of better quality than Virginia, but\n         the iron ore in Virginia was of sufficient quality to\n         produce a good pig iron. The western ore deposits were not\n         as conveniently located as Virginia deposits, but the\n         inexpensiveness of production more than made up for it.","In examining the rise and fall of the Low Moor Iron\n         Company, we can see a situation in which the conditions for\n         the manufacture of iron were nearly ideal. There was plenty\n         of land for expansion and resources for the manufacture of\n         the iron. The major internal problem faced by the Low Moor\n         Iron Company was that of transportation. External\n         developments, however, caused the final demise of the Low\n         Moor Iron Company.","Low Moor Iron Company Personnel:","Executive Staff: Managing Director, Colonel H. M.\n         Goodwin: ca. 1881. General Managers: H. G. Merry: ca.\n         1884-1902; E. C. Means: ca. 1905-1915; J. P. Guernsey: ca.\n         1915 (acting General Manager); F. U. Humbert: ca.\n         1916-1929. Assistant General Manager: E. B. Wilkinson: ca.\n         1909-1915. Treasurers and Assistant Treasurers: Edward Low:\n         ca. 1886-1898; Frank Lyman (in New York): ca. 1898-1919; S.\n         G. Cragill (Asst. Treasurer): ca. 1900-1915; H. A. Dalton:\n         ca. 1921-1929; John Lipscomb (Asst. Treasurer): ca.\n         1918-1928.","Factory and Mine Supervisors: Kay Moor Superintendents:\n         C. C. Cooke: ca. 1918; Ed. D. Wickes: ca. 1906; H. L.\n         Tansell: ca. 1903; A. H. Reed: ca. 1906. Kay Moor Managers:\n         J. W. Monteith: manager of mines. ca. 1918; promoted in\n         1925 to general superintendent in charge of mine plants,\n         coke ovens, shops, repairs, and construction; A. L.\n         Monteith: assistant superintendent of mines, ca. 1918;\n         George T. Wickes: manager of Covington mines, ca.\n         1906-1917; Ross Howell, ca. 1918. Stack Mines\n         Superintendents: J. H. Carpenter: ca. 1906; C. D.\n         Oberschain: ca. 1907; J. L. Harris: ca. 1903; John S. Ham:\n         ca. 1891-1901. Rich Patch Mines Superintendents: John R.\n         Thompson: foreman, ca. 1906. Low Moor assorted other\n         personnel: S. L. Tulley: trainmaster, ca. 1906; B. J.\n         Shenkley: foreman, Low Moor limestone quarries; L. Q. Wood:\n         assistant traffic manager, ca. 1919."],"custodhist_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe Low Moor Iron Company ceased operations in 1930;\n            what happened to the records of the company in the years\n            immediately following is not known, but in 1939, the Green\n            Bookman, a Charlottesville bookshop, sold the records to\n            the University of Virginia Library.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe records arrived at the receiving room door of the\n            new Alderman Library on October 16, 1939, in a trailer\n            truck whose load was estimated to weigh about fourteen\n            tons. As the manuscripts staff dug around in the piles of\n            over 1200 account books, and countless boxes of papers they\n            realized that the company had saved almost all of its\n            papers including checks, invoices, vouchers, and receipts,\n            and certain of these records were destroyed as their\n            information was recorded in other records. Once the bulk of\n            the collection had been reduced, the remaining records were\n            transferred to the stack area of the Division of Rare Books\n            and Manuscripts.\u003c/p\u003e"],"custodhist_heading_ssm":["Provenance"],"custodhist_tesim":["The Low Moor Iron Company ceased operations in 1930;\n            what happened to the records of the company in the years\n            immediately following is not known, but in 1939, the Green\n            Bookman, a Charlottesville bookshop, sold the records to\n            the University of Virginia Library.","The records arrived at the receiving room door of the\n            new Alderman Library on October 16, 1939, in a trailer\n            truck whose load was estimated to weigh about fourteen\n            tons. As the manuscripts staff dug around in the piles of\n            over 1200 account books, and countless boxes of papers they\n            realized that the company had saved almost all of its\n            papers including checks, invoices, vouchers, and receipts,\n            and certain of these records were destroyed as their\n            information was recorded in other records. Once the bulk of\n            the collection had been reduced, the remaining records were\n            transferred to the stack area of the Division of Rare Books\n            and Manuscripts."],"otherfindaid_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eSome 1200 bound accounting record books of the Low Moor\n            Iron Company came into the custody of the Library with the\n            loose papers. When the project staff investigated these\n            volumes in the dormitory attic where they were stored, they\n            found that the volumes had been shelved by size rather than\n            by series. Thus, a letterbook may stand next to a stock\n            report book for a furnace, which is, in turn, next to a\n            store account book for the Kay Moor Mines' store. No series\n            are shelved in order.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMembers of the project staff surveyed the volumes,\n            completing for each volume two copies of a mimeographed\n            survey form, and assigning to each volume a number. One\n            copy of the survey report form was placed in the volume,\n            and the second was returned to the Library.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eFrom the survey report forms, 3 x 5 inch index\n            cards--with a carbon copy of each--were typed. One set of\n            index cards has been kept in order by the numbers assigned\n            to the volumes as they stand on the shelves. This provides\n            a shelf list for the use of the library staff. The other\n            set of cards was sorted into categories as a finding aid.\n            On the list that follows, the researcher will find a number\n            of major headings such as \"Accounts,\" \"Inventories,\"\n            \"Letter Books,\" and \"Shipments-Outgoing.\"\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eInsofar as it has been possible to determine from the\n            data on the survey report forms, the volumes have been\n            assigned to categories. Most of the major categories, or\n            headings, have sub-headings. Within those sub-headings, the\n            volumes have been arranged chronologically. The\n            investigators realize that after careful study of some of\n            these volumes, they will be revealed as belonging to other\n            categories than those in which they have initially been\n            placed. The card index will allow such movement.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAvailable in the Manuscripts/Archives Reading Room in\n            the Library is the sorted card index file. There is a card\n            for every volume in this file whereas, on the pages that\n            follow, volumes have been summarized under the headings and\n            sub-headings. In each case, the number of volumes has been\n            given in the summarized list; the date ranges given are\n            inclusive in most cases, and do not reveal the many gaps in\n            sequences unless the number of volumes is small and the\n            date range wide. Occasional remarks about the content of\n            volumes have been supplied if the contents are not obvious\n            from the heading or sub-heading.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eResearchers wishing to examine any of these volumes will\n            have to use the card index file in order to be able to give\n            to the staff the volume number assigned to the individual\n            volumes that are to be inspected.\u003c/p\u003e"],"otherfindaid_heading_ssm":["Other Finding Aid"],"otherfindaid_tesim":["Some 1200 bound accounting record books of the Low Moor\n            Iron Company came into the custody of the Library with the\n            loose papers. When the project staff investigated these\n            volumes in the dormitory attic where they were stored, they\n            found that the volumes had been shelved by size rather than\n            by series. Thus, a letterbook may stand next to a stock\n            report book for a furnace, which is, in turn, next to a\n            store account book for the Kay Moor Mines' store. No series\n            are shelved in order.","Members of the project staff surveyed the volumes,\n            completing for each volume two copies of a mimeographed\n            survey form, and assigning to each volume a number. One\n            copy of the survey report form was placed in the volume,\n            and the second was returned to the Library.","From the survey report forms, 3 x 5 inch index\n            cards--with a carbon copy of each--were typed. One set of\n            index cards has been kept in order by the numbers assigned\n            to the volumes as they stand on the shelves. This provides\n            a shelf list for the use of the library staff. The other\n            set of cards was sorted into categories as a finding aid.\n            On the list that follows, the researcher will find a number\n            of major headings such as \"Accounts,\" \"Inventories,\"\n            \"Letter Books,\" and \"Shipments-Outgoing.\"","Insofar as it has been possible to determine from the\n            data on the survey report forms, the volumes have been\n            assigned to categories. Most of the major categories, or\n            headings, have sub-headings. Within those sub-headings, the\n            volumes have been arranged chronologically. The\n            investigators realize that after careful study of some of\n            these volumes, they will be revealed as belonging to other\n            categories than those in which they have initially been\n            placed. The card index will allow such movement.","Available in the Manuscripts/Archives Reading Room in\n            the Library is the sorted card index file. There is a card\n            for every volume in this file whereas, on the pages that\n            follow, volumes have been summarized under the headings and\n            sub-headings. In each case, the number of volumes has been\n            given in the summarized list; the date ranges given are\n            inclusive in most cases, and do not reveal the many gaps in\n            sequences unless the number of volumes is small and the\n            date range wide. Occasional remarks about the content of\n            volumes have been supplied if the contents are not obvious\n            from the heading or sub-heading.","Researchers wishing to examine any of these volumes will\n            have to use the card index file in order to be able to give\n            to the staff the volume number assigned to the individual\n            volumes that are to be inspected."],"prefercite_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003ePapers of the Low Moor Iron Company, Accession #662,\n            Special Collections, University of Virginia Library,\n            Charlottesville, Va.\u003c/p\u003e"],"prefercite_tesim":["Papers of the Low Moor Iron Company, Accession #662,\n            Special Collections, University of Virginia Library,\n            Charlottesville, Va."],"processinfo_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eBy 1958, little storage space remained in Alderman\n            Library, and the Rare Books and Manuscripts Division was\n            especially crowded because of the rapid growth of its\n            collections. After an examination of its storage areas, the\n            division's staff decided to move the Low Moor records to\n            the attic of one of the student dormitories. The collection\n            had had little use chiefly because there was no finding\n            aid. There seemed little likelihood of extensive researcher\n            use until the collection could be processed.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIn preparation for the move, the old letter boxes in\n            which much of the collection had arrived in the Library\n            were discarded. The records from each box were placed\n            between sheets of the heavy gray cardboard used to protect\n            unbound newspapers in the Library's stacks, and the spine\n            labels of the old letter boxes were copied onto the\n            cardboard. The resulting bundles were wrapped with brown\n            Kraft paper and tied up with string. The bundles were\n            numbered. Whatever original order the letter boxes may have\n            had was lost by the time they arrived in the Library, and\n            after the bundling, removal to a dormitory attic, and\n            subsequent return to the Library in 1976, all vestiges of\n            the original order were lost.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe bundles remained in the dormitory attic for almost\n            twenty years. Occasional visits were made by the division\n            staff to check on their condition, and on very rare\n            occasions, a researcher was brave enough to ask to be shown\n            the collection. Once the researcher saw the imposing amount\n            of material and the conditions in the attic, interest in\n            using the collection invariably died.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIn late 1976 a grant from the National Endowment for the\n            Humanities was obtained to allow the Library to process the\n            Low Moor Iron Company papers, and the papers of Edward L.\n            Stone and the Borderland Coal Company, another large\n            collection of records stored in the same dormitory attic.\n            All of these records and papers were moved back to the\n            Library where the bundles were cleaned and opened. The\n            contents of each were placed in a Hollinger storage box,\n            and all notes on the paper wrappings and on the gray\n            cardboard sheets were recorded.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe more than 1200 bound accounting records of the Low\n            Moor Iron Company were surveyed by the grant project staff.\n            The contents of each volume were noted on a mimeographed\n            form, and later typed on 3 x 5\" cards to create a\n            readily-accessible file for the Manuscripts Reading Room.\n            This information was also typed on pages to be added to\n            this guide.\u003c/p\u003e"],"processinfo_heading_ssm":["Processing Information"],"processinfo_tesim":["By 1958, little storage space remained in Alderman\n            Library, and the Rare Books and Manuscripts Division was\n            especially crowded because of the rapid growth of its\n            collections. After an examination of its storage areas, the\n            division's staff decided to move the Low Moor records to\n            the attic of one of the student dormitories. The collection\n            had had little use chiefly because there was no finding\n            aid. There seemed little likelihood of extensive researcher\n            use until the collection could be processed.","In preparation for the move, the old letter boxes in\n            which much of the collection had arrived in the Library\n            were discarded. The records from each box were placed\n            between sheets of the heavy gray cardboard used to protect\n            unbound newspapers in the Library's stacks, and the spine\n            labels of the old letter boxes were copied onto the\n            cardboard. The resulting bundles were wrapped with brown\n            Kraft paper and tied up with string. The bundles were\n            numbered. Whatever original order the letter boxes may have\n            had was lost by the time they arrived in the Library, and\n            after the bundling, removal to a dormitory attic, and\n            subsequent return to the Library in 1976, all vestiges of\n            the original order were lost.","The bundles remained in the dormitory attic for almost\n            twenty years. Occasional visits were made by the division\n            staff to check on their condition, and on very rare\n            occasions, a researcher was brave enough to ask to be shown\n            the collection. Once the researcher saw the imposing amount\n            of material and the conditions in the attic, interest in\n            using the collection invariably died.","In late 1976 a grant from the National Endowment for the\n            Humanities was obtained to allow the Library to process the\n            Low Moor Iron Company papers, and the papers of Edward L.\n            Stone and the Borderland Coal Company, another large\n            collection of records stored in the same dormitory attic.\n            All of these records and papers were moved back to the\n            Library where the bundles were cleaned and opened. The\n            contents of each were placed in a Hollinger storage box,\n            and all notes on the paper wrappings and on the gray\n            cardboard sheets were recorded.","The more than 1200 bound accounting records of the Low\n            Moor Iron Company were surveyed by the grant project staff.\n            The contents of each volume were noted on a mimeographed\n            form, and later typed on 3 x 5\" cards to create a\n            readily-accessible file for the Manuscripts Reading Room.\n            This information was also typed on pages to be added to\n            this guide."],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe Low Moor Iron Company papers consist of\n         approximately 280 four-inch Hollinger archives boxes (ca.\n         95 linear feet) of records, ca. 1885-1927, and some 1200\n         bound volumes of the company's accounting records,\n         1873-1927, of this iron producing company located in Low\n         Moor (four miles southwest of Clifton Forge), Alleghany\n         County, Virginia.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThis material consists of records typical of those\n         produced by a firm of this type in the period, but as the\n         company owned its own coal and iron mines and limestone\n         quarries, there is considerable information about the\n         production of these raw materials. Large numbers of the\n         records that deal with the company's employees have\n         survived: time books, payroll books, hands ledgers, and the\n         like. Because these books sometimes include information\n         about the employee's trade or job with the company, and as\n         race is indicated in some of the records, these books\n         should provide date for studies of the structure and upward\n         mobility within the labor force, patterns of\n         ethnic--possibly racial--occupational penetration and\n         mobility, material conditions of the workers, and so on.\n         The papers should permit a range of studies detailing the\n         pattern and evolution of industrial organization in the\n         iron industry, and the evolution of markets and marketing\n         structures for the entire period. Because the company was\n         dependent upon railroads to move its raw materials to the\n         furnaces, and for the marketing of its products, there is\n         considerable information about railroads and their\n         relationship to their customers.\u003c/p\u003e"],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Scope and Content Information"],"scopecontent_tesim":["The Low Moor Iron Company papers consist of\n         approximately 280 four-inch Hollinger archives boxes (ca.\n         95 linear feet) of records, ca. 1885-1927, and some 1200\n         bound volumes of the company's accounting records,\n         1873-1927, of this iron producing company located in Low\n         Moor (four miles southwest of Clifton Forge), Alleghany\n         County, Virginia.","This material consists of records typical of those\n         produced by a firm of this type in the period, but as the\n         company owned its own coal and iron mines and limestone\n         quarries, there is considerable information about the\n         production of these raw materials. Large numbers of the\n         records that deal with the company's employees have\n         survived: time books, payroll books, hands ledgers, and the\n         like. Because these books sometimes include information\n         about the employee's trade or job with the company, and as\n         race is indicated in some of the records, these books\n         should provide date for studies of the structure and upward\n         mobility within the labor force, patterns of\n         ethnic--possibly racial--occupational penetration and\n         mobility, material conditions of the workers, and so on.\n         The papers should permit a range of studies detailing the\n         pattern and evolution of industrial organization in the\n         iron industry, and the evolution of markets and marketing\n         structures for the entire period. Because the company was\n         dependent upon railroads to move its raw materials to the\n         furnaces, and for the marketing of its products, there is\n         considerable information about railroads and their\n         relationship to their customers."],"userestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eSee the \n            \u003cextref type=\"simple\" href=\"https://www.library.virginia.edu/policies/use-of-materials\"\u003e\n            University of Virginia Library’s use policy.\u003c/extref\u003e\u003c/p\u003e"],"userestrict_heading_ssm":["Use Restrictions\n"],"userestrict_tesim":["See the \n             \n            University of Virginia Library’s use policy."],"language_ssim":["English"],"total_component_count_is":1879,"online_item_count_is":0,"component_level_isim":[0],"sort_isi":0,"timestamp":"2026-05-21T12:10:02.328Z"}]}},"label":"Breadcrumbs"}}},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_viu00917_c01_c01_c01"}},{"id":"viu_viu00917_c01_c28_c01","type":"Subseries","attributes":{"title":"A. General; many show occupation, daily\n                     rate, hours","breadcrumbs":{"id":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_viu00917_c01_c28_c01#breadcrumbs","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":{"ref_ssi":"viu_viu00917_c01_c28_c01","ref_ssm":["viu_viu00917_c01_c28_c01"],"id":"viu_viu00917_c01_c28_c01","ead_ssi":"viu_viu00917","_root_":"viu_viu00917","_nest_parent_":"viu_viu00917_c01_c28","parent_ssi":"viu_viu00917_c01_c28","parent_ssim":["viu_viu00917","viu_viu00917_c01","viu_viu00917_c01_c28"],"parent_ids_ssim":["viu_viu00917","viu_viu00917_c01","viu_viu00917_c01_c28"],"parent_unittitles_ssm":["Papers of the Low Moor Iron Company \n         1873-1927","Bound Volumes","Time Books"],"parent_unittitles_tesim":["Papers of the Low Moor Iron Company \n         1873-1927","Bound Volumes","Time Books"],"text":["Papers of the Low Moor Iron Company \n         1873-1927","Bound Volumes","Time Books","A. General; many show occupation, daily\n                     rate, hours","66 volumes"],"title_filing_ssi":"A. General; many show occupation, daily\n                     rate, hours","title_ssm":["A. General; many show occupation, daily\n                     rate, hours"],"title_tesim":["A. General; many show occupation, daily\n                     rate, hours"],"unitdate_other_ssim":["1875-1926"],"normalized_date_ssm":["1875/1926"],"normalized_title_ssm":["A. General; many show occupation, daily\n                     rate, hours"],"component_level_isim":[3],"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"collection_ssim":["Papers of the Low Moor Iron Company \n         1873-1927"],"physdesc_tesim":["66 volumes"],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"child_component_count_isi":0,"level_ssm":["Subseries"],"level_ssim":["Subseries"],"sort_isi":149,"date_range_isim":[1875,1876,1877,1878,1879,1880,1881,1882,1883,1884,1885,1886,1887,1888,1889,1890,1891,1892,1893,1894,1895,1896,1897,1898,1899,1900,1901,1902,1903,1904,1905,1906,1907,1908,1909,1910,1911,1912,1913,1914,1915,1916,1917,1918,1919,1920,1921,1922,1923,1924,1925,1926],"_nest_path_":"/components#0/components#27/components#0","timestamp":"2026-05-21T12:10:02.328Z","collection":{"numFound":1,"start":0,"numFoundExact":true,"docs":[{"id":"viu_viu00917","ead_ssi":"viu_viu00917","_root_":"viu_viu00917","_nest_parent_":"viu_viu00917","ead_source_url_ssi":"data/uva-sc/viu00917.xml","title_ssm":["Papers of the Low Moor Iron Company \n         1873-1927"],"title_tesim":["Papers of the Low Moor Iron Company \n         1873-1927"],"level_ssm":["collection"],"level_ssim":["Collection"],"unitid_ssm":["662"],"text":["662","Papers of the Low Moor Iron Company \n         1873-1927","95 linear feer + 1200\n         volumes","Stored off-site. Users must request boxes 48 hours in advance of desired use. Neither drop-in nor next-day requests can be fulfilled. For additional information, contact Special Collections. \n","The word \"organization\" is used here with considerable\n         diffidence, for any researcher studying the container list\n         that follows will realize quickly that there is no\n         organization in the usual sense of the word.","As noted under \"Provenance,\" the Low Moor Iron Company\n         papers were subjected to a number of moves; when processing\n         began in the fall of 1976, no discernible scheme of\n         organization could be determined.","The first step was to review the series of coded numbers\n         placed on the bundles of papers before they were moved to\n         the dormitory attic, but these did not provide any sort of\n         useful organization. Next, the spine titles of the original\n         letter boxes were reviewed (they had been copied onto the\n         gray cardboard sheets before the move to the dormitory\n         attic), but they, too, proved useless.","These steps having provided no scheme, and after a\n         considerable hiatus due to a turnover in student processors\n         on the collection, the new student processors were\n         instructed to begin a box-by-box inventory of the contents\n         of the collection. During this inventory, old folders were\n         replaced with acid-free ones, and the original folder\n         headings were copied onto the new ones. Some removal of\n         paper clips was accomplished, and the materials were\n         reviewed and notes taken for the guide.","Some consolidation of materials was accomplished, and in\n         other cases, materials were moved. This work has created\n         some problems in the numbering of the boxes. Thus, the\n         researchers will find boxes marked \"6A\" and \"23C\"; he will\n         also discover that certain box numbers have been entirely\n         omitted. As the box numbers exist only to aid in the\n         location of material, it was not felt that the unusual\n         numbers and the omissions would cause problems in working\n         with the papers.","A certain amount of movement of boxes within the\n         collection, and of materials among boxes, probably would\n         ease use of it. But what processing was accomplished on\n         this project took far longer than had been anticipated, and\n         there was no time in the late spring of 1978, when the\n         processors had to complete their work with the project, to\n         undertake a mass movement of material. Thus, they stand in\n         the order in which we found them at the beginning of the\n         project.","The Low Moor Iron Company, the first producer of pig\n         iron in Virginia according to the company's claims, was a\n         self-contained manufacturing unit producing from its own\n         mines the coal, limestone, and iron ore needed for its iron\n         production. Located in Low Moor near Clifton Forge in\n         Alleghany County in western Virginia, an area rich in\n         mineral deposits, the company was in operation from\n         1872-1930, producing only pig iron; it never attempted to\n         produce finished iron products.","Coal came to the Low Moor furnaces from the Kay Moor\n         Mines at Kay Moor, West Virginia, about thirty miles from\n         Low Moor; limestone was produced from the Low Moor\n         limestone quarries; and iron ore came from the Fenwick,\n         Dolly Ann, Jordan, Rich Patch, Low Moor, and Longdale\n         Mines, most of them within twenty miles of Low Moor at\n         Covington or Clifton Forge.","The towns of Low Moor and Kay Moor were company towns in\n         every respect. Workers lived in company-owned houses,\n         bought food in company stores, worshiped at the company\n         church, saw movies in the company theater, were treated in\n         the company hospital, and were buried in the company\n         cemetery. Workers received part of their pay in scrip that\n         they exchanged for goods and services. According to a\n         statement from the Kay Moor Mines dated November 1904, Kay\n         Moor then employed 338 people, paid them an average wage of\n         $36.26 per month, and issued half of their pay in scrip.\n         Kay Moor had four stores; Low Moor had seven or eight. All\n         of these stores carried large inventories which are\n         detailed in the collection. These inventories are valuable\n         to anyone interested in determining the wants and needs of\n         a coal miner and his family.","In the late 1910's and 1920's Kay Moor had a company\n         theater called the Azure Theater which seated about 300\n         people. There were also plans for a company-owned social\n         center, to have pool tables, a soda fountain, and\n         provisions for dancing and skating. The company was in\n         tough economic straits by the 1920's, however, and there is\n         no evidence that the social center was built. The town of\n         Low Moor was so completely under the company's influence\n         that one of Low Moor Iron Company's assistant managers\n         served as the town sheriff. He often foreclosed on people\n         who did not pay their debts, and drove troublesome people\n         \"out of town on a rail\" as he put it.","The Low Moor Iron Company's fortunes fluctuated during\n         the various business cycles between the years 1880-1930.\n         Low Moor was one of the larger pig iron producers in\n         Virginia, but Virginia pig iron production was not\n         important nationally. Low Moor officials sometimes sold\n         their product themselves, but more often they used agents,\n         the prevalent method at the time. Low Moor Iron Company\n         used a variety of agents through the 1900's. James F. Bryan\n         acted as the exclusive agent for the sale of Kay Moor Coal\n         from September 21, 1903 to September, 1905. From about 1890\n         until about 1910 Dalton Nash and Company were the exclusive\n         eastern agents of Low Moor Iron. After that time the\n         exclusive agency went to Philips Isham and Company located\n         in New York. From about 1890 the western agency was handled\n         chiefly by Thomas Mack and Company. After 1902 Thomas Mack\n         and Company underwent a name change, becoming Walter\n         Wallingford and Company, with offices located in\n         Cincinnati, Pittsburgh, and Chicago.","Perhaps the Low Moor Iron Company's biggest problem over\n         the years was obtaining railroad cars for the\n         transportation of its finished product. Low Moor Iron\n         Company had its own cars for transporting its raw materials\n         among its various facilities. For the long haul necessary\n         for its finished goods, however, it depended upon the\n         services of the Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad, and the\n         relationship was not always a happy one. The Low Moor\n         Company complained many times to the C \u0026 O Railroad\n         about the discrepancies between long-and shorthaul freight\n         rates. Low Moor also had trouble getting cars from the C\n         \u0026 O. In a letter to one of Low Moor Company's agents\n         from an irate customer dated 1898, the customer wrote: \"We\n         wrote you on Saturday and endeavored to question upon your\n         mind the necessity of taking care of us with Low Moor iron.\n         We are on our uppers--there is not a pound of Low Moor iron\n         in the yard. Of the one hundred tons ordered some time ago,\n         not one pound of it has been received.\" This was, according\n         to the Low Moor Iron Company, because they could not get\n         the railroad cars. In a letter from Thomas Mack and Company\n         dated November 26, 1901, to General Manager E. C. Means:\n         \"We are hopeful that the car supply will get better because\n         of the number of orders you have of ours for prompt\n         shipment. Our customers are complaining that they are not\n         getting the iron fast enough. . . . We hope that the\n         railroad will be able to supply you with empty cars.\" In\n         another letter dated 1916 to John B. Guernsey, then acting\n         General Manager of the Low Moor Iron Company, \"We were not\n         supplied with coke cars for today's loading, and\n         consequently we have been practically down of Kay Moor\n         ovens all day.\"","The problem of procuring labor also plagued the Low Moor\n         Company. The company sometimes tried to hire immigrant\n         laborers and send the men directly to Low Moor from New\n         York City. There were problems with this, as is explained\n         in the following letter dated April 7, 1906: \n          To Mr. George Wickes \n             Supt. of Mines \n             Kay Moor, Virginia \n             Dear George, \n             Tony arrived with twenty one men last night. One\n            got away in Jersey two in Washington D.C., four in\n            Charlottesville. Some of the men are very good looking,\n            but taken as a whole they are the worst lot I have ever\n            seen: Irish, German-Jews, and Italians. . . . Our New\n            York transportations to this place have never been a\n            success. Signed, \n             Ed D. Wickes Supt. of Mines Low Moor usually employed labor agencies, one\n         of which was Atwood's Employment Agency. Often the Low Moor\n         Company would request certain nationalities, believing them\n         to be better workers than others. Sometimes the company\n         would request a gang of twenty made up of \"ten Greeks and\n         ten Italians.\" Many of the immigrants fled Low Moor and Kay\n         Moor when they learned that they would have to work\n         underground. There is a fair amount of material on\n         immigrant labor and its procurement in the collection, and\n         it is noted in the description of the box contents.","Low Moor Iron Company not only had trouble procuring\n         labor, but it also had trouble with labor already employed\n         in the mines and at the factory. Labor dissension and\n         strikes troubled the Kay Moor Mines through the 1900's. The\n         great coal strike of 1902 hurt the Low Moor Company's coal\n         mining operation, but by 1903 things were \"nearly back to\n         normal\" according to the mine superintendent. There was\n         still trouble at Kay Moor Mines, however. In a letter dated\n         April 26, 1906, to the treasurer of Low Moor Company, the\n         manager of the mines wrote about the trouble in \"trying to\n         get the agitators out.\" The mines were seventy-five men\n         short of the total labor force needed because many of the\n         coal miners returned to their farms during the spring.\n         There were rumblings of another strike at Kay Moor, the\n         result of which was to be a fourteen percent increase in\n         wages for the Kay Moor Mine workers via an agreement with\n         the United Mine Workers Union in December.","The Low Moor Iron Company grew along with the rest of\n         Virginia industry in the 1890's and 1900's. Starting with\n         only one furnace in the 1870's, it opened a second furnace\n         at Covington, Virginia, in 1891. In 1911 it opened a third\n         furnace, this time at Low Moor. Covington, with its heavy\n         industry, soon became known as the \"Pittsburgh of\n         Virginia.\" Virginia's pig iron production rose from 9,000\n         short tons in 1870 to 544,034 long tons in 1903. Judging\n         from the Low Moor Company's correspondence, the most\n         prosperous period for the company fell between the years\n         1895-1907. In the years between 1907-1917 problems befell\n         the Virginia pig iron industry. In a letter from William W.\n         Hearns, the president of the Virginia based Princess Pig\n         Iron Company, to U. S. Senator Thomas S. Martin, Hearns\n         writes of the problems of the Virginia pig iron industry:\n         \"There is not a blast furnace in Virginia that is making\n         any money from the manufacture of pig iron. The cause of\n         this is there is an exceedingly low price on pig iron in\n         the country at the present time, and the increased cost of\n         manufacturing is due to the increase in wages in all\n         lines.\" With the outbreak of World War I prices rose\n         dramatically, but in a market report to Low Moor dated\n         November 11, 1916, it was stated that: \"In spite of the\n         high prices, it is not a picnic to be in the iron industry.\n         There is a desperate shortage of cars and equipment in the\n         coal and iron districts, and in consequence there are\n         troubles of all kinds to get materials shipped. The\n         situation has grown serious.\"","When America became involved in the First World War, it\n         meant a boost for the Low Moor Iron Company. The government\n         helped it procure labor, and even helped it repair its\n         furnaces. The problem of supplies and cars for their\n         shipments, however, plagued the company more than ever. It\n         had a good deal of trouble getting all the raw materials it\n         needed due chiefly to the \"tight ship\" run by Harry F.\n         Byrd, Sr., U.S. Fuel Administrator for Virginia. After the\n         war very serious problems began to trouble the Low Moor\n         Iron Company. The demand for iron fell precipitously and a\n         short but severe depression ensued from 1919-1922. The\n         depression seemed to hit the iron industry especially hard.\n         Prices took a huge drop due to the lack of demand, and many\n         pre-war contracts had to be revalued. To compound the\n         company's problems, the Kay Moor Mines went on strike in\n         1919. This strike was quickly settled, as the market for\n         coal was so good that the Low Moor Company ceased taking\n         orders temporarily in 1921 as it could not fill the orders\n         it had on hand.","The Low Moor Company furnaces lay idle for some twenty\n         months. Finally, in November 1922 one of Low Moor's\n         furnaces was finally fired up. While prosperity gradually\n         returned to the rest of the country, the Low Moor Iron\n         Company never recovered. Production of pig iron in the\n         Virginia iron industry declined from 544,034 tons in 1903\n         to 148,053 tons in 1923, considered a good year for the\n         industry as a whole. In February 1926 Low Moor officials\n         talked of merging with two other iron companies in order to\n         revive the iron business for the three companies. The\n         merger, however, never occurred. By late 1926 the company\n         was in the process of liquidation. An advertisement in the\n         Charleston, West Virginia, Daily Mail dated April 30, 1927,\n         told of a huge warehouse sale at the Low Moor Iron Company.\n         The advertisement noted \"thousands of screws, pipe\n         fittings, valves, etc.\" The last piece of correspondence\n         from the Low Moor Iron Company in the collection is dated\n         1929. It deals with the sale of a machine.","Why did the iron industry in Virginia decline as it did?\n         Some say that lack of speed, efficiency, and a decent\n         transportation system for Alleghany County caused it. In a\n         letter from C. E. Bertie, secretary of the Virginia Pig\n         Iron Association, to the \n          Manufacturers Record dated 1925, Bertie claimed that it was the\n         tremendous rise in the cost of transportation. Virginia, he\n         claimed, had almost no home market. Over 80% of its normal\n         production was shipped out to other states. The failure of\n         the Interstate Commerce Commission to treat Virginia\n         furnaces as southern furnaces was the cause of much of the\n         trouble. From 1914-1925 there were four blanket increases\n         in freight rates in the country, of which only one applied\n         equally to all localities. Southern furnaces were received\n         only two increases--a 25% increase in 1918 and a 25%\n         increase in 1920--but northern furnaces had had 5%, 15%,\n         25%, and 40% increases in their transportation costs.\n         Virginia furnaces, although recognized as southern\n         furnaces, had had freight rates increased in line with the\n         northern furnaces. Prior to the war Virginia iron reached\n         all points in Ohio, Indiana, Michigan, and Illinois on a\n         competitive basis with southern furnaces. After World War I\n         the advantage was limited to a small portion of\n         southeastern Ohio. All of Indiana, Illinois, and Michigan\n         were now lost to the Virginia producers. The Virginia\n         producer, according to Bertie, felt that the freight rates\n         should be restored to a relationship with southern\n         furnaces. If what Bertie said was true, the other southern\n         states iron industries should not have been in the same\n         desperate economic straits as Virginia's, and statistics\n         should support this. In the 1920's production rose to new\n         heights in Alabama. In Tennessee, however, iron production\n         plunged to new lows during the 1920's. While the south\n         accounted for 10.2% of the entire U. S. production in the\n         years 1919-1924, Virginia accounted for less than 1% during\n         those years. In 1915 Virginia accounted for over 6% of the\n         U.S. iron production. One can see a decline in other areas\n         of the south than Virginia. While the discrepancies in the\n         freight rates may have helped cause the decline, clearly\n         there are other reasons.","During the 1900's there was a discovery of extremely\n         rich iron ore deposits in the mid-west. Much of this ore\n         was on or near the surface, making the mining of it both\n         easy and inexpensive. This in turn lowered production costs\n         of the pig iron. This caused iron production to shift to\n         that region, and resulted in a decline in the Virginia iron\n         industry. There was a sharp increase in iron production in\n         the mid-west through the 1920's. The iron ore in the\n         mid-west may have been of better quality than Virginia, but\n         the iron ore in Virginia was of sufficient quality to\n         produce a good pig iron. The western ore deposits were not\n         as conveniently located as Virginia deposits, but the\n         inexpensiveness of production more than made up for it.","In examining the rise and fall of the Low Moor Iron\n         Company, we can see a situation in which the conditions for\n         the manufacture of iron were nearly ideal. There was plenty\n         of land for expansion and resources for the manufacture of\n         the iron. The major internal problem faced by the Low Moor\n         Iron Company was that of transportation. External\n         developments, however, caused the final demise of the Low\n         Moor Iron Company.","Low Moor Iron Company Personnel:","Executive Staff: Managing Director, Colonel H. M.\n         Goodwin: ca. 1881. General Managers: H. G. Merry: ca.\n         1884-1902; E. C. Means: ca. 1905-1915; J. P. Guernsey: ca.\n         1915 (acting General Manager); F. U. Humbert: ca.\n         1916-1929. Assistant General Manager: E. B. Wilkinson: ca.\n         1909-1915. Treasurers and Assistant Treasurers: Edward Low:\n         ca. 1886-1898; Frank Lyman (in New York): ca. 1898-1919; S.\n         G. Cragill (Asst. Treasurer): ca. 1900-1915; H. A. Dalton:\n         ca. 1921-1929; John Lipscomb (Asst. Treasurer): ca.\n         1918-1928.","Factory and Mine Supervisors: Kay Moor Superintendents:\n         C. C. Cooke: ca. 1918; Ed. D. Wickes: ca. 1906; H. L.\n         Tansell: ca. 1903; A. H. Reed: ca. 1906. Kay Moor Managers:\n         J. W. Monteith: manager of mines. ca. 1918; promoted in\n         1925 to general superintendent in charge of mine plants,\n         coke ovens, shops, repairs, and construction; A. L.\n         Monteith: assistant superintendent of mines, ca. 1918;\n         George T. Wickes: manager of Covington mines, ca.\n         1906-1917; Ross Howell, ca. 1918. Stack Mines\n         Superintendents: J. H. Carpenter: ca. 1906; C. D.\n         Oberschain: ca. 1907; J. L. Harris: ca. 1903; John S. Ham:\n         ca. 1891-1901. Rich Patch Mines Superintendents: John R.\n         Thompson: foreman, ca. 1906. Low Moor assorted other\n         personnel: S. L. Tulley: trainmaster, ca. 1906; B. J.\n         Shenkley: foreman, Low Moor limestone quarries; L. Q. Wood:\n         assistant traffic manager, ca. 1919.","The Low Moor Iron Company ceased operations in 1930;\n            what happened to the records of the company in the years\n            immediately following is not known, but in 1939, the Green\n            Bookman, a Charlottesville bookshop, sold the records to\n            the University of Virginia Library.","The records arrived at the receiving room door of the\n            new Alderman Library on October 16, 1939, in a trailer\n            truck whose load was estimated to weigh about fourteen\n            tons. As the manuscripts staff dug around in the piles of\n            over 1200 account books, and countless boxes of papers they\n            realized that the company had saved almost all of its\n            papers including checks, invoices, vouchers, and receipts,\n            and certain of these records were destroyed as their\n            information was recorded in other records. Once the bulk of\n            the collection had been reduced, the remaining records were\n            transferred to the stack area of the Division of Rare Books\n            and Manuscripts.","By 1958, little storage space remained in Alderman\n            Library, and the Rare Books and Manuscripts Division was\n            especially crowded because of the rapid growth of its\n            collections. After an examination of its storage areas, the\n            division's staff decided to move the Low Moor records to\n            the attic of one of the student dormitories. The collection\n            had had little use chiefly because there was no finding\n            aid. There seemed little likelihood of extensive researcher\n            use until the collection could be processed.","In preparation for the move, the old letter boxes in\n            which much of the collection had arrived in the Library\n            were discarded. The records from each box were placed\n            between sheets of the heavy gray cardboard used to protect\n            unbound newspapers in the Library's stacks, and the spine\n            labels of the old letter boxes were copied onto the\n            cardboard. The resulting bundles were wrapped with brown\n            Kraft paper and tied up with string. The bundles were\n            numbered. Whatever original order the letter boxes may have\n            had was lost by the time they arrived in the Library, and\n            after the bundling, removal to a dormitory attic, and\n            subsequent return to the Library in 1976, all vestiges of\n            the original order were lost.","The bundles remained in the dormitory attic for almost\n            twenty years. Occasional visits were made by the division\n            staff to check on their condition, and on very rare\n            occasions, a researcher was brave enough to ask to be shown\n            the collection. Once the researcher saw the imposing amount\n            of material and the conditions in the attic, interest in\n            using the collection invariably died.","In late 1976 a grant from the National Endowment for the\n            Humanities was obtained to allow the Library to process the\n            Low Moor Iron Company papers, and the papers of Edward L.\n            Stone and the Borderland Coal Company, another large\n            collection of records stored in the same dormitory attic.\n            All of these records and papers were moved back to the\n            Library where the bundles were cleaned and opened. The\n            contents of each were placed in a Hollinger storage box,\n            and all notes on the paper wrappings and on the gray\n            cardboard sheets were recorded.","The more than 1200 bound accounting records of the Low\n            Moor Iron Company were surveyed by the grant project staff.\n            The contents of each volume were noted on a mimeographed\n            form, and later typed on 3 x 5\" cards to create a\n            readily-accessible file for the Manuscripts Reading Room.\n            This information was also typed on pages to be added to\n            this guide.","The Low Moor Iron Company papers consist of\n         approximately 280 four-inch Hollinger archives boxes (ca.\n         95 linear feet) of records, ca. 1885-1927, and some 1200\n         bound volumes of the company's accounting records,\n         1873-1927, of this iron producing company located in Low\n         Moor (four miles southwest of Clifton Forge), Alleghany\n         County, Virginia.","This material consists of records typical of those\n         produced by a firm of this type in the period, but as the\n         company owned its own coal and iron mines and limestone\n         quarries, there is considerable information about the\n         production of these raw materials. Large numbers of the\n         records that deal with the company's employees have\n         survived: time books, payroll books, hands ledgers, and the\n         like. Because these books sometimes include information\n         about the employee's trade or job with the company, and as\n         race is indicated in some of the records, these books\n         should provide date for studies of the structure and upward\n         mobility within the labor force, patterns of\n         ethnic--possibly racial--occupational penetration and\n         mobility, material conditions of the workers, and so on.\n         The papers should permit a range of studies detailing the\n         pattern and evolution of industrial organization in the\n         iron industry, and the evolution of markets and marketing\n         structures for the entire period. Because the company was\n         dependent upon railroads to move its raw materials to the\n         furnaces, and for the marketing of its products, there is\n         considerable information about railroads and their\n         relationship to their customers.","See the \n             \n            University of Virginia Library’s use policy.","English"],"unitid_tesim":["662"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Papers of the Low Moor Iron Company \n         1873-1927"],"collection_title_tesim":["Papers of the Low Moor Iron Company \n         1873-1927"],"collection_ssim":["Papers of the Low Moor Iron Company \n         1873-1927"],"repository_ssm":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"acqinfo_ssim":["This collection was purchased from Green Bookman in\n            1939."],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"physdesc_tesim":["95 linear feer + 1200\n         volumes"],"accessrestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eStored off-site. Users must request boxes 48 hours in advance of desired use. Neither drop-in nor next-day requests can be fulfilled. For additional information, contact Special Collections. \n\u003c/p\u003e"],"accessrestrict_heading_ssm":["Access Restrictions"],"accessrestrict_tesim":["Stored off-site. Users must request boxes 48 hours in advance of desired use. Neither drop-in nor next-day requests can be fulfilled. For additional information, contact Special Collections. \n"],"arrangement_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe word \"organization\" is used here with considerable\n         diffidence, for any researcher studying the container list\n         that follows will realize quickly that there is no\n         organization in the usual sense of the word.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAs noted under \"Provenance,\" the Low Moor Iron Company\n         papers were subjected to a number of moves; when processing\n         began in the fall of 1976, no discernible scheme of\n         organization could be determined.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe first step was to review the series of coded numbers\n         placed on the bundles of papers before they were moved to\n         the dormitory attic, but these did not provide any sort of\n         useful organization. Next, the spine titles of the original\n         letter boxes were reviewed (they had been copied onto the\n         gray cardboard sheets before the move to the dormitory\n         attic), but they, too, proved useless.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThese steps having provided no scheme, and after a\n         considerable hiatus due to a turnover in student processors\n         on the collection, the new student processors were\n         instructed to begin a box-by-box inventory of the contents\n         of the collection. During this inventory, old folders were\n         replaced with acid-free ones, and the original folder\n         headings were copied onto the new ones. Some removal of\n         paper clips was accomplished, and the materials were\n         reviewed and notes taken for the guide.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSome consolidation of materials was accomplished, and in\n         other cases, materials were moved. This work has created\n         some problems in the numbering of the boxes. Thus, the\n         researchers will find boxes marked \"6A\" and \"23C\"; he will\n         also discover that certain box numbers have been entirely\n         omitted. As the box numbers exist only to aid in the\n         location of material, it was not felt that the unusual\n         numbers and the omissions would cause problems in working\n         with the papers.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eA certain amount of movement of boxes within the\n         collection, and of materials among boxes, probably would\n         ease use of it. But what processing was accomplished on\n         this project took far longer than had been anticipated, and\n         there was no time in the late spring of 1978, when the\n         processors had to complete their work with the project, to\n         undertake a mass movement of material. Thus, they stand in\n         the order in which we found them at the beginning of the\n         project.\u003c/p\u003e"],"arrangement_heading_ssm":["Organization"],"arrangement_tesim":["The word \"organization\" is used here with considerable\n         diffidence, for any researcher studying the container list\n         that follows will realize quickly that there is no\n         organization in the usual sense of the word.","As noted under \"Provenance,\" the Low Moor Iron Company\n         papers were subjected to a number of moves; when processing\n         began in the fall of 1976, no discernible scheme of\n         organization could be determined.","The first step was to review the series of coded numbers\n         placed on the bundles of papers before they were moved to\n         the dormitory attic, but these did not provide any sort of\n         useful organization. Next, the spine titles of the original\n         letter boxes were reviewed (they had been copied onto the\n         gray cardboard sheets before the move to the dormitory\n         attic), but they, too, proved useless.","These steps having provided no scheme, and after a\n         considerable hiatus due to a turnover in student processors\n         on the collection, the new student processors were\n         instructed to begin a box-by-box inventory of the contents\n         of the collection. During this inventory, old folders were\n         replaced with acid-free ones, and the original folder\n         headings were copied onto the new ones. Some removal of\n         paper clips was accomplished, and the materials were\n         reviewed and notes taken for the guide.","Some consolidation of materials was accomplished, and in\n         other cases, materials were moved. This work has created\n         some problems in the numbering of the boxes. Thus, the\n         researchers will find boxes marked \"6A\" and \"23C\"; he will\n         also discover that certain box numbers have been entirely\n         omitted. As the box numbers exist only to aid in the\n         location of material, it was not felt that the unusual\n         numbers and the omissions would cause problems in working\n         with the papers.","A certain amount of movement of boxes within the\n         collection, and of materials among boxes, probably would\n         ease use of it. But what processing was accomplished on\n         this project took far longer than had been anticipated, and\n         there was no time in the late spring of 1978, when the\n         processors had to complete their work with the project, to\n         undertake a mass movement of material. Thus, they stand in\n         the order in which we found them at the beginning of the\n         project."],"bioghist_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe Low Moor Iron Company, the first producer of pig\n         iron in Virginia according to the company's claims, was a\n         self-contained manufacturing unit producing from its own\n         mines the coal, limestone, and iron ore needed for its iron\n         production. Located in Low Moor near Clifton Forge in\n         Alleghany County in western Virginia, an area rich in\n         mineral deposits, the company was in operation from\n         1872-1930, producing only pig iron; it never attempted to\n         produce finished iron products.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCoal came to the Low Moor furnaces from the Kay Moor\n         Mines at Kay Moor, West Virginia, about thirty miles from\n         Low Moor; limestone was produced from the Low Moor\n         limestone quarries; and iron ore came from the Fenwick,\n         Dolly Ann, Jordan, Rich Patch, Low Moor, and Longdale\n         Mines, most of them within twenty miles of Low Moor at\n         Covington or Clifton Forge.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe towns of Low Moor and Kay Moor were company towns in\n         every respect. Workers lived in company-owned houses,\n         bought food in company stores, worshiped at the company\n         church, saw movies in the company theater, were treated in\n         the company hospital, and were buried in the company\n         cemetery. Workers received part of their pay in scrip that\n         they exchanged for goods and services. According to a\n         statement from the Kay Moor Mines dated November 1904, Kay\n         Moor then employed 338 people, paid them an average wage of\n         $36.26 per month, and issued half of their pay in scrip.\n         Kay Moor had four stores; Low Moor had seven or eight. All\n         of these stores carried large inventories which are\n         detailed in the collection. These inventories are valuable\n         to anyone interested in determining the wants and needs of\n         a coal miner and his family.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIn the late 1910's and 1920's Kay Moor had a company\n         theater called the Azure Theater which seated about 300\n         people. There were also plans for a company-owned social\n         center, to have pool tables, a soda fountain, and\n         provisions for dancing and skating. The company was in\n         tough economic straits by the 1920's, however, and there is\n         no evidence that the social center was built. The town of\n         Low Moor was so completely under the company's influence\n         that one of Low Moor Iron Company's assistant managers\n         served as the town sheriff. He often foreclosed on people\n         who did not pay their debts, and drove troublesome people\n         \"out of town on a rail\" as he put it.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe Low Moor Iron Company's fortunes fluctuated during\n         the various business cycles between the years 1880-1930.\n         Low Moor was one of the larger pig iron producers in\n         Virginia, but Virginia pig iron production was not\n         important nationally. Low Moor officials sometimes sold\n         their product themselves, but more often they used agents,\n         the prevalent method at the time. Low Moor Iron Company\n         used a variety of agents through the 1900's. James F. Bryan\n         acted as the exclusive agent for the sale of Kay Moor Coal\n         from September 21, 1903 to September, 1905. From about 1890\n         until about 1910 Dalton Nash and Company were the exclusive\n         eastern agents of Low Moor Iron. After that time the\n         exclusive agency went to Philips Isham and Company located\n         in New York. From about 1890 the western agency was handled\n         chiefly by Thomas Mack and Company. After 1902 Thomas Mack\n         and Company underwent a name change, becoming Walter\n         Wallingford and Company, with offices located in\n         Cincinnati, Pittsburgh, and Chicago.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePerhaps the Low Moor Iron Company's biggest problem over\n         the years was obtaining railroad cars for the\n         transportation of its finished product. Low Moor Iron\n         Company had its own cars for transporting its raw materials\n         among its various facilities. For the long haul necessary\n         for its finished goods, however, it depended upon the\n         services of the Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad, and the\n         relationship was not always a happy one. The Low Moor\n         Company complained many times to the C \u0026amp; O Railroad\n         about the discrepancies between long-and shorthaul freight\n         rates. Low Moor also had trouble getting cars from the C\n         \u0026amp; O. In a letter to one of Low Moor Company's agents\n         from an irate customer dated 1898, the customer wrote: \"We\n         wrote you on Saturday and endeavored to question upon your\n         mind the necessity of taking care of us with Low Moor iron.\n         We are on our uppers--there is not a pound of Low Moor iron\n         in the yard. Of the one hundred tons ordered some time ago,\n         not one pound of it has been received.\" This was, according\n         to the Low Moor Iron Company, because they could not get\n         the railroad cars. In a letter from Thomas Mack and Company\n         dated November 26, 1901, to General Manager E. C. Means:\n         \"We are hopeful that the car supply will get better because\n         of the number of orders you have of ours for prompt\n         shipment. Our customers are complaining that they are not\n         getting the iron fast enough. . . . We hope that the\n         railroad will be able to supply you with empty cars.\" In\n         another letter dated 1916 to John B. Guernsey, then acting\n         General Manager of the Low Moor Iron Company, \"We were not\n         supplied with coke cars for today's loading, and\n         consequently we have been practically down of Kay Moor\n         ovens all day.\"\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe problem of procuring labor also plagued the Low Moor\n         Company. The company sometimes tried to hire immigrant\n         laborers and send the men directly to Low Moor from New\n         York City. There were problems with this, as is explained\n         in the following letter dated April 7, 1906: \n         \u003cblockquote\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eTo Mr. George Wickes \n            \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003eSupt. of Mines \n            \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003eKay Moor, Virginia \n            \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e\u003c/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eDear George, \n            \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003eTony arrived with twenty one men last night. One\n            got away in Jersey two in Washington D.C., four in\n            Charlottesville. Some of the men are very good looking,\n            but taken as a whole they are the worst lot I have ever\n            seen: Irish, German-Jews, and Italians. . . . Our New\n            York transportations to this place have never been a\n            success.\u003c/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eSigned, \n            \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003eEd D. Wickes Supt. of Mines\u003c/p\u003e\n\u003c/blockquote\u003eLow Moor usually employed labor agencies, one\n         of which was Atwood's Employment Agency. Often the Low Moor\n         Company would request certain nationalities, believing them\n         to be better workers than others. Sometimes the company\n         would request a gang of twenty made up of \"ten Greeks and\n         ten Italians.\" Many of the immigrants fled Low Moor and Kay\n         Moor when they learned that they would have to work\n         underground. There is a fair amount of material on\n         immigrant labor and its procurement in the collection, and\n         it is noted in the description of the box contents.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLow Moor Iron Company not only had trouble procuring\n         labor, but it also had trouble with labor already employed\n         in the mines and at the factory. Labor dissension and\n         strikes troubled the Kay Moor Mines through the 1900's. The\n         great coal strike of 1902 hurt the Low Moor Company's coal\n         mining operation, but by 1903 things were \"nearly back to\n         normal\" according to the mine superintendent. There was\n         still trouble at Kay Moor Mines, however. In a letter dated\n         April 26, 1906, to the treasurer of Low Moor Company, the\n         manager of the mines wrote about the trouble in \"trying to\n         get the agitators out.\" The mines were seventy-five men\n         short of the total labor force needed because many of the\n         coal miners returned to their farms during the spring.\n         There were rumblings of another strike at Kay Moor, the\n         result of which was to be a fourteen percent increase in\n         wages for the Kay Moor Mine workers via an agreement with\n         the United Mine Workers Union in December.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe Low Moor Iron Company grew along with the rest of\n         Virginia industry in the 1890's and 1900's. Starting with\n         only one furnace in the 1870's, it opened a second furnace\n         at Covington, Virginia, in 1891. In 1911 it opened a third\n         furnace, this time at Low Moor. Covington, with its heavy\n         industry, soon became known as the \"Pittsburgh of\n         Virginia.\" Virginia's pig iron production rose from 9,000\n         short tons in 1870 to 544,034 long tons in 1903. Judging\n         from the Low Moor Company's correspondence, the most\n         prosperous period for the company fell between the years\n         1895-1907. In the years between 1907-1917 problems befell\n         the Virginia pig iron industry. In a letter from William W.\n         Hearns, the president of the Virginia based Princess Pig\n         Iron Company, to U. S. Senator Thomas S. Martin, Hearns\n         writes of the problems of the Virginia pig iron industry:\n         \"There is not a blast furnace in Virginia that is making\n         any money from the manufacture of pig iron. The cause of\n         this is there is an exceedingly low price on pig iron in\n         the country at the present time, and the increased cost of\n         manufacturing is due to the increase in wages in all\n         lines.\" With the outbreak of World War I prices rose\n         dramatically, but in a market report to Low Moor dated\n         November 11, 1916, it was stated that: \"In spite of the\n         high prices, it is not a picnic to be in the iron industry.\n         There is a desperate shortage of cars and equipment in the\n         coal and iron districts, and in consequence there are\n         troubles of all kinds to get materials shipped. The\n         situation has grown serious.\"\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eWhen America became involved in the First World War, it\n         meant a boost for the Low Moor Iron Company. The government\n         helped it procure labor, and even helped it repair its\n         furnaces. The problem of supplies and cars for their\n         shipments, however, plagued the company more than ever. It\n         had a good deal of trouble getting all the raw materials it\n         needed due chiefly to the \"tight ship\" run by Harry F.\n         Byrd, Sr., U.S. Fuel Administrator for Virginia. After the\n         war very serious problems began to trouble the Low Moor\n         Iron Company. The demand for iron fell precipitously and a\n         short but severe depression ensued from 1919-1922. The\n         depression seemed to hit the iron industry especially hard.\n         Prices took a huge drop due to the lack of demand, and many\n         pre-war contracts had to be revalued. To compound the\n         company's problems, the Kay Moor Mines went on strike in\n         1919. This strike was quickly settled, as the market for\n         coal was so good that the Low Moor Company ceased taking\n         orders temporarily in 1921 as it could not fill the orders\n         it had on hand.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe Low Moor Company furnaces lay idle for some twenty\n         months. Finally, in November 1922 one of Low Moor's\n         furnaces was finally fired up. While prosperity gradually\n         returned to the rest of the country, the Low Moor Iron\n         Company never recovered. Production of pig iron in the\n         Virginia iron industry declined from 544,034 tons in 1903\n         to 148,053 tons in 1923, considered a good year for the\n         industry as a whole. In February 1926 Low Moor officials\n         talked of merging with two other iron companies in order to\n         revive the iron business for the three companies. The\n         merger, however, never occurred. By late 1926 the company\n         was in the process of liquidation. An advertisement in the\n         Charleston, West Virginia, Daily Mail dated April 30, 1927,\n         told of a huge warehouse sale at the Low Moor Iron Company.\n         The advertisement noted \"thousands of screws, pipe\n         fittings, valves, etc.\" The last piece of correspondence\n         from the Low Moor Iron Company in the collection is dated\n         1929. It deals with the sale of a machine.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eWhy did the iron industry in Virginia decline as it did?\n         Some say that lack of speed, efficiency, and a decent\n         transportation system for Alleghany County caused it. In a\n         letter from C. E. Bertie, secretary of the Virginia Pig\n         Iron Association, to the \n         \u003cbibref type=\"simple\" href=\"\"\u003e\u003ctitle type=\"simple\" href=\"\"\u003eManufacturers Record\u003c/title\u003e\u003c/bibref\u003edated 1925, Bertie claimed that it was the\n         tremendous rise in the cost of transportation. Virginia, he\n         claimed, had almost no home market. Over 80% of its normal\n         production was shipped out to other states. The failure of\n         the Interstate Commerce Commission to treat Virginia\n         furnaces as southern furnaces was the cause of much of the\n         trouble. From 1914-1925 there were four blanket increases\n         in freight rates in the country, of which only one applied\n         equally to all localities. Southern furnaces were received\n         only two increases--a 25% increase in 1918 and a 25%\n         increase in 1920--but northern furnaces had had 5%, 15%,\n         25%, and 40% increases in their transportation costs.\n         Virginia furnaces, although recognized as southern\n         furnaces, had had freight rates increased in line with the\n         northern furnaces. Prior to the war Virginia iron reached\n         all points in Ohio, Indiana, Michigan, and Illinois on a\n         competitive basis with southern furnaces. After World War I\n         the advantage was limited to a small portion of\n         southeastern Ohio. All of Indiana, Illinois, and Michigan\n         were now lost to the Virginia producers. The Virginia\n         producer, according to Bertie, felt that the freight rates\n         should be restored to a relationship with southern\n         furnaces. If what Bertie said was true, the other southern\n         states iron industries should not have been in the same\n         desperate economic straits as Virginia's, and statistics\n         should support this. In the 1920's production rose to new\n         heights in Alabama. In Tennessee, however, iron production\n         plunged to new lows during the 1920's. While the south\n         accounted for 10.2% of the entire U. S. production in the\n         years 1919-1924, Virginia accounted for less than 1% during\n         those years. In 1915 Virginia accounted for over 6% of the\n         U.S. iron production. One can see a decline in other areas\n         of the south than Virginia. While the discrepancies in the\n         freight rates may have helped cause the decline, clearly\n         there are other reasons.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eDuring the 1900's there was a discovery of extremely\n         rich iron ore deposits in the mid-west. Much of this ore\n         was on or near the surface, making the mining of it both\n         easy and inexpensive. This in turn lowered production costs\n         of the pig iron. This caused iron production to shift to\n         that region, and resulted in a decline in the Virginia iron\n         industry. There was a sharp increase in iron production in\n         the mid-west through the 1920's. The iron ore in the\n         mid-west may have been of better quality than Virginia, but\n         the iron ore in Virginia was of sufficient quality to\n         produce a good pig iron. The western ore deposits were not\n         as conveniently located as Virginia deposits, but the\n         inexpensiveness of production more than made up for it.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIn examining the rise and fall of the Low Moor Iron\n         Company, we can see a situation in which the conditions for\n         the manufacture of iron were nearly ideal. There was plenty\n         of land for expansion and resources for the manufacture of\n         the iron. The major internal problem faced by the Low Moor\n         Iron Company was that of transportation. External\n         developments, however, caused the final demise of the Low\n         Moor Iron Company.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLow Moor Iron Company Personnel:\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eExecutive Staff: Managing Director, Colonel H. M.\n         Goodwin: ca. 1881. General Managers: H. G. Merry: ca.\n         1884-1902; E. C. Means: ca. 1905-1915; J. P. Guernsey: ca.\n         1915 (acting General Manager); F. U. Humbert: ca.\n         1916-1929. Assistant General Manager: E. B. Wilkinson: ca.\n         1909-1915. Treasurers and Assistant Treasurers: Edward Low:\n         ca. 1886-1898; Frank Lyman (in New York): ca. 1898-1919; S.\n         G. Cragill (Asst. Treasurer): ca. 1900-1915; H. A. Dalton:\n         ca. 1921-1929; John Lipscomb (Asst. Treasurer): ca.\n         1918-1928.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eFactory and Mine Supervisors: Kay Moor Superintendents:\n         C. C. Cooke: ca. 1918; Ed. D. Wickes: ca. 1906; H. L.\n         Tansell: ca. 1903; A. H. Reed: ca. 1906. Kay Moor Managers:\n         J. W. Monteith: manager of mines. ca. 1918; promoted in\n         1925 to general superintendent in charge of mine plants,\n         coke ovens, shops, repairs, and construction; A. L.\n         Monteith: assistant superintendent of mines, ca. 1918;\n         George T. Wickes: manager of Covington mines, ca.\n         1906-1917; Ross Howell, ca. 1918. Stack Mines\n         Superintendents: J. H. Carpenter: ca. 1906; C. D.\n         Oberschain: ca. 1907; J. L. Harris: ca. 1903; John S. Ham:\n         ca. 1891-1901. Rich Patch Mines Superintendents: John R.\n         Thompson: foreman, ca. 1906. Low Moor assorted other\n         personnel: S. L. Tulley: trainmaster, ca. 1906; B. J.\n         Shenkley: foreman, Low Moor limestone quarries; L. Q. Wood:\n         assistant traffic manager, ca. 1919.\u003c/p\u003e"],"bioghist_heading_ssm":["Biographical/Historical Information"],"bioghist_tesim":["The Low Moor Iron Company, the first producer of pig\n         iron in Virginia according to the company's claims, was a\n         self-contained manufacturing unit producing from its own\n         mines the coal, limestone, and iron ore needed for its iron\n         production. Located in Low Moor near Clifton Forge in\n         Alleghany County in western Virginia, an area rich in\n         mineral deposits, the company was in operation from\n         1872-1930, producing only pig iron; it never attempted to\n         produce finished iron products.","Coal came to the Low Moor furnaces from the Kay Moor\n         Mines at Kay Moor, West Virginia, about thirty miles from\n         Low Moor; limestone was produced from the Low Moor\n         limestone quarries; and iron ore came from the Fenwick,\n         Dolly Ann, Jordan, Rich Patch, Low Moor, and Longdale\n         Mines, most of them within twenty miles of Low Moor at\n         Covington or Clifton Forge.","The towns of Low Moor and Kay Moor were company towns in\n         every respect. Workers lived in company-owned houses,\n         bought food in company stores, worshiped at the company\n         church, saw movies in the company theater, were treated in\n         the company hospital, and were buried in the company\n         cemetery. Workers received part of their pay in scrip that\n         they exchanged for goods and services. According to a\n         statement from the Kay Moor Mines dated November 1904, Kay\n         Moor then employed 338 people, paid them an average wage of\n         $36.26 per month, and issued half of their pay in scrip.\n         Kay Moor had four stores; Low Moor had seven or eight. All\n         of these stores carried large inventories which are\n         detailed in the collection. These inventories are valuable\n         to anyone interested in determining the wants and needs of\n         a coal miner and his family.","In the late 1910's and 1920's Kay Moor had a company\n         theater called the Azure Theater which seated about 300\n         people. There were also plans for a company-owned social\n         center, to have pool tables, a soda fountain, and\n         provisions for dancing and skating. The company was in\n         tough economic straits by the 1920's, however, and there is\n         no evidence that the social center was built. The town of\n         Low Moor was so completely under the company's influence\n         that one of Low Moor Iron Company's assistant managers\n         served as the town sheriff. He often foreclosed on people\n         who did not pay their debts, and drove troublesome people\n         \"out of town on a rail\" as he put it.","The Low Moor Iron Company's fortunes fluctuated during\n         the various business cycles between the years 1880-1930.\n         Low Moor was one of the larger pig iron producers in\n         Virginia, but Virginia pig iron production was not\n         important nationally. Low Moor officials sometimes sold\n         their product themselves, but more often they used agents,\n         the prevalent method at the time. Low Moor Iron Company\n         used a variety of agents through the 1900's. James F. Bryan\n         acted as the exclusive agent for the sale of Kay Moor Coal\n         from September 21, 1903 to September, 1905. From about 1890\n         until about 1910 Dalton Nash and Company were the exclusive\n         eastern agents of Low Moor Iron. After that time the\n         exclusive agency went to Philips Isham and Company located\n         in New York. From about 1890 the western agency was handled\n         chiefly by Thomas Mack and Company. After 1902 Thomas Mack\n         and Company underwent a name change, becoming Walter\n         Wallingford and Company, with offices located in\n         Cincinnati, Pittsburgh, and Chicago.","Perhaps the Low Moor Iron Company's biggest problem over\n         the years was obtaining railroad cars for the\n         transportation of its finished product. Low Moor Iron\n         Company had its own cars for transporting its raw materials\n         among its various facilities. For the long haul necessary\n         for its finished goods, however, it depended upon the\n         services of the Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad, and the\n         relationship was not always a happy one. The Low Moor\n         Company complained many times to the C \u0026 O Railroad\n         about the discrepancies between long-and shorthaul freight\n         rates. Low Moor also had trouble getting cars from the C\n         \u0026 O. In a letter to one of Low Moor Company's agents\n         from an irate customer dated 1898, the customer wrote: \"We\n         wrote you on Saturday and endeavored to question upon your\n         mind the necessity of taking care of us with Low Moor iron.\n         We are on our uppers--there is not a pound of Low Moor iron\n         in the yard. Of the one hundred tons ordered some time ago,\n         not one pound of it has been received.\" This was, according\n         to the Low Moor Iron Company, because they could not get\n         the railroad cars. In a letter from Thomas Mack and Company\n         dated November 26, 1901, to General Manager E. C. Means:\n         \"We are hopeful that the car supply will get better because\n         of the number of orders you have of ours for prompt\n         shipment. Our customers are complaining that they are not\n         getting the iron fast enough. . . . We hope that the\n         railroad will be able to supply you with empty cars.\" In\n         another letter dated 1916 to John B. Guernsey, then acting\n         General Manager of the Low Moor Iron Company, \"We were not\n         supplied with coke cars for today's loading, and\n         consequently we have been practically down of Kay Moor\n         ovens all day.\"","The problem of procuring labor also plagued the Low Moor\n         Company. The company sometimes tried to hire immigrant\n         laborers and send the men directly to Low Moor from New\n         York City. There were problems with this, as is explained\n         in the following letter dated April 7, 1906: \n          To Mr. George Wickes \n             Supt. of Mines \n             Kay Moor, Virginia \n             Dear George, \n             Tony arrived with twenty one men last night. One\n            got away in Jersey two in Washington D.C., four in\n            Charlottesville. Some of the men are very good looking,\n            but taken as a whole they are the worst lot I have ever\n            seen: Irish, German-Jews, and Italians. . . . Our New\n            York transportations to this place have never been a\n            success. Signed, \n             Ed D. Wickes Supt. of Mines Low Moor usually employed labor agencies, one\n         of which was Atwood's Employment Agency. Often the Low Moor\n         Company would request certain nationalities, believing them\n         to be better workers than others. Sometimes the company\n         would request a gang of twenty made up of \"ten Greeks and\n         ten Italians.\" Many of the immigrants fled Low Moor and Kay\n         Moor when they learned that they would have to work\n         underground. There is a fair amount of material on\n         immigrant labor and its procurement in the collection, and\n         it is noted in the description of the box contents.","Low Moor Iron Company not only had trouble procuring\n         labor, but it also had trouble with labor already employed\n         in the mines and at the factory. Labor dissension and\n         strikes troubled the Kay Moor Mines through the 1900's. The\n         great coal strike of 1902 hurt the Low Moor Company's coal\n         mining operation, but by 1903 things were \"nearly back to\n         normal\" according to the mine superintendent. There was\n         still trouble at Kay Moor Mines, however. In a letter dated\n         April 26, 1906, to the treasurer of Low Moor Company, the\n         manager of the mines wrote about the trouble in \"trying to\n         get the agitators out.\" The mines were seventy-five men\n         short of the total labor force needed because many of the\n         coal miners returned to their farms during the spring.\n         There were rumblings of another strike at Kay Moor, the\n         result of which was to be a fourteen percent increase in\n         wages for the Kay Moor Mine workers via an agreement with\n         the United Mine Workers Union in December.","The Low Moor Iron Company grew along with the rest of\n         Virginia industry in the 1890's and 1900's. Starting with\n         only one furnace in the 1870's, it opened a second furnace\n         at Covington, Virginia, in 1891. In 1911 it opened a third\n         furnace, this time at Low Moor. Covington, with its heavy\n         industry, soon became known as the \"Pittsburgh of\n         Virginia.\" Virginia's pig iron production rose from 9,000\n         short tons in 1870 to 544,034 long tons in 1903. Judging\n         from the Low Moor Company's correspondence, the most\n         prosperous period for the company fell between the years\n         1895-1907. In the years between 1907-1917 problems befell\n         the Virginia pig iron industry. In a letter from William W.\n         Hearns, the president of the Virginia based Princess Pig\n         Iron Company, to U. S. Senator Thomas S. Martin, Hearns\n         writes of the problems of the Virginia pig iron industry:\n         \"There is not a blast furnace in Virginia that is making\n         any money from the manufacture of pig iron. The cause of\n         this is there is an exceedingly low price on pig iron in\n         the country at the present time, and the increased cost of\n         manufacturing is due to the increase in wages in all\n         lines.\" With the outbreak of World War I prices rose\n         dramatically, but in a market report to Low Moor dated\n         November 11, 1916, it was stated that: \"In spite of the\n         high prices, it is not a picnic to be in the iron industry.\n         There is a desperate shortage of cars and equipment in the\n         coal and iron districts, and in consequence there are\n         troubles of all kinds to get materials shipped. The\n         situation has grown serious.\"","When America became involved in the First World War, it\n         meant a boost for the Low Moor Iron Company. The government\n         helped it procure labor, and even helped it repair its\n         furnaces. The problem of supplies and cars for their\n         shipments, however, plagued the company more than ever. It\n         had a good deal of trouble getting all the raw materials it\n         needed due chiefly to the \"tight ship\" run by Harry F.\n         Byrd, Sr., U.S. Fuel Administrator for Virginia. After the\n         war very serious problems began to trouble the Low Moor\n         Iron Company. The demand for iron fell precipitously and a\n         short but severe depression ensued from 1919-1922. The\n         depression seemed to hit the iron industry especially hard.\n         Prices took a huge drop due to the lack of demand, and many\n         pre-war contracts had to be revalued. To compound the\n         company's problems, the Kay Moor Mines went on strike in\n         1919. This strike was quickly settled, as the market for\n         coal was so good that the Low Moor Company ceased taking\n         orders temporarily in 1921 as it could not fill the orders\n         it had on hand.","The Low Moor Company furnaces lay idle for some twenty\n         months. Finally, in November 1922 one of Low Moor's\n         furnaces was finally fired up. While prosperity gradually\n         returned to the rest of the country, the Low Moor Iron\n         Company never recovered. Production of pig iron in the\n         Virginia iron industry declined from 544,034 tons in 1903\n         to 148,053 tons in 1923, considered a good year for the\n         industry as a whole. In February 1926 Low Moor officials\n         talked of merging with two other iron companies in order to\n         revive the iron business for the three companies. The\n         merger, however, never occurred. By late 1926 the company\n         was in the process of liquidation. An advertisement in the\n         Charleston, West Virginia, Daily Mail dated April 30, 1927,\n         told of a huge warehouse sale at the Low Moor Iron Company.\n         The advertisement noted \"thousands of screws, pipe\n         fittings, valves, etc.\" The last piece of correspondence\n         from the Low Moor Iron Company in the collection is dated\n         1929. It deals with the sale of a machine.","Why did the iron industry in Virginia decline as it did?\n         Some say that lack of speed, efficiency, and a decent\n         transportation system for Alleghany County caused it. In a\n         letter from C. E. Bertie, secretary of the Virginia Pig\n         Iron Association, to the \n          Manufacturers Record dated 1925, Bertie claimed that it was the\n         tremendous rise in the cost of transportation. Virginia, he\n         claimed, had almost no home market. Over 80% of its normal\n         production was shipped out to other states. The failure of\n         the Interstate Commerce Commission to treat Virginia\n         furnaces as southern furnaces was the cause of much of the\n         trouble. From 1914-1925 there were four blanket increases\n         in freight rates in the country, of which only one applied\n         equally to all localities. Southern furnaces were received\n         only two increases--a 25% increase in 1918 and a 25%\n         increase in 1920--but northern furnaces had had 5%, 15%,\n         25%, and 40% increases in their transportation costs.\n         Virginia furnaces, although recognized as southern\n         furnaces, had had freight rates increased in line with the\n         northern furnaces. Prior to the war Virginia iron reached\n         all points in Ohio, Indiana, Michigan, and Illinois on a\n         competitive basis with southern furnaces. After World War I\n         the advantage was limited to a small portion of\n         southeastern Ohio. All of Indiana, Illinois, and Michigan\n         were now lost to the Virginia producers. The Virginia\n         producer, according to Bertie, felt that the freight rates\n         should be restored to a relationship with southern\n         furnaces. If what Bertie said was true, the other southern\n         states iron industries should not have been in the same\n         desperate economic straits as Virginia's, and statistics\n         should support this. In the 1920's production rose to new\n         heights in Alabama. In Tennessee, however, iron production\n         plunged to new lows during the 1920's. While the south\n         accounted for 10.2% of the entire U. S. production in the\n         years 1919-1924, Virginia accounted for less than 1% during\n         those years. In 1915 Virginia accounted for over 6% of the\n         U.S. iron production. One can see a decline in other areas\n         of the south than Virginia. While the discrepancies in the\n         freight rates may have helped cause the decline, clearly\n         there are other reasons.","During the 1900's there was a discovery of extremely\n         rich iron ore deposits in the mid-west. Much of this ore\n         was on or near the surface, making the mining of it both\n         easy and inexpensive. This in turn lowered production costs\n         of the pig iron. This caused iron production to shift to\n         that region, and resulted in a decline in the Virginia iron\n         industry. There was a sharp increase in iron production in\n         the mid-west through the 1920's. The iron ore in the\n         mid-west may have been of better quality than Virginia, but\n         the iron ore in Virginia was of sufficient quality to\n         produce a good pig iron. The western ore deposits were not\n         as conveniently located as Virginia deposits, but the\n         inexpensiveness of production more than made up for it.","In examining the rise and fall of the Low Moor Iron\n         Company, we can see a situation in which the conditions for\n         the manufacture of iron were nearly ideal. There was plenty\n         of land for expansion and resources for the manufacture of\n         the iron. The major internal problem faced by the Low Moor\n         Iron Company was that of transportation. External\n         developments, however, caused the final demise of the Low\n         Moor Iron Company.","Low Moor Iron Company Personnel:","Executive Staff: Managing Director, Colonel H. M.\n         Goodwin: ca. 1881. General Managers: H. G. Merry: ca.\n         1884-1902; E. C. Means: ca. 1905-1915; J. P. Guernsey: ca.\n         1915 (acting General Manager); F. U. Humbert: ca.\n         1916-1929. Assistant General Manager: E. B. Wilkinson: ca.\n         1909-1915. Treasurers and Assistant Treasurers: Edward Low:\n         ca. 1886-1898; Frank Lyman (in New York): ca. 1898-1919; S.\n         G. Cragill (Asst. Treasurer): ca. 1900-1915; H. A. Dalton:\n         ca. 1921-1929; John Lipscomb (Asst. Treasurer): ca.\n         1918-1928.","Factory and Mine Supervisors: Kay Moor Superintendents:\n         C. C. Cooke: ca. 1918; Ed. D. Wickes: ca. 1906; H. L.\n         Tansell: ca. 1903; A. H. Reed: ca. 1906. Kay Moor Managers:\n         J. W. Monteith: manager of mines. ca. 1918; promoted in\n         1925 to general superintendent in charge of mine plants,\n         coke ovens, shops, repairs, and construction; A. L.\n         Monteith: assistant superintendent of mines, ca. 1918;\n         George T. Wickes: manager of Covington mines, ca.\n         1906-1917; Ross Howell, ca. 1918. Stack Mines\n         Superintendents: J. H. Carpenter: ca. 1906; C. D.\n         Oberschain: ca. 1907; J. L. Harris: ca. 1903; John S. Ham:\n         ca. 1891-1901. Rich Patch Mines Superintendents: John R.\n         Thompson: foreman, ca. 1906. Low Moor assorted other\n         personnel: S. L. Tulley: trainmaster, ca. 1906; B. J.\n         Shenkley: foreman, Low Moor limestone quarries; L. Q. Wood:\n         assistant traffic manager, ca. 1919."],"custodhist_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe Low Moor Iron Company ceased operations in 1930;\n            what happened to the records of the company in the years\n            immediately following is not known, but in 1939, the Green\n            Bookman, a Charlottesville bookshop, sold the records to\n            the University of Virginia Library.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe records arrived at the receiving room door of the\n            new Alderman Library on October 16, 1939, in a trailer\n            truck whose load was estimated to weigh about fourteen\n            tons. As the manuscripts staff dug around in the piles of\n            over 1200 account books, and countless boxes of papers they\n            realized that the company had saved almost all of its\n            papers including checks, invoices, vouchers, and receipts,\n            and certain of these records were destroyed as their\n            information was recorded in other records. Once the bulk of\n            the collection had been reduced, the remaining records were\n            transferred to the stack area of the Division of Rare Books\n            and Manuscripts.\u003c/p\u003e"],"custodhist_heading_ssm":["Provenance"],"custodhist_tesim":["The Low Moor Iron Company ceased operations in 1930;\n            what happened to the records of the company in the years\n            immediately following is not known, but in 1939, the Green\n            Bookman, a Charlottesville bookshop, sold the records to\n            the University of Virginia Library.","The records arrived at the receiving room door of the\n            new Alderman Library on October 16, 1939, in a trailer\n            truck whose load was estimated to weigh about fourteen\n            tons. As the manuscripts staff dug around in the piles of\n            over 1200 account books, and countless boxes of papers they\n            realized that the company had saved almost all of its\n            papers including checks, invoices, vouchers, and receipts,\n            and certain of these records were destroyed as their\n            information was recorded in other records. Once the bulk of\n            the collection had been reduced, the remaining records were\n            transferred to the stack area of the Division of Rare Books\n            and Manuscripts."],"otherfindaid_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eSome 1200 bound accounting record books of the Low Moor\n            Iron Company came into the custody of the Library with the\n            loose papers. When the project staff investigated these\n            volumes in the dormitory attic where they were stored, they\n            found that the volumes had been shelved by size rather than\n            by series. Thus, a letterbook may stand next to a stock\n            report book for a furnace, which is, in turn, next to a\n            store account book for the Kay Moor Mines' store. No series\n            are shelved in order.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMembers of the project staff surveyed the volumes,\n            completing for each volume two copies of a mimeographed\n            survey form, and assigning to each volume a number. One\n            copy of the survey report form was placed in the volume,\n            and the second was returned to the Library.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eFrom the survey report forms, 3 x 5 inch index\n            cards--with a carbon copy of each--were typed. One set of\n            index cards has been kept in order by the numbers assigned\n            to the volumes as they stand on the shelves. This provides\n            a shelf list for the use of the library staff. The other\n            set of cards was sorted into categories as a finding aid.\n            On the list that follows, the researcher will find a number\n            of major headings such as \"Accounts,\" \"Inventories,\"\n            \"Letter Books,\" and \"Shipments-Outgoing.\"\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eInsofar as it has been possible to determine from the\n            data on the survey report forms, the volumes have been\n            assigned to categories. Most of the major categories, or\n            headings, have sub-headings. Within those sub-headings, the\n            volumes have been arranged chronologically. The\n            investigators realize that after careful study of some of\n            these volumes, they will be revealed as belonging to other\n            categories than those in which they have initially been\n            placed. The card index will allow such movement.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAvailable in the Manuscripts/Archives Reading Room in\n            the Library is the sorted card index file. There is a card\n            for every volume in this file whereas, on the pages that\n            follow, volumes have been summarized under the headings and\n            sub-headings. In each case, the number of volumes has been\n            given in the summarized list; the date ranges given are\n            inclusive in most cases, and do not reveal the many gaps in\n            sequences unless the number of volumes is small and the\n            date range wide. Occasional remarks about the content of\n            volumes have been supplied if the contents are not obvious\n            from the heading or sub-heading.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eResearchers wishing to examine any of these volumes will\n            have to use the card index file in order to be able to give\n            to the staff the volume number assigned to the individual\n            volumes that are to be inspected.\u003c/p\u003e"],"otherfindaid_heading_ssm":["Other Finding Aid"],"otherfindaid_tesim":["Some 1200 bound accounting record books of the Low Moor\n            Iron Company came into the custody of the Library with the\n            loose papers. When the project staff investigated these\n            volumes in the dormitory attic where they were stored, they\n            found that the volumes had been shelved by size rather than\n            by series. Thus, a letterbook may stand next to a stock\n            report book for a furnace, which is, in turn, next to a\n            store account book for the Kay Moor Mines' store. No series\n            are shelved in order.","Members of the project staff surveyed the volumes,\n            completing for each volume two copies of a mimeographed\n            survey form, and assigning to each volume a number. One\n            copy of the survey report form was placed in the volume,\n            and the second was returned to the Library.","From the survey report forms, 3 x 5 inch index\n            cards--with a carbon copy of each--were typed. One set of\n            index cards has been kept in order by the numbers assigned\n            to the volumes as they stand on the shelves. This provides\n            a shelf list for the use of the library staff. The other\n            set of cards was sorted into categories as a finding aid.\n            On the list that follows, the researcher will find a number\n            of major headings such as \"Accounts,\" \"Inventories,\"\n            \"Letter Books,\" and \"Shipments-Outgoing.\"","Insofar as it has been possible to determine from the\n            data on the survey report forms, the volumes have been\n            assigned to categories. Most of the major categories, or\n            headings, have sub-headings. Within those sub-headings, the\n            volumes have been arranged chronologically. The\n            investigators realize that after careful study of some of\n            these volumes, they will be revealed as belonging to other\n            categories than those in which they have initially been\n            placed. The card index will allow such movement.","Available in the Manuscripts/Archives Reading Room in\n            the Library is the sorted card index file. There is a card\n            for every volume in this file whereas, on the pages that\n            follow, volumes have been summarized under the headings and\n            sub-headings. In each case, the number of volumes has been\n            given in the summarized list; the date ranges given are\n            inclusive in most cases, and do not reveal the many gaps in\n            sequences unless the number of volumes is small and the\n            date range wide. Occasional remarks about the content of\n            volumes have been supplied if the contents are not obvious\n            from the heading or sub-heading.","Researchers wishing to examine any of these volumes will\n            have to use the card index file in order to be able to give\n            to the staff the volume number assigned to the individual\n            volumes that are to be inspected."],"prefercite_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003ePapers of the Low Moor Iron Company, Accession #662,\n            Special Collections, University of Virginia Library,\n            Charlottesville, Va.\u003c/p\u003e"],"prefercite_tesim":["Papers of the Low Moor Iron Company, Accession #662,\n            Special Collections, University of Virginia Library,\n            Charlottesville, Va."],"processinfo_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eBy 1958, little storage space remained in Alderman\n            Library, and the Rare Books and Manuscripts Division was\n            especially crowded because of the rapid growth of its\n            collections. After an examination of its storage areas, the\n            division's staff decided to move the Low Moor records to\n            the attic of one of the student dormitories. The collection\n            had had little use chiefly because there was no finding\n            aid. There seemed little likelihood of extensive researcher\n            use until the collection could be processed.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIn preparation for the move, the old letter boxes in\n            which much of the collection had arrived in the Library\n            were discarded. The records from each box were placed\n            between sheets of the heavy gray cardboard used to protect\n            unbound newspapers in the Library's stacks, and the spine\n            labels of the old letter boxes were copied onto the\n            cardboard. The resulting bundles were wrapped with brown\n            Kraft paper and tied up with string. The bundles were\n            numbered. Whatever original order the letter boxes may have\n            had was lost by the time they arrived in the Library, and\n            after the bundling, removal to a dormitory attic, and\n            subsequent return to the Library in 1976, all vestiges of\n            the original order were lost.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe bundles remained in the dormitory attic for almost\n            twenty years. Occasional visits were made by the division\n            staff to check on their condition, and on very rare\n            occasions, a researcher was brave enough to ask to be shown\n            the collection. Once the researcher saw the imposing amount\n            of material and the conditions in the attic, interest in\n            using the collection invariably died.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIn late 1976 a grant from the National Endowment for the\n            Humanities was obtained to allow the Library to process the\n            Low Moor Iron Company papers, and the papers of Edward L.\n            Stone and the Borderland Coal Company, another large\n            collection of records stored in the same dormitory attic.\n            All of these records and papers were moved back to the\n            Library where the bundles were cleaned and opened. The\n            contents of each were placed in a Hollinger storage box,\n            and all notes on the paper wrappings and on the gray\n            cardboard sheets were recorded.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe more than 1200 bound accounting records of the Low\n            Moor Iron Company were surveyed by the grant project staff.\n            The contents of each volume were noted on a mimeographed\n            form, and later typed on 3 x 5\" cards to create a\n            readily-accessible file for the Manuscripts Reading Room.\n            This information was also typed on pages to be added to\n            this guide.\u003c/p\u003e"],"processinfo_heading_ssm":["Processing Information"],"processinfo_tesim":["By 1958, little storage space remained in Alderman\n            Library, and the Rare Books and Manuscripts Division was\n            especially crowded because of the rapid growth of its\n            collections. After an examination of its storage areas, the\n            division's staff decided to move the Low Moor records to\n            the attic of one of the student dormitories. The collection\n            had had little use chiefly because there was no finding\n            aid. There seemed little likelihood of extensive researcher\n            use until the collection could be processed.","In preparation for the move, the old letter boxes in\n            which much of the collection had arrived in the Library\n            were discarded. The records from each box were placed\n            between sheets of the heavy gray cardboard used to protect\n            unbound newspapers in the Library's stacks, and the spine\n            labels of the old letter boxes were copied onto the\n            cardboard. The resulting bundles were wrapped with brown\n            Kraft paper and tied up with string. The bundles were\n            numbered. Whatever original order the letter boxes may have\n            had was lost by the time they arrived in the Library, and\n            after the bundling, removal to a dormitory attic, and\n            subsequent return to the Library in 1976, all vestiges of\n            the original order were lost.","The bundles remained in the dormitory attic for almost\n            twenty years. Occasional visits were made by the division\n            staff to check on their condition, and on very rare\n            occasions, a researcher was brave enough to ask to be shown\n            the collection. Once the researcher saw the imposing amount\n            of material and the conditions in the attic, interest in\n            using the collection invariably died.","In late 1976 a grant from the National Endowment for the\n            Humanities was obtained to allow the Library to process the\n            Low Moor Iron Company papers, and the papers of Edward L.\n            Stone and the Borderland Coal Company, another large\n            collection of records stored in the same dormitory attic.\n            All of these records and papers were moved back to the\n            Library where the bundles were cleaned and opened. The\n            contents of each were placed in a Hollinger storage box,\n            and all notes on the paper wrappings and on the gray\n            cardboard sheets were recorded.","The more than 1200 bound accounting records of the Low\n            Moor Iron Company were surveyed by the grant project staff.\n            The contents of each volume were noted on a mimeographed\n            form, and later typed on 3 x 5\" cards to create a\n            readily-accessible file for the Manuscripts Reading Room.\n            This information was also typed on pages to be added to\n            this guide."],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe Low Moor Iron Company papers consist of\n         approximately 280 four-inch Hollinger archives boxes (ca.\n         95 linear feet) of records, ca. 1885-1927, and some 1200\n         bound volumes of the company's accounting records,\n         1873-1927, of this iron producing company located in Low\n         Moor (four miles southwest of Clifton Forge), Alleghany\n         County, Virginia.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThis material consists of records typical of those\n         produced by a firm of this type in the period, but as the\n         company owned its own coal and iron mines and limestone\n         quarries, there is considerable information about the\n         production of these raw materials. Large numbers of the\n         records that deal with the company's employees have\n         survived: time books, payroll books, hands ledgers, and the\n         like. Because these books sometimes include information\n         about the employee's trade or job with the company, and as\n         race is indicated in some of the records, these books\n         should provide date for studies of the structure and upward\n         mobility within the labor force, patterns of\n         ethnic--possibly racial--occupational penetration and\n         mobility, material conditions of the workers, and so on.\n         The papers should permit a range of studies detailing the\n         pattern and evolution of industrial organization in the\n         iron industry, and the evolution of markets and marketing\n         structures for the entire period. Because the company was\n         dependent upon railroads to move its raw materials to the\n         furnaces, and for the marketing of its products, there is\n         considerable information about railroads and their\n         relationship to their customers.\u003c/p\u003e"],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Scope and Content Information"],"scopecontent_tesim":["The Low Moor Iron Company papers consist of\n         approximately 280 four-inch Hollinger archives boxes (ca.\n         95 linear feet) of records, ca. 1885-1927, and some 1200\n         bound volumes of the company's accounting records,\n         1873-1927, of this iron producing company located in Low\n         Moor (four miles southwest of Clifton Forge), Alleghany\n         County, Virginia.","This material consists of records typical of those\n         produced by a firm of this type in the period, but as the\n         company owned its own coal and iron mines and limestone\n         quarries, there is considerable information about the\n         production of these raw materials. Large numbers of the\n         records that deal with the company's employees have\n         survived: time books, payroll books, hands ledgers, and the\n         like. Because these books sometimes include information\n         about the employee's trade or job with the company, and as\n         race is indicated in some of the records, these books\n         should provide date for studies of the structure and upward\n         mobility within the labor force, patterns of\n         ethnic--possibly racial--occupational penetration and\n         mobility, material conditions of the workers, and so on.\n         The papers should permit a range of studies detailing the\n         pattern and evolution of industrial organization in the\n         iron industry, and the evolution of markets and marketing\n         structures for the entire period. Because the company was\n         dependent upon railroads to move its raw materials to the\n         furnaces, and for the marketing of its products, there is\n         considerable information about railroads and their\n         relationship to their customers."],"userestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eSee the \n            \u003cextref type=\"simple\" href=\"https://www.library.virginia.edu/policies/use-of-materials\"\u003e\n            University of Virginia Library’s use policy.\u003c/extref\u003e\u003c/p\u003e"],"userestrict_heading_ssm":["Use Restrictions\n"],"userestrict_tesim":["See the \n             \n            University of Virginia Library’s use policy."],"language_ssim":["English"],"total_component_count_is":1879,"online_item_count_is":0,"component_level_isim":[0],"sort_isi":0,"timestamp":"2026-05-21T12:10:02.328Z"}]}},"label":"Breadcrumbs"}}},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_viu00917_c01_c28_c01"}},{"id":"viu_viu00917_c01_c06_c01","type":"Subseries","attributes":{"title":"A. General; numbered\n                     sequence","breadcrumbs":{"id":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_viu00917_c01_c06_c01#breadcrumbs","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":{"ref_ssi":"viu_viu00917_c01_c06_c01","ref_ssm":["viu_viu00917_c01_c06_c01"],"id":"viu_viu00917_c01_c06_c01","ead_ssi":"viu_viu00917","_root_":"viu_viu00917","_nest_parent_":"viu_viu00917_c01_c06","parent_ssi":"viu_viu00917_c01_c06","parent_ssim":["viu_viu00917","viu_viu00917_c01","viu_viu00917_c01_c06"],"parent_ids_ssim":["viu_viu00917","viu_viu00917_c01","viu_viu00917_c01_c06"],"parent_unittitles_ssm":["Papers of the Low Moor Iron Company \n         1873-1927","Bound Volumes","Cashbooks"],"parent_unittitles_tesim":["Papers of the Low Moor Iron Company \n         1873-1927","Bound Volumes","Cashbooks"],"text":["Papers of the Low Moor Iron Company \n         1873-1927","Bound Volumes","Cashbooks","A. General; numbered\n                     sequence","11 volumes"],"title_filing_ssi":"A. General; numbered\n                     sequence","title_ssm":["A. General; numbered\n                     sequence"],"title_tesim":["A. General; numbered\n                     sequence"],"unitdate_other_ssim":["1873-1925"],"normalized_date_ssm":["1873/1925"],"normalized_title_ssm":["A. General; numbered\n                     sequence"],"component_level_isim":[3],"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"collection_ssim":["Papers of the Low Moor Iron Company \n         1873-1927"],"physdesc_tesim":["11 volumes"],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"child_component_count_isi":0,"level_ssm":["Subseries"],"level_ssim":["Subseries"],"sort_isi":21,"date_range_isim":[1873,1874,1875,1876,1877,1878,1879,1880,1881,1882,1883,1884,1885,1886,1887,1888,1889,1890,1891,1892,1893,1894,1895,1896,1897,1898,1899,1900,1901,1902,1903,1904,1905,1906,1907,1908,1909,1910,1911,1912,1913,1914,1915,1916,1917,1918,1919,1920,1921,1922,1923,1924,1925],"_nest_path_":"/components#0/components#5/components#0","timestamp":"2026-05-21T12:10:02.328Z","collection":{"numFound":1,"start":0,"numFoundExact":true,"docs":[{"id":"viu_viu00917","ead_ssi":"viu_viu00917","_root_":"viu_viu00917","_nest_parent_":"viu_viu00917","ead_source_url_ssi":"data/uva-sc/viu00917.xml","title_ssm":["Papers of the Low Moor Iron Company \n         1873-1927"],"title_tesim":["Papers of the Low Moor Iron Company \n         1873-1927"],"level_ssm":["collection"],"level_ssim":["Collection"],"unitid_ssm":["662"],"text":["662","Papers of the Low Moor Iron Company \n         1873-1927","95 linear feer + 1200\n         volumes","Stored off-site. Users must request boxes 48 hours in advance of desired use. Neither drop-in nor next-day requests can be fulfilled. For additional information, contact Special Collections. \n","The word \"organization\" is used here with considerable\n         diffidence, for any researcher studying the container list\n         that follows will realize quickly that there is no\n         organization in the usual sense of the word.","As noted under \"Provenance,\" the Low Moor Iron Company\n         papers were subjected to a number of moves; when processing\n         began in the fall of 1976, no discernible scheme of\n         organization could be determined.","The first step was to review the series of coded numbers\n         placed on the bundles of papers before they were moved to\n         the dormitory attic, but these did not provide any sort of\n         useful organization. Next, the spine titles of the original\n         letter boxes were reviewed (they had been copied onto the\n         gray cardboard sheets before the move to the dormitory\n         attic), but they, too, proved useless.","These steps having provided no scheme, and after a\n         considerable hiatus due to a turnover in student processors\n         on the collection, the new student processors were\n         instructed to begin a box-by-box inventory of the contents\n         of the collection. During this inventory, old folders were\n         replaced with acid-free ones, and the original folder\n         headings were copied onto the new ones. Some removal of\n         paper clips was accomplished, and the materials were\n         reviewed and notes taken for the guide.","Some consolidation of materials was accomplished, and in\n         other cases, materials were moved. This work has created\n         some problems in the numbering of the boxes. Thus, the\n         researchers will find boxes marked \"6A\" and \"23C\"; he will\n         also discover that certain box numbers have been entirely\n         omitted. As the box numbers exist only to aid in the\n         location of material, it was not felt that the unusual\n         numbers and the omissions would cause problems in working\n         with the papers.","A certain amount of movement of boxes within the\n         collection, and of materials among boxes, probably would\n         ease use of it. But what processing was accomplished on\n         this project took far longer than had been anticipated, and\n         there was no time in the late spring of 1978, when the\n         processors had to complete their work with the project, to\n         undertake a mass movement of material. Thus, they stand in\n         the order in which we found them at the beginning of the\n         project.","The Low Moor Iron Company, the first producer of pig\n         iron in Virginia according to the company's claims, was a\n         self-contained manufacturing unit producing from its own\n         mines the coal, limestone, and iron ore needed for its iron\n         production. Located in Low Moor near Clifton Forge in\n         Alleghany County in western Virginia, an area rich in\n         mineral deposits, the company was in operation from\n         1872-1930, producing only pig iron; it never attempted to\n         produce finished iron products.","Coal came to the Low Moor furnaces from the Kay Moor\n         Mines at Kay Moor, West Virginia, about thirty miles from\n         Low Moor; limestone was produced from the Low Moor\n         limestone quarries; and iron ore came from the Fenwick,\n         Dolly Ann, Jordan, Rich Patch, Low Moor, and Longdale\n         Mines, most of them within twenty miles of Low Moor at\n         Covington or Clifton Forge.","The towns of Low Moor and Kay Moor were company towns in\n         every respect. Workers lived in company-owned houses,\n         bought food in company stores, worshiped at the company\n         church, saw movies in the company theater, were treated in\n         the company hospital, and were buried in the company\n         cemetery. Workers received part of their pay in scrip that\n         they exchanged for goods and services. According to a\n         statement from the Kay Moor Mines dated November 1904, Kay\n         Moor then employed 338 people, paid them an average wage of\n         $36.26 per month, and issued half of their pay in scrip.\n         Kay Moor had four stores; Low Moor had seven or eight. All\n         of these stores carried large inventories which are\n         detailed in the collection. These inventories are valuable\n         to anyone interested in determining the wants and needs of\n         a coal miner and his family.","In the late 1910's and 1920's Kay Moor had a company\n         theater called the Azure Theater which seated about 300\n         people. There were also plans for a company-owned social\n         center, to have pool tables, a soda fountain, and\n         provisions for dancing and skating. The company was in\n         tough economic straits by the 1920's, however, and there is\n         no evidence that the social center was built. The town of\n         Low Moor was so completely under the company's influence\n         that one of Low Moor Iron Company's assistant managers\n         served as the town sheriff. He often foreclosed on people\n         who did not pay their debts, and drove troublesome people\n         \"out of town on a rail\" as he put it.","The Low Moor Iron Company's fortunes fluctuated during\n         the various business cycles between the years 1880-1930.\n         Low Moor was one of the larger pig iron producers in\n         Virginia, but Virginia pig iron production was not\n         important nationally. Low Moor officials sometimes sold\n         their product themselves, but more often they used agents,\n         the prevalent method at the time. Low Moor Iron Company\n         used a variety of agents through the 1900's. James F. Bryan\n         acted as the exclusive agent for the sale of Kay Moor Coal\n         from September 21, 1903 to September, 1905. From about 1890\n         until about 1910 Dalton Nash and Company were the exclusive\n         eastern agents of Low Moor Iron. After that time the\n         exclusive agency went to Philips Isham and Company located\n         in New York. From about 1890 the western agency was handled\n         chiefly by Thomas Mack and Company. After 1902 Thomas Mack\n         and Company underwent a name change, becoming Walter\n         Wallingford and Company, with offices located in\n         Cincinnati, Pittsburgh, and Chicago.","Perhaps the Low Moor Iron Company's biggest problem over\n         the years was obtaining railroad cars for the\n         transportation of its finished product. Low Moor Iron\n         Company had its own cars for transporting its raw materials\n         among its various facilities. For the long haul necessary\n         for its finished goods, however, it depended upon the\n         services of the Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad, and the\n         relationship was not always a happy one. The Low Moor\n         Company complained many times to the C \u0026 O Railroad\n         about the discrepancies between long-and shorthaul freight\n         rates. Low Moor also had trouble getting cars from the C\n         \u0026 O. In a letter to one of Low Moor Company's agents\n         from an irate customer dated 1898, the customer wrote: \"We\n         wrote you on Saturday and endeavored to question upon your\n         mind the necessity of taking care of us with Low Moor iron.\n         We are on our uppers--there is not a pound of Low Moor iron\n         in the yard. Of the one hundred tons ordered some time ago,\n         not one pound of it has been received.\" This was, according\n         to the Low Moor Iron Company, because they could not get\n         the railroad cars. In a letter from Thomas Mack and Company\n         dated November 26, 1901, to General Manager E. C. Means:\n         \"We are hopeful that the car supply will get better because\n         of the number of orders you have of ours for prompt\n         shipment. Our customers are complaining that they are not\n         getting the iron fast enough. . . . We hope that the\n         railroad will be able to supply you with empty cars.\" In\n         another letter dated 1916 to John B. Guernsey, then acting\n         General Manager of the Low Moor Iron Company, \"We were not\n         supplied with coke cars for today's loading, and\n         consequently we have been practically down of Kay Moor\n         ovens all day.\"","The problem of procuring labor also plagued the Low Moor\n         Company. The company sometimes tried to hire immigrant\n         laborers and send the men directly to Low Moor from New\n         York City. There were problems with this, as is explained\n         in the following letter dated April 7, 1906: \n          To Mr. George Wickes \n             Supt. of Mines \n             Kay Moor, Virginia \n             Dear George, \n             Tony arrived with twenty one men last night. One\n            got away in Jersey two in Washington D.C., four in\n            Charlottesville. Some of the men are very good looking,\n            but taken as a whole they are the worst lot I have ever\n            seen: Irish, German-Jews, and Italians. . . . Our New\n            York transportations to this place have never been a\n            success. Signed, \n             Ed D. Wickes Supt. of Mines Low Moor usually employed labor agencies, one\n         of which was Atwood's Employment Agency. Often the Low Moor\n         Company would request certain nationalities, believing them\n         to be better workers than others. Sometimes the company\n         would request a gang of twenty made up of \"ten Greeks and\n         ten Italians.\" Many of the immigrants fled Low Moor and Kay\n         Moor when they learned that they would have to work\n         underground. There is a fair amount of material on\n         immigrant labor and its procurement in the collection, and\n         it is noted in the description of the box contents.","Low Moor Iron Company not only had trouble procuring\n         labor, but it also had trouble with labor already employed\n         in the mines and at the factory. Labor dissension and\n         strikes troubled the Kay Moor Mines through the 1900's. The\n         great coal strike of 1902 hurt the Low Moor Company's coal\n         mining operation, but by 1903 things were \"nearly back to\n         normal\" according to the mine superintendent. There was\n         still trouble at Kay Moor Mines, however. In a letter dated\n         April 26, 1906, to the treasurer of Low Moor Company, the\n         manager of the mines wrote about the trouble in \"trying to\n         get the agitators out.\" The mines were seventy-five men\n         short of the total labor force needed because many of the\n         coal miners returned to their farms during the spring.\n         There were rumblings of another strike at Kay Moor, the\n         result of which was to be a fourteen percent increase in\n         wages for the Kay Moor Mine workers via an agreement with\n         the United Mine Workers Union in December.","The Low Moor Iron Company grew along with the rest of\n         Virginia industry in the 1890's and 1900's. Starting with\n         only one furnace in the 1870's, it opened a second furnace\n         at Covington, Virginia, in 1891. In 1911 it opened a third\n         furnace, this time at Low Moor. Covington, with its heavy\n         industry, soon became known as the \"Pittsburgh of\n         Virginia.\" Virginia's pig iron production rose from 9,000\n         short tons in 1870 to 544,034 long tons in 1903. Judging\n         from the Low Moor Company's correspondence, the most\n         prosperous period for the company fell between the years\n         1895-1907. In the years between 1907-1917 problems befell\n         the Virginia pig iron industry. In a letter from William W.\n         Hearns, the president of the Virginia based Princess Pig\n         Iron Company, to U. S. Senator Thomas S. Martin, Hearns\n         writes of the problems of the Virginia pig iron industry:\n         \"There is not a blast furnace in Virginia that is making\n         any money from the manufacture of pig iron. The cause of\n         this is there is an exceedingly low price on pig iron in\n         the country at the present time, and the increased cost of\n         manufacturing is due to the increase in wages in all\n         lines.\" With the outbreak of World War I prices rose\n         dramatically, but in a market report to Low Moor dated\n         November 11, 1916, it was stated that: \"In spite of the\n         high prices, it is not a picnic to be in the iron industry.\n         There is a desperate shortage of cars and equipment in the\n         coal and iron districts, and in consequence there are\n         troubles of all kinds to get materials shipped. The\n         situation has grown serious.\"","When America became involved in the First World War, it\n         meant a boost for the Low Moor Iron Company. The government\n         helped it procure labor, and even helped it repair its\n         furnaces. The problem of supplies and cars for their\n         shipments, however, plagued the company more than ever. It\n         had a good deal of trouble getting all the raw materials it\n         needed due chiefly to the \"tight ship\" run by Harry F.\n         Byrd, Sr., U.S. Fuel Administrator for Virginia. After the\n         war very serious problems began to trouble the Low Moor\n         Iron Company. The demand for iron fell precipitously and a\n         short but severe depression ensued from 1919-1922. The\n         depression seemed to hit the iron industry especially hard.\n         Prices took a huge drop due to the lack of demand, and many\n         pre-war contracts had to be revalued. To compound the\n         company's problems, the Kay Moor Mines went on strike in\n         1919. This strike was quickly settled, as the market for\n         coal was so good that the Low Moor Company ceased taking\n         orders temporarily in 1921 as it could not fill the orders\n         it had on hand.","The Low Moor Company furnaces lay idle for some twenty\n         months. Finally, in November 1922 one of Low Moor's\n         furnaces was finally fired up. While prosperity gradually\n         returned to the rest of the country, the Low Moor Iron\n         Company never recovered. Production of pig iron in the\n         Virginia iron industry declined from 544,034 tons in 1903\n         to 148,053 tons in 1923, considered a good year for the\n         industry as a whole. In February 1926 Low Moor officials\n         talked of merging with two other iron companies in order to\n         revive the iron business for the three companies. The\n         merger, however, never occurred. By late 1926 the company\n         was in the process of liquidation. An advertisement in the\n         Charleston, West Virginia, Daily Mail dated April 30, 1927,\n         told of a huge warehouse sale at the Low Moor Iron Company.\n         The advertisement noted \"thousands of screws, pipe\n         fittings, valves, etc.\" The last piece of correspondence\n         from the Low Moor Iron Company in the collection is dated\n         1929. It deals with the sale of a machine.","Why did the iron industry in Virginia decline as it did?\n         Some say that lack of speed, efficiency, and a decent\n         transportation system for Alleghany County caused it. In a\n         letter from C. E. Bertie, secretary of the Virginia Pig\n         Iron Association, to the \n          Manufacturers Record dated 1925, Bertie claimed that it was the\n         tremendous rise in the cost of transportation. Virginia, he\n         claimed, had almost no home market. Over 80% of its normal\n         production was shipped out to other states. The failure of\n         the Interstate Commerce Commission to treat Virginia\n         furnaces as southern furnaces was the cause of much of the\n         trouble. From 1914-1925 there were four blanket increases\n         in freight rates in the country, of which only one applied\n         equally to all localities. Southern furnaces were received\n         only two increases--a 25% increase in 1918 and a 25%\n         increase in 1920--but northern furnaces had had 5%, 15%,\n         25%, and 40% increases in their transportation costs.\n         Virginia furnaces, although recognized as southern\n         furnaces, had had freight rates increased in line with the\n         northern furnaces. Prior to the war Virginia iron reached\n         all points in Ohio, Indiana, Michigan, and Illinois on a\n         competitive basis with southern furnaces. After World War I\n         the advantage was limited to a small portion of\n         southeastern Ohio. All of Indiana, Illinois, and Michigan\n         were now lost to the Virginia producers. The Virginia\n         producer, according to Bertie, felt that the freight rates\n         should be restored to a relationship with southern\n         furnaces. If what Bertie said was true, the other southern\n         states iron industries should not have been in the same\n         desperate economic straits as Virginia's, and statistics\n         should support this. In the 1920's production rose to new\n         heights in Alabama. In Tennessee, however, iron production\n         plunged to new lows during the 1920's. While the south\n         accounted for 10.2% of the entire U. S. production in the\n         years 1919-1924, Virginia accounted for less than 1% during\n         those years. In 1915 Virginia accounted for over 6% of the\n         U.S. iron production. One can see a decline in other areas\n         of the south than Virginia. While the discrepancies in the\n         freight rates may have helped cause the decline, clearly\n         there are other reasons.","During the 1900's there was a discovery of extremely\n         rich iron ore deposits in the mid-west. Much of this ore\n         was on or near the surface, making the mining of it both\n         easy and inexpensive. This in turn lowered production costs\n         of the pig iron. This caused iron production to shift to\n         that region, and resulted in a decline in the Virginia iron\n         industry. There was a sharp increase in iron production in\n         the mid-west through the 1920's. The iron ore in the\n         mid-west may have been of better quality than Virginia, but\n         the iron ore in Virginia was of sufficient quality to\n         produce a good pig iron. The western ore deposits were not\n         as conveniently located as Virginia deposits, but the\n         inexpensiveness of production more than made up for it.","In examining the rise and fall of the Low Moor Iron\n         Company, we can see a situation in which the conditions for\n         the manufacture of iron were nearly ideal. There was plenty\n         of land for expansion and resources for the manufacture of\n         the iron. The major internal problem faced by the Low Moor\n         Iron Company was that of transportation. External\n         developments, however, caused the final demise of the Low\n         Moor Iron Company.","Low Moor Iron Company Personnel:","Executive Staff: Managing Director, Colonel H. M.\n         Goodwin: ca. 1881. General Managers: H. G. Merry: ca.\n         1884-1902; E. C. Means: ca. 1905-1915; J. P. Guernsey: ca.\n         1915 (acting General Manager); F. U. Humbert: ca.\n         1916-1929. Assistant General Manager: E. B. Wilkinson: ca.\n         1909-1915. Treasurers and Assistant Treasurers: Edward Low:\n         ca. 1886-1898; Frank Lyman (in New York): ca. 1898-1919; S.\n         G. Cragill (Asst. Treasurer): ca. 1900-1915; H. A. Dalton:\n         ca. 1921-1929; John Lipscomb (Asst. Treasurer): ca.\n         1918-1928.","Factory and Mine Supervisors: Kay Moor Superintendents:\n         C. C. Cooke: ca. 1918; Ed. D. Wickes: ca. 1906; H. L.\n         Tansell: ca. 1903; A. H. Reed: ca. 1906. Kay Moor Managers:\n         J. W. Monteith: manager of mines. ca. 1918; promoted in\n         1925 to general superintendent in charge of mine plants,\n         coke ovens, shops, repairs, and construction; A. L.\n         Monteith: assistant superintendent of mines, ca. 1918;\n         George T. Wickes: manager of Covington mines, ca.\n         1906-1917; Ross Howell, ca. 1918. Stack Mines\n         Superintendents: J. H. Carpenter: ca. 1906; C. D.\n         Oberschain: ca. 1907; J. L. Harris: ca. 1903; John S. Ham:\n         ca. 1891-1901. Rich Patch Mines Superintendents: John R.\n         Thompson: foreman, ca. 1906. Low Moor assorted other\n         personnel: S. L. Tulley: trainmaster, ca. 1906; B. J.\n         Shenkley: foreman, Low Moor limestone quarries; L. Q. Wood:\n         assistant traffic manager, ca. 1919.","The Low Moor Iron Company ceased operations in 1930;\n            what happened to the records of the company in the years\n            immediately following is not known, but in 1939, the Green\n            Bookman, a Charlottesville bookshop, sold the records to\n            the University of Virginia Library.","The records arrived at the receiving room door of the\n            new Alderman Library on October 16, 1939, in a trailer\n            truck whose load was estimated to weigh about fourteen\n            tons. As the manuscripts staff dug around in the piles of\n            over 1200 account books, and countless boxes of papers they\n            realized that the company had saved almost all of its\n            papers including checks, invoices, vouchers, and receipts,\n            and certain of these records were destroyed as their\n            information was recorded in other records. Once the bulk of\n            the collection had been reduced, the remaining records were\n            transferred to the stack area of the Division of Rare Books\n            and Manuscripts.","By 1958, little storage space remained in Alderman\n            Library, and the Rare Books and Manuscripts Division was\n            especially crowded because of the rapid growth of its\n            collections. After an examination of its storage areas, the\n            division's staff decided to move the Low Moor records to\n            the attic of one of the student dormitories. The collection\n            had had little use chiefly because there was no finding\n            aid. There seemed little likelihood of extensive researcher\n            use until the collection could be processed.","In preparation for the move, the old letter boxes in\n            which much of the collection had arrived in the Library\n            were discarded. The records from each box were placed\n            between sheets of the heavy gray cardboard used to protect\n            unbound newspapers in the Library's stacks, and the spine\n            labels of the old letter boxes were copied onto the\n            cardboard. The resulting bundles were wrapped with brown\n            Kraft paper and tied up with string. The bundles were\n            numbered. Whatever original order the letter boxes may have\n            had was lost by the time they arrived in the Library, and\n            after the bundling, removal to a dormitory attic, and\n            subsequent return to the Library in 1976, all vestiges of\n            the original order were lost.","The bundles remained in the dormitory attic for almost\n            twenty years. Occasional visits were made by the division\n            staff to check on their condition, and on very rare\n            occasions, a researcher was brave enough to ask to be shown\n            the collection. Once the researcher saw the imposing amount\n            of material and the conditions in the attic, interest in\n            using the collection invariably died.","In late 1976 a grant from the National Endowment for the\n            Humanities was obtained to allow the Library to process the\n            Low Moor Iron Company papers, and the papers of Edward L.\n            Stone and the Borderland Coal Company, another large\n            collection of records stored in the same dormitory attic.\n            All of these records and papers were moved back to the\n            Library where the bundles were cleaned and opened. The\n            contents of each were placed in a Hollinger storage box,\n            and all notes on the paper wrappings and on the gray\n            cardboard sheets were recorded.","The more than 1200 bound accounting records of the Low\n            Moor Iron Company were surveyed by the grant project staff.\n            The contents of each volume were noted on a mimeographed\n            form, and later typed on 3 x 5\" cards to create a\n            readily-accessible file for the Manuscripts Reading Room.\n            This information was also typed on pages to be added to\n            this guide.","The Low Moor Iron Company papers consist of\n         approximately 280 four-inch Hollinger archives boxes (ca.\n         95 linear feet) of records, ca. 1885-1927, and some 1200\n         bound volumes of the company's accounting records,\n         1873-1927, of this iron producing company located in Low\n         Moor (four miles southwest of Clifton Forge), Alleghany\n         County, Virginia.","This material consists of records typical of those\n         produced by a firm of this type in the period, but as the\n         company owned its own coal and iron mines and limestone\n         quarries, there is considerable information about the\n         production of these raw materials. Large numbers of the\n         records that deal with the company's employees have\n         survived: time books, payroll books, hands ledgers, and the\n         like. Because these books sometimes include information\n         about the employee's trade or job with the company, and as\n         race is indicated in some of the records, these books\n         should provide date for studies of the structure and upward\n         mobility within the labor force, patterns of\n         ethnic--possibly racial--occupational penetration and\n         mobility, material conditions of the workers, and so on.\n         The papers should permit a range of studies detailing the\n         pattern and evolution of industrial organization in the\n         iron industry, and the evolution of markets and marketing\n         structures for the entire period. Because the company was\n         dependent upon railroads to move its raw materials to the\n         furnaces, and for the marketing of its products, there is\n         considerable information about railroads and their\n         relationship to their customers.","See the \n             \n            University of Virginia Library’s use policy.","English"],"unitid_tesim":["662"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Papers of the Low Moor Iron Company \n         1873-1927"],"collection_title_tesim":["Papers of the Low Moor Iron Company \n         1873-1927"],"collection_ssim":["Papers of the Low Moor Iron Company \n         1873-1927"],"repository_ssm":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"acqinfo_ssim":["This collection was purchased from Green Bookman in\n            1939."],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"physdesc_tesim":["95 linear feer + 1200\n         volumes"],"accessrestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eStored off-site. Users must request boxes 48 hours in advance of desired use. Neither drop-in nor next-day requests can be fulfilled. For additional information, contact Special Collections. \n\u003c/p\u003e"],"accessrestrict_heading_ssm":["Access Restrictions"],"accessrestrict_tesim":["Stored off-site. Users must request boxes 48 hours in advance of desired use. Neither drop-in nor next-day requests can be fulfilled. For additional information, contact Special Collections. \n"],"arrangement_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe word \"organization\" is used here with considerable\n         diffidence, for any researcher studying the container list\n         that follows will realize quickly that there is no\n         organization in the usual sense of the word.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAs noted under \"Provenance,\" the Low Moor Iron Company\n         papers were subjected to a number of moves; when processing\n         began in the fall of 1976, no discernible scheme of\n         organization could be determined.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe first step was to review the series of coded numbers\n         placed on the bundles of papers before they were moved to\n         the dormitory attic, but these did not provide any sort of\n         useful organization. Next, the spine titles of the original\n         letter boxes were reviewed (they had been copied onto the\n         gray cardboard sheets before the move to the dormitory\n         attic), but they, too, proved useless.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThese steps having provided no scheme, and after a\n         considerable hiatus due to a turnover in student processors\n         on the collection, the new student processors were\n         instructed to begin a box-by-box inventory of the contents\n         of the collection. During this inventory, old folders were\n         replaced with acid-free ones, and the original folder\n         headings were copied onto the new ones. Some removal of\n         paper clips was accomplished, and the materials were\n         reviewed and notes taken for the guide.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSome consolidation of materials was accomplished, and in\n         other cases, materials were moved. This work has created\n         some problems in the numbering of the boxes. Thus, the\n         researchers will find boxes marked \"6A\" and \"23C\"; he will\n         also discover that certain box numbers have been entirely\n         omitted. As the box numbers exist only to aid in the\n         location of material, it was not felt that the unusual\n         numbers and the omissions would cause problems in working\n         with the papers.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eA certain amount of movement of boxes within the\n         collection, and of materials among boxes, probably would\n         ease use of it. But what processing was accomplished on\n         this project took far longer than had been anticipated, and\n         there was no time in the late spring of 1978, when the\n         processors had to complete their work with the project, to\n         undertake a mass movement of material. Thus, they stand in\n         the order in which we found them at the beginning of the\n         project.\u003c/p\u003e"],"arrangement_heading_ssm":["Organization"],"arrangement_tesim":["The word \"organization\" is used here with considerable\n         diffidence, for any researcher studying the container list\n         that follows will realize quickly that there is no\n         organization in the usual sense of the word.","As noted under \"Provenance,\" the Low Moor Iron Company\n         papers were subjected to a number of moves; when processing\n         began in the fall of 1976, no discernible scheme of\n         organization could be determined.","The first step was to review the series of coded numbers\n         placed on the bundles of papers before they were moved to\n         the dormitory attic, but these did not provide any sort of\n         useful organization. Next, the spine titles of the original\n         letter boxes were reviewed (they had been copied onto the\n         gray cardboard sheets before the move to the dormitory\n         attic), but they, too, proved useless.","These steps having provided no scheme, and after a\n         considerable hiatus due to a turnover in student processors\n         on the collection, the new student processors were\n         instructed to begin a box-by-box inventory of the contents\n         of the collection. During this inventory, old folders were\n         replaced with acid-free ones, and the original folder\n         headings were copied onto the new ones. Some removal of\n         paper clips was accomplished, and the materials were\n         reviewed and notes taken for the guide.","Some consolidation of materials was accomplished, and in\n         other cases, materials were moved. This work has created\n         some problems in the numbering of the boxes. Thus, the\n         researchers will find boxes marked \"6A\" and \"23C\"; he will\n         also discover that certain box numbers have been entirely\n         omitted. As the box numbers exist only to aid in the\n         location of material, it was not felt that the unusual\n         numbers and the omissions would cause problems in working\n         with the papers.","A certain amount of movement of boxes within the\n         collection, and of materials among boxes, probably would\n         ease use of it. But what processing was accomplished on\n         this project took far longer than had been anticipated, and\n         there was no time in the late spring of 1978, when the\n         processors had to complete their work with the project, to\n         undertake a mass movement of material. Thus, they stand in\n         the order in which we found them at the beginning of the\n         project."],"bioghist_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe Low Moor Iron Company, the first producer of pig\n         iron in Virginia according to the company's claims, was a\n         self-contained manufacturing unit producing from its own\n         mines the coal, limestone, and iron ore needed for its iron\n         production. Located in Low Moor near Clifton Forge in\n         Alleghany County in western Virginia, an area rich in\n         mineral deposits, the company was in operation from\n         1872-1930, producing only pig iron; it never attempted to\n         produce finished iron products.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCoal came to the Low Moor furnaces from the Kay Moor\n         Mines at Kay Moor, West Virginia, about thirty miles from\n         Low Moor; limestone was produced from the Low Moor\n         limestone quarries; and iron ore came from the Fenwick,\n         Dolly Ann, Jordan, Rich Patch, Low Moor, and Longdale\n         Mines, most of them within twenty miles of Low Moor at\n         Covington or Clifton Forge.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe towns of Low Moor and Kay Moor were company towns in\n         every respect. Workers lived in company-owned houses,\n         bought food in company stores, worshiped at the company\n         church, saw movies in the company theater, were treated in\n         the company hospital, and were buried in the company\n         cemetery. Workers received part of their pay in scrip that\n         they exchanged for goods and services. According to a\n         statement from the Kay Moor Mines dated November 1904, Kay\n         Moor then employed 338 people, paid them an average wage of\n         $36.26 per month, and issued half of their pay in scrip.\n         Kay Moor had four stores; Low Moor had seven or eight. All\n         of these stores carried large inventories which are\n         detailed in the collection. These inventories are valuable\n         to anyone interested in determining the wants and needs of\n         a coal miner and his family.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIn the late 1910's and 1920's Kay Moor had a company\n         theater called the Azure Theater which seated about 300\n         people. There were also plans for a company-owned social\n         center, to have pool tables, a soda fountain, and\n         provisions for dancing and skating. The company was in\n         tough economic straits by the 1920's, however, and there is\n         no evidence that the social center was built. The town of\n         Low Moor was so completely under the company's influence\n         that one of Low Moor Iron Company's assistant managers\n         served as the town sheriff. He often foreclosed on people\n         who did not pay their debts, and drove troublesome people\n         \"out of town on a rail\" as he put it.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe Low Moor Iron Company's fortunes fluctuated during\n         the various business cycles between the years 1880-1930.\n         Low Moor was one of the larger pig iron producers in\n         Virginia, but Virginia pig iron production was not\n         important nationally. Low Moor officials sometimes sold\n         their product themselves, but more often they used agents,\n         the prevalent method at the time. Low Moor Iron Company\n         used a variety of agents through the 1900's. James F. Bryan\n         acted as the exclusive agent for the sale of Kay Moor Coal\n         from September 21, 1903 to September, 1905. From about 1890\n         until about 1910 Dalton Nash and Company were the exclusive\n         eastern agents of Low Moor Iron. After that time the\n         exclusive agency went to Philips Isham and Company located\n         in New York. From about 1890 the western agency was handled\n         chiefly by Thomas Mack and Company. After 1902 Thomas Mack\n         and Company underwent a name change, becoming Walter\n         Wallingford and Company, with offices located in\n         Cincinnati, Pittsburgh, and Chicago.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePerhaps the Low Moor Iron Company's biggest problem over\n         the years was obtaining railroad cars for the\n         transportation of its finished product. Low Moor Iron\n         Company had its own cars for transporting its raw materials\n         among its various facilities. For the long haul necessary\n         for its finished goods, however, it depended upon the\n         services of the Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad, and the\n         relationship was not always a happy one. The Low Moor\n         Company complained many times to the C \u0026amp; O Railroad\n         about the discrepancies between long-and shorthaul freight\n         rates. Low Moor also had trouble getting cars from the C\n         \u0026amp; O. In a letter to one of Low Moor Company's agents\n         from an irate customer dated 1898, the customer wrote: \"We\n         wrote you on Saturday and endeavored to question upon your\n         mind the necessity of taking care of us with Low Moor iron.\n         We are on our uppers--there is not a pound of Low Moor iron\n         in the yard. Of the one hundred tons ordered some time ago,\n         not one pound of it has been received.\" This was, according\n         to the Low Moor Iron Company, because they could not get\n         the railroad cars. In a letter from Thomas Mack and Company\n         dated November 26, 1901, to General Manager E. C. Means:\n         \"We are hopeful that the car supply will get better because\n         of the number of orders you have of ours for prompt\n         shipment. Our customers are complaining that they are not\n         getting the iron fast enough. . . . We hope that the\n         railroad will be able to supply you with empty cars.\" In\n         another letter dated 1916 to John B. Guernsey, then acting\n         General Manager of the Low Moor Iron Company, \"We were not\n         supplied with coke cars for today's loading, and\n         consequently we have been practically down of Kay Moor\n         ovens all day.\"\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe problem of procuring labor also plagued the Low Moor\n         Company. The company sometimes tried to hire immigrant\n         laborers and send the men directly to Low Moor from New\n         York City. There were problems with this, as is explained\n         in the following letter dated April 7, 1906: \n         \u003cblockquote\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eTo Mr. George Wickes \n            \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003eSupt. of Mines \n            \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003eKay Moor, Virginia \n            \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e\u003c/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eDear George, \n            \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003eTony arrived with twenty one men last night. One\n            got away in Jersey two in Washington D.C., four in\n            Charlottesville. Some of the men are very good looking,\n            but taken as a whole they are the worst lot I have ever\n            seen: Irish, German-Jews, and Italians. . . . Our New\n            York transportations to this place have never been a\n            success.\u003c/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eSigned, \n            \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003eEd D. Wickes Supt. of Mines\u003c/p\u003e\n\u003c/blockquote\u003eLow Moor usually employed labor agencies, one\n         of which was Atwood's Employment Agency. Often the Low Moor\n         Company would request certain nationalities, believing them\n         to be better workers than others. Sometimes the company\n         would request a gang of twenty made up of \"ten Greeks and\n         ten Italians.\" Many of the immigrants fled Low Moor and Kay\n         Moor when they learned that they would have to work\n         underground. There is a fair amount of material on\n         immigrant labor and its procurement in the collection, and\n         it is noted in the description of the box contents.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLow Moor Iron Company not only had trouble procuring\n         labor, but it also had trouble with labor already employed\n         in the mines and at the factory. Labor dissension and\n         strikes troubled the Kay Moor Mines through the 1900's. The\n         great coal strike of 1902 hurt the Low Moor Company's coal\n         mining operation, but by 1903 things were \"nearly back to\n         normal\" according to the mine superintendent. There was\n         still trouble at Kay Moor Mines, however. In a letter dated\n         April 26, 1906, to the treasurer of Low Moor Company, the\n         manager of the mines wrote about the trouble in \"trying to\n         get the agitators out.\" The mines were seventy-five men\n         short of the total labor force needed because many of the\n         coal miners returned to their farms during the spring.\n         There were rumblings of another strike at Kay Moor, the\n         result of which was to be a fourteen percent increase in\n         wages for the Kay Moor Mine workers via an agreement with\n         the United Mine Workers Union in December.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe Low Moor Iron Company grew along with the rest of\n         Virginia industry in the 1890's and 1900's. Starting with\n         only one furnace in the 1870's, it opened a second furnace\n         at Covington, Virginia, in 1891. In 1911 it opened a third\n         furnace, this time at Low Moor. Covington, with its heavy\n         industry, soon became known as the \"Pittsburgh of\n         Virginia.\" Virginia's pig iron production rose from 9,000\n         short tons in 1870 to 544,034 long tons in 1903. Judging\n         from the Low Moor Company's correspondence, the most\n         prosperous period for the company fell between the years\n         1895-1907. In the years between 1907-1917 problems befell\n         the Virginia pig iron industry. In a letter from William W.\n         Hearns, the president of the Virginia based Princess Pig\n         Iron Company, to U. S. Senator Thomas S. Martin, Hearns\n         writes of the problems of the Virginia pig iron industry:\n         \"There is not a blast furnace in Virginia that is making\n         any money from the manufacture of pig iron. The cause of\n         this is there is an exceedingly low price on pig iron in\n         the country at the present time, and the increased cost of\n         manufacturing is due to the increase in wages in all\n         lines.\" With the outbreak of World War I prices rose\n         dramatically, but in a market report to Low Moor dated\n         November 11, 1916, it was stated that: \"In spite of the\n         high prices, it is not a picnic to be in the iron industry.\n         There is a desperate shortage of cars and equipment in the\n         coal and iron districts, and in consequence there are\n         troubles of all kinds to get materials shipped. The\n         situation has grown serious.\"\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eWhen America became involved in the First World War, it\n         meant a boost for the Low Moor Iron Company. The government\n         helped it procure labor, and even helped it repair its\n         furnaces. The problem of supplies and cars for their\n         shipments, however, plagued the company more than ever. It\n         had a good deal of trouble getting all the raw materials it\n         needed due chiefly to the \"tight ship\" run by Harry F.\n         Byrd, Sr., U.S. Fuel Administrator for Virginia. After the\n         war very serious problems began to trouble the Low Moor\n         Iron Company. The demand for iron fell precipitously and a\n         short but severe depression ensued from 1919-1922. The\n         depression seemed to hit the iron industry especially hard.\n         Prices took a huge drop due to the lack of demand, and many\n         pre-war contracts had to be revalued. To compound the\n         company's problems, the Kay Moor Mines went on strike in\n         1919. This strike was quickly settled, as the market for\n         coal was so good that the Low Moor Company ceased taking\n         orders temporarily in 1921 as it could not fill the orders\n         it had on hand.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe Low Moor Company furnaces lay idle for some twenty\n         months. Finally, in November 1922 one of Low Moor's\n         furnaces was finally fired up. While prosperity gradually\n         returned to the rest of the country, the Low Moor Iron\n         Company never recovered. Production of pig iron in the\n         Virginia iron industry declined from 544,034 tons in 1903\n         to 148,053 tons in 1923, considered a good year for the\n         industry as a whole. In February 1926 Low Moor officials\n         talked of merging with two other iron companies in order to\n         revive the iron business for the three companies. The\n         merger, however, never occurred. By late 1926 the company\n         was in the process of liquidation. An advertisement in the\n         Charleston, West Virginia, Daily Mail dated April 30, 1927,\n         told of a huge warehouse sale at the Low Moor Iron Company.\n         The advertisement noted \"thousands of screws, pipe\n         fittings, valves, etc.\" The last piece of correspondence\n         from the Low Moor Iron Company in the collection is dated\n         1929. It deals with the sale of a machine.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eWhy did the iron industry in Virginia decline as it did?\n         Some say that lack of speed, efficiency, and a decent\n         transportation system for Alleghany County caused it. In a\n         letter from C. E. Bertie, secretary of the Virginia Pig\n         Iron Association, to the \n         \u003cbibref type=\"simple\" href=\"\"\u003e\u003ctitle type=\"simple\" href=\"\"\u003eManufacturers Record\u003c/title\u003e\u003c/bibref\u003edated 1925, Bertie claimed that it was the\n         tremendous rise in the cost of transportation. Virginia, he\n         claimed, had almost no home market. Over 80% of its normal\n         production was shipped out to other states. The failure of\n         the Interstate Commerce Commission to treat Virginia\n         furnaces as southern furnaces was the cause of much of the\n         trouble. From 1914-1925 there were four blanket increases\n         in freight rates in the country, of which only one applied\n         equally to all localities. Southern furnaces were received\n         only two increases--a 25% increase in 1918 and a 25%\n         increase in 1920--but northern furnaces had had 5%, 15%,\n         25%, and 40% increases in their transportation costs.\n         Virginia furnaces, although recognized as southern\n         furnaces, had had freight rates increased in line with the\n         northern furnaces. Prior to the war Virginia iron reached\n         all points in Ohio, Indiana, Michigan, and Illinois on a\n         competitive basis with southern furnaces. After World War I\n         the advantage was limited to a small portion of\n         southeastern Ohio. All of Indiana, Illinois, and Michigan\n         were now lost to the Virginia producers. The Virginia\n         producer, according to Bertie, felt that the freight rates\n         should be restored to a relationship with southern\n         furnaces. If what Bertie said was true, the other southern\n         states iron industries should not have been in the same\n         desperate economic straits as Virginia's, and statistics\n         should support this. In the 1920's production rose to new\n         heights in Alabama. In Tennessee, however, iron production\n         plunged to new lows during the 1920's. While the south\n         accounted for 10.2% of the entire U. S. production in the\n         years 1919-1924, Virginia accounted for less than 1% during\n         those years. In 1915 Virginia accounted for over 6% of the\n         U.S. iron production. One can see a decline in other areas\n         of the south than Virginia. While the discrepancies in the\n         freight rates may have helped cause the decline, clearly\n         there are other reasons.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eDuring the 1900's there was a discovery of extremely\n         rich iron ore deposits in the mid-west. Much of this ore\n         was on or near the surface, making the mining of it both\n         easy and inexpensive. This in turn lowered production costs\n         of the pig iron. This caused iron production to shift to\n         that region, and resulted in a decline in the Virginia iron\n         industry. There was a sharp increase in iron production in\n         the mid-west through the 1920's. The iron ore in the\n         mid-west may have been of better quality than Virginia, but\n         the iron ore in Virginia was of sufficient quality to\n         produce a good pig iron. The western ore deposits were not\n         as conveniently located as Virginia deposits, but the\n         inexpensiveness of production more than made up for it.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIn examining the rise and fall of the Low Moor Iron\n         Company, we can see a situation in which the conditions for\n         the manufacture of iron were nearly ideal. There was plenty\n         of land for expansion and resources for the manufacture of\n         the iron. The major internal problem faced by the Low Moor\n         Iron Company was that of transportation. External\n         developments, however, caused the final demise of the Low\n         Moor Iron Company.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLow Moor Iron Company Personnel:\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eExecutive Staff: Managing Director, Colonel H. M.\n         Goodwin: ca. 1881. General Managers: H. G. Merry: ca.\n         1884-1902; E. C. Means: ca. 1905-1915; J. P. Guernsey: ca.\n         1915 (acting General Manager); F. U. Humbert: ca.\n         1916-1929. Assistant General Manager: E. B. Wilkinson: ca.\n         1909-1915. Treasurers and Assistant Treasurers: Edward Low:\n         ca. 1886-1898; Frank Lyman (in New York): ca. 1898-1919; S.\n         G. Cragill (Asst. Treasurer): ca. 1900-1915; H. A. Dalton:\n         ca. 1921-1929; John Lipscomb (Asst. Treasurer): ca.\n         1918-1928.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eFactory and Mine Supervisors: Kay Moor Superintendents:\n         C. C. Cooke: ca. 1918; Ed. D. Wickes: ca. 1906; H. L.\n         Tansell: ca. 1903; A. H. Reed: ca. 1906. Kay Moor Managers:\n         J. W. Monteith: manager of mines. ca. 1918; promoted in\n         1925 to general superintendent in charge of mine plants,\n         coke ovens, shops, repairs, and construction; A. L.\n         Monteith: assistant superintendent of mines, ca. 1918;\n         George T. Wickes: manager of Covington mines, ca.\n         1906-1917; Ross Howell, ca. 1918. Stack Mines\n         Superintendents: J. H. Carpenter: ca. 1906; C. D.\n         Oberschain: ca. 1907; J. L. Harris: ca. 1903; John S. Ham:\n         ca. 1891-1901. Rich Patch Mines Superintendents: John R.\n         Thompson: foreman, ca. 1906. Low Moor assorted other\n         personnel: S. L. Tulley: trainmaster, ca. 1906; B. J.\n         Shenkley: foreman, Low Moor limestone quarries; L. Q. Wood:\n         assistant traffic manager, ca. 1919.\u003c/p\u003e"],"bioghist_heading_ssm":["Biographical/Historical Information"],"bioghist_tesim":["The Low Moor Iron Company, the first producer of pig\n         iron in Virginia according to the company's claims, was a\n         self-contained manufacturing unit producing from its own\n         mines the coal, limestone, and iron ore needed for its iron\n         production. Located in Low Moor near Clifton Forge in\n         Alleghany County in western Virginia, an area rich in\n         mineral deposits, the company was in operation from\n         1872-1930, producing only pig iron; it never attempted to\n         produce finished iron products.","Coal came to the Low Moor furnaces from the Kay Moor\n         Mines at Kay Moor, West Virginia, about thirty miles from\n         Low Moor; limestone was produced from the Low Moor\n         limestone quarries; and iron ore came from the Fenwick,\n         Dolly Ann, Jordan, Rich Patch, Low Moor, and Longdale\n         Mines, most of them within twenty miles of Low Moor at\n         Covington or Clifton Forge.","The towns of Low Moor and Kay Moor were company towns in\n         every respect. Workers lived in company-owned houses,\n         bought food in company stores, worshiped at the company\n         church, saw movies in the company theater, were treated in\n         the company hospital, and were buried in the company\n         cemetery. Workers received part of their pay in scrip that\n         they exchanged for goods and services. According to a\n         statement from the Kay Moor Mines dated November 1904, Kay\n         Moor then employed 338 people, paid them an average wage of\n         $36.26 per month, and issued half of their pay in scrip.\n         Kay Moor had four stores; Low Moor had seven or eight. All\n         of these stores carried large inventories which are\n         detailed in the collection. These inventories are valuable\n         to anyone interested in determining the wants and needs of\n         a coal miner and his family.","In the late 1910's and 1920's Kay Moor had a company\n         theater called the Azure Theater which seated about 300\n         people. There were also plans for a company-owned social\n         center, to have pool tables, a soda fountain, and\n         provisions for dancing and skating. The company was in\n         tough economic straits by the 1920's, however, and there is\n         no evidence that the social center was built. The town of\n         Low Moor was so completely under the company's influence\n         that one of Low Moor Iron Company's assistant managers\n         served as the town sheriff. He often foreclosed on people\n         who did not pay their debts, and drove troublesome people\n         \"out of town on a rail\" as he put it.","The Low Moor Iron Company's fortunes fluctuated during\n         the various business cycles between the years 1880-1930.\n         Low Moor was one of the larger pig iron producers in\n         Virginia, but Virginia pig iron production was not\n         important nationally. Low Moor officials sometimes sold\n         their product themselves, but more often they used agents,\n         the prevalent method at the time. Low Moor Iron Company\n         used a variety of agents through the 1900's. James F. Bryan\n         acted as the exclusive agent for the sale of Kay Moor Coal\n         from September 21, 1903 to September, 1905. From about 1890\n         until about 1910 Dalton Nash and Company were the exclusive\n         eastern agents of Low Moor Iron. After that time the\n         exclusive agency went to Philips Isham and Company located\n         in New York. From about 1890 the western agency was handled\n         chiefly by Thomas Mack and Company. After 1902 Thomas Mack\n         and Company underwent a name change, becoming Walter\n         Wallingford and Company, with offices located in\n         Cincinnati, Pittsburgh, and Chicago.","Perhaps the Low Moor Iron Company's biggest problem over\n         the years was obtaining railroad cars for the\n         transportation of its finished product. Low Moor Iron\n         Company had its own cars for transporting its raw materials\n         among its various facilities. For the long haul necessary\n         for its finished goods, however, it depended upon the\n         services of the Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad, and the\n         relationship was not always a happy one. The Low Moor\n         Company complained many times to the C \u0026 O Railroad\n         about the discrepancies between long-and shorthaul freight\n         rates. Low Moor also had trouble getting cars from the C\n         \u0026 O. In a letter to one of Low Moor Company's agents\n         from an irate customer dated 1898, the customer wrote: \"We\n         wrote you on Saturday and endeavored to question upon your\n         mind the necessity of taking care of us with Low Moor iron.\n         We are on our uppers--there is not a pound of Low Moor iron\n         in the yard. Of the one hundred tons ordered some time ago,\n         not one pound of it has been received.\" This was, according\n         to the Low Moor Iron Company, because they could not get\n         the railroad cars. In a letter from Thomas Mack and Company\n         dated November 26, 1901, to General Manager E. C. Means:\n         \"We are hopeful that the car supply will get better because\n         of the number of orders you have of ours for prompt\n         shipment. Our customers are complaining that they are not\n         getting the iron fast enough. . . . We hope that the\n         railroad will be able to supply you with empty cars.\" In\n         another letter dated 1916 to John B. Guernsey, then acting\n         General Manager of the Low Moor Iron Company, \"We were not\n         supplied with coke cars for today's loading, and\n         consequently we have been practically down of Kay Moor\n         ovens all day.\"","The problem of procuring labor also plagued the Low Moor\n         Company. The company sometimes tried to hire immigrant\n         laborers and send the men directly to Low Moor from New\n         York City. There were problems with this, as is explained\n         in the following letter dated April 7, 1906: \n          To Mr. George Wickes \n             Supt. of Mines \n             Kay Moor, Virginia \n             Dear George, \n             Tony arrived with twenty one men last night. One\n            got away in Jersey two in Washington D.C., four in\n            Charlottesville. Some of the men are very good looking,\n            but taken as a whole they are the worst lot I have ever\n            seen: Irish, German-Jews, and Italians. . . . Our New\n            York transportations to this place have never been a\n            success. Signed, \n             Ed D. Wickes Supt. of Mines Low Moor usually employed labor agencies, one\n         of which was Atwood's Employment Agency. Often the Low Moor\n         Company would request certain nationalities, believing them\n         to be better workers than others. Sometimes the company\n         would request a gang of twenty made up of \"ten Greeks and\n         ten Italians.\" Many of the immigrants fled Low Moor and Kay\n         Moor when they learned that they would have to work\n         underground. There is a fair amount of material on\n         immigrant labor and its procurement in the collection, and\n         it is noted in the description of the box contents.","Low Moor Iron Company not only had trouble procuring\n         labor, but it also had trouble with labor already employed\n         in the mines and at the factory. Labor dissension and\n         strikes troubled the Kay Moor Mines through the 1900's. The\n         great coal strike of 1902 hurt the Low Moor Company's coal\n         mining operation, but by 1903 things were \"nearly back to\n         normal\" according to the mine superintendent. There was\n         still trouble at Kay Moor Mines, however. In a letter dated\n         April 26, 1906, to the treasurer of Low Moor Company, the\n         manager of the mines wrote about the trouble in \"trying to\n         get the agitators out.\" The mines were seventy-five men\n         short of the total labor force needed because many of the\n         coal miners returned to their farms during the spring.\n         There were rumblings of another strike at Kay Moor, the\n         result of which was to be a fourteen percent increase in\n         wages for the Kay Moor Mine workers via an agreement with\n         the United Mine Workers Union in December.","The Low Moor Iron Company grew along with the rest of\n         Virginia industry in the 1890's and 1900's. Starting with\n         only one furnace in the 1870's, it opened a second furnace\n         at Covington, Virginia, in 1891. In 1911 it opened a third\n         furnace, this time at Low Moor. Covington, with its heavy\n         industry, soon became known as the \"Pittsburgh of\n         Virginia.\" Virginia's pig iron production rose from 9,000\n         short tons in 1870 to 544,034 long tons in 1903. Judging\n         from the Low Moor Company's correspondence, the most\n         prosperous period for the company fell between the years\n         1895-1907. In the years between 1907-1917 problems befell\n         the Virginia pig iron industry. In a letter from William W.\n         Hearns, the president of the Virginia based Princess Pig\n         Iron Company, to U. S. Senator Thomas S. Martin, Hearns\n         writes of the problems of the Virginia pig iron industry:\n         \"There is not a blast furnace in Virginia that is making\n         any money from the manufacture of pig iron. The cause of\n         this is there is an exceedingly low price on pig iron in\n         the country at the present time, and the increased cost of\n         manufacturing is due to the increase in wages in all\n         lines.\" With the outbreak of World War I prices rose\n         dramatically, but in a market report to Low Moor dated\n         November 11, 1916, it was stated that: \"In spite of the\n         high prices, it is not a picnic to be in the iron industry.\n         There is a desperate shortage of cars and equipment in the\n         coal and iron districts, and in consequence there are\n         troubles of all kinds to get materials shipped. The\n         situation has grown serious.\"","When America became involved in the First World War, it\n         meant a boost for the Low Moor Iron Company. The government\n         helped it procure labor, and even helped it repair its\n         furnaces. The problem of supplies and cars for their\n         shipments, however, plagued the company more than ever. It\n         had a good deal of trouble getting all the raw materials it\n         needed due chiefly to the \"tight ship\" run by Harry F.\n         Byrd, Sr., U.S. Fuel Administrator for Virginia. After the\n         war very serious problems began to trouble the Low Moor\n         Iron Company. The demand for iron fell precipitously and a\n         short but severe depression ensued from 1919-1922. The\n         depression seemed to hit the iron industry especially hard.\n         Prices took a huge drop due to the lack of demand, and many\n         pre-war contracts had to be revalued. To compound the\n         company's problems, the Kay Moor Mines went on strike in\n         1919. This strike was quickly settled, as the market for\n         coal was so good that the Low Moor Company ceased taking\n         orders temporarily in 1921 as it could not fill the orders\n         it had on hand.","The Low Moor Company furnaces lay idle for some twenty\n         months. Finally, in November 1922 one of Low Moor's\n         furnaces was finally fired up. While prosperity gradually\n         returned to the rest of the country, the Low Moor Iron\n         Company never recovered. Production of pig iron in the\n         Virginia iron industry declined from 544,034 tons in 1903\n         to 148,053 tons in 1923, considered a good year for the\n         industry as a whole. In February 1926 Low Moor officials\n         talked of merging with two other iron companies in order to\n         revive the iron business for the three companies. The\n         merger, however, never occurred. By late 1926 the company\n         was in the process of liquidation. An advertisement in the\n         Charleston, West Virginia, Daily Mail dated April 30, 1927,\n         told of a huge warehouse sale at the Low Moor Iron Company.\n         The advertisement noted \"thousands of screws, pipe\n         fittings, valves, etc.\" The last piece of correspondence\n         from the Low Moor Iron Company in the collection is dated\n         1929. It deals with the sale of a machine.","Why did the iron industry in Virginia decline as it did?\n         Some say that lack of speed, efficiency, and a decent\n         transportation system for Alleghany County caused it. In a\n         letter from C. E. Bertie, secretary of the Virginia Pig\n         Iron Association, to the \n          Manufacturers Record dated 1925, Bertie claimed that it was the\n         tremendous rise in the cost of transportation. Virginia, he\n         claimed, had almost no home market. Over 80% of its normal\n         production was shipped out to other states. The failure of\n         the Interstate Commerce Commission to treat Virginia\n         furnaces as southern furnaces was the cause of much of the\n         trouble. From 1914-1925 there were four blanket increases\n         in freight rates in the country, of which only one applied\n         equally to all localities. Southern furnaces were received\n         only two increases--a 25% increase in 1918 and a 25%\n         increase in 1920--but northern furnaces had had 5%, 15%,\n         25%, and 40% increases in their transportation costs.\n         Virginia furnaces, although recognized as southern\n         furnaces, had had freight rates increased in line with the\n         northern furnaces. Prior to the war Virginia iron reached\n         all points in Ohio, Indiana, Michigan, and Illinois on a\n         competitive basis with southern furnaces. After World War I\n         the advantage was limited to a small portion of\n         southeastern Ohio. All of Indiana, Illinois, and Michigan\n         were now lost to the Virginia producers. The Virginia\n         producer, according to Bertie, felt that the freight rates\n         should be restored to a relationship with southern\n         furnaces. If what Bertie said was true, the other southern\n         states iron industries should not have been in the same\n         desperate economic straits as Virginia's, and statistics\n         should support this. In the 1920's production rose to new\n         heights in Alabama. In Tennessee, however, iron production\n         plunged to new lows during the 1920's. While the south\n         accounted for 10.2% of the entire U. S. production in the\n         years 1919-1924, Virginia accounted for less than 1% during\n         those years. In 1915 Virginia accounted for over 6% of the\n         U.S. iron production. One can see a decline in other areas\n         of the south than Virginia. While the discrepancies in the\n         freight rates may have helped cause the decline, clearly\n         there are other reasons.","During the 1900's there was a discovery of extremely\n         rich iron ore deposits in the mid-west. Much of this ore\n         was on or near the surface, making the mining of it both\n         easy and inexpensive. This in turn lowered production costs\n         of the pig iron. This caused iron production to shift to\n         that region, and resulted in a decline in the Virginia iron\n         industry. There was a sharp increase in iron production in\n         the mid-west through the 1920's. The iron ore in the\n         mid-west may have been of better quality than Virginia, but\n         the iron ore in Virginia was of sufficient quality to\n         produce a good pig iron. The western ore deposits were not\n         as conveniently located as Virginia deposits, but the\n         inexpensiveness of production more than made up for it.","In examining the rise and fall of the Low Moor Iron\n         Company, we can see a situation in which the conditions for\n         the manufacture of iron were nearly ideal. There was plenty\n         of land for expansion and resources for the manufacture of\n         the iron. The major internal problem faced by the Low Moor\n         Iron Company was that of transportation. External\n         developments, however, caused the final demise of the Low\n         Moor Iron Company.","Low Moor Iron Company Personnel:","Executive Staff: Managing Director, Colonel H. M.\n         Goodwin: ca. 1881. General Managers: H. G. Merry: ca.\n         1884-1902; E. C. Means: ca. 1905-1915; J. P. Guernsey: ca.\n         1915 (acting General Manager); F. U. Humbert: ca.\n         1916-1929. Assistant General Manager: E. B. Wilkinson: ca.\n         1909-1915. Treasurers and Assistant Treasurers: Edward Low:\n         ca. 1886-1898; Frank Lyman (in New York): ca. 1898-1919; S.\n         G. Cragill (Asst. Treasurer): ca. 1900-1915; H. A. Dalton:\n         ca. 1921-1929; John Lipscomb (Asst. Treasurer): ca.\n         1918-1928.","Factory and Mine Supervisors: Kay Moor Superintendents:\n         C. C. Cooke: ca. 1918; Ed. D. Wickes: ca. 1906; H. L.\n         Tansell: ca. 1903; A. H. Reed: ca. 1906. Kay Moor Managers:\n         J. W. Monteith: manager of mines. ca. 1918; promoted in\n         1925 to general superintendent in charge of mine plants,\n         coke ovens, shops, repairs, and construction; A. L.\n         Monteith: assistant superintendent of mines, ca. 1918;\n         George T. Wickes: manager of Covington mines, ca.\n         1906-1917; Ross Howell, ca. 1918. Stack Mines\n         Superintendents: J. H. Carpenter: ca. 1906; C. D.\n         Oberschain: ca. 1907; J. L. Harris: ca. 1903; John S. Ham:\n         ca. 1891-1901. Rich Patch Mines Superintendents: John R.\n         Thompson: foreman, ca. 1906. Low Moor assorted other\n         personnel: S. L. Tulley: trainmaster, ca. 1906; B. J.\n         Shenkley: foreman, Low Moor limestone quarries; L. Q. Wood:\n         assistant traffic manager, ca. 1919."],"custodhist_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe Low Moor Iron Company ceased operations in 1930;\n            what happened to the records of the company in the years\n            immediately following is not known, but in 1939, the Green\n            Bookman, a Charlottesville bookshop, sold the records to\n            the University of Virginia Library.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe records arrived at the receiving room door of the\n            new Alderman Library on October 16, 1939, in a trailer\n            truck whose load was estimated to weigh about fourteen\n            tons. As the manuscripts staff dug around in the piles of\n            over 1200 account books, and countless boxes of papers they\n            realized that the company had saved almost all of its\n            papers including checks, invoices, vouchers, and receipts,\n            and certain of these records were destroyed as their\n            information was recorded in other records. Once the bulk of\n            the collection had been reduced, the remaining records were\n            transferred to the stack area of the Division of Rare Books\n            and Manuscripts.\u003c/p\u003e"],"custodhist_heading_ssm":["Provenance"],"custodhist_tesim":["The Low Moor Iron Company ceased operations in 1930;\n            what happened to the records of the company in the years\n            immediately following is not known, but in 1939, the Green\n            Bookman, a Charlottesville bookshop, sold the records to\n            the University of Virginia Library.","The records arrived at the receiving room door of the\n            new Alderman Library on October 16, 1939, in a trailer\n            truck whose load was estimated to weigh about fourteen\n            tons. As the manuscripts staff dug around in the piles of\n            over 1200 account books, and countless boxes of papers they\n            realized that the company had saved almost all of its\n            papers including checks, invoices, vouchers, and receipts,\n            and certain of these records were destroyed as their\n            information was recorded in other records. Once the bulk of\n            the collection had been reduced, the remaining records were\n            transferred to the stack area of the Division of Rare Books\n            and Manuscripts."],"otherfindaid_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eSome 1200 bound accounting record books of the Low Moor\n            Iron Company came into the custody of the Library with the\n            loose papers. When the project staff investigated these\n            volumes in the dormitory attic where they were stored, they\n            found that the volumes had been shelved by size rather than\n            by series. Thus, a letterbook may stand next to a stock\n            report book for a furnace, which is, in turn, next to a\n            store account book for the Kay Moor Mines' store. No series\n            are shelved in order.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMembers of the project staff surveyed the volumes,\n            completing for each volume two copies of a mimeographed\n            survey form, and assigning to each volume a number. One\n            copy of the survey report form was placed in the volume,\n            and the second was returned to the Library.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eFrom the survey report forms, 3 x 5 inch index\n            cards--with a carbon copy of each--were typed. One set of\n            index cards has been kept in order by the numbers assigned\n            to the volumes as they stand on the shelves. This provides\n            a shelf list for the use of the library staff. The other\n            set of cards was sorted into categories as a finding aid.\n            On the list that follows, the researcher will find a number\n            of major headings such as \"Accounts,\" \"Inventories,\"\n            \"Letter Books,\" and \"Shipments-Outgoing.\"\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eInsofar as it has been possible to determine from the\n            data on the survey report forms, the volumes have been\n            assigned to categories. Most of the major categories, or\n            headings, have sub-headings. Within those sub-headings, the\n            volumes have been arranged chronologically. The\n            investigators realize that after careful study of some of\n            these volumes, they will be revealed as belonging to other\n            categories than those in which they have initially been\n            placed. The card index will allow such movement.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAvailable in the Manuscripts/Archives Reading Room in\n            the Library is the sorted card index file. There is a card\n            for every volume in this file whereas, on the pages that\n            follow, volumes have been summarized under the headings and\n            sub-headings. In each case, the number of volumes has been\n            given in the summarized list; the date ranges given are\n            inclusive in most cases, and do not reveal the many gaps in\n            sequences unless the number of volumes is small and the\n            date range wide. Occasional remarks about the content of\n            volumes have been supplied if the contents are not obvious\n            from the heading or sub-heading.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eResearchers wishing to examine any of these volumes will\n            have to use the card index file in order to be able to give\n            to the staff the volume number assigned to the individual\n            volumes that are to be inspected.\u003c/p\u003e"],"otherfindaid_heading_ssm":["Other Finding Aid"],"otherfindaid_tesim":["Some 1200 bound accounting record books of the Low Moor\n            Iron Company came into the custody of the Library with the\n            loose papers. When the project staff investigated these\n            volumes in the dormitory attic where they were stored, they\n            found that the volumes had been shelved by size rather than\n            by series. Thus, a letterbook may stand next to a stock\n            report book for a furnace, which is, in turn, next to a\n            store account book for the Kay Moor Mines' store. No series\n            are shelved in order.","Members of the project staff surveyed the volumes,\n            completing for each volume two copies of a mimeographed\n            survey form, and assigning to each volume a number. One\n            copy of the survey report form was placed in the volume,\n            and the second was returned to the Library.","From the survey report forms, 3 x 5 inch index\n            cards--with a carbon copy of each--were typed. One set of\n            index cards has been kept in order by the numbers assigned\n            to the volumes as they stand on the shelves. This provides\n            a shelf list for the use of the library staff. The other\n            set of cards was sorted into categories as a finding aid.\n            On the list that follows, the researcher will find a number\n            of major headings such as \"Accounts,\" \"Inventories,\"\n            \"Letter Books,\" and \"Shipments-Outgoing.\"","Insofar as it has been possible to determine from the\n            data on the survey report forms, the volumes have been\n            assigned to categories. Most of the major categories, or\n            headings, have sub-headings. Within those sub-headings, the\n            volumes have been arranged chronologically. The\n            investigators realize that after careful study of some of\n            these volumes, they will be revealed as belonging to other\n            categories than those in which they have initially been\n            placed. The card index will allow such movement.","Available in the Manuscripts/Archives Reading Room in\n            the Library is the sorted card index file. There is a card\n            for every volume in this file whereas, on the pages that\n            follow, volumes have been summarized under the headings and\n            sub-headings. In each case, the number of volumes has been\n            given in the summarized list; the date ranges given are\n            inclusive in most cases, and do not reveal the many gaps in\n            sequences unless the number of volumes is small and the\n            date range wide. Occasional remarks about the content of\n            volumes have been supplied if the contents are not obvious\n            from the heading or sub-heading.","Researchers wishing to examine any of these volumes will\n            have to use the card index file in order to be able to give\n            to the staff the volume number assigned to the individual\n            volumes that are to be inspected."],"prefercite_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003ePapers of the Low Moor Iron Company, Accession #662,\n            Special Collections, University of Virginia Library,\n            Charlottesville, Va.\u003c/p\u003e"],"prefercite_tesim":["Papers of the Low Moor Iron Company, Accession #662,\n            Special Collections, University of Virginia Library,\n            Charlottesville, Va."],"processinfo_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eBy 1958, little storage space remained in Alderman\n            Library, and the Rare Books and Manuscripts Division was\n            especially crowded because of the rapid growth of its\n            collections. After an examination of its storage areas, the\n            division's staff decided to move the Low Moor records to\n            the attic of one of the student dormitories. The collection\n            had had little use chiefly because there was no finding\n            aid. There seemed little likelihood of extensive researcher\n            use until the collection could be processed.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIn preparation for the move, the old letter boxes in\n            which much of the collection had arrived in the Library\n            were discarded. The records from each box were placed\n            between sheets of the heavy gray cardboard used to protect\n            unbound newspapers in the Library's stacks, and the spine\n            labels of the old letter boxes were copied onto the\n            cardboard. The resulting bundles were wrapped with brown\n            Kraft paper and tied up with string. The bundles were\n            numbered. Whatever original order the letter boxes may have\n            had was lost by the time they arrived in the Library, and\n            after the bundling, removal to a dormitory attic, and\n            subsequent return to the Library in 1976, all vestiges of\n            the original order were lost.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe bundles remained in the dormitory attic for almost\n            twenty years. Occasional visits were made by the division\n            staff to check on their condition, and on very rare\n            occasions, a researcher was brave enough to ask to be shown\n            the collection. Once the researcher saw the imposing amount\n            of material and the conditions in the attic, interest in\n            using the collection invariably died.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIn late 1976 a grant from the National Endowment for the\n            Humanities was obtained to allow the Library to process the\n            Low Moor Iron Company papers, and the papers of Edward L.\n            Stone and the Borderland Coal Company, another large\n            collection of records stored in the same dormitory attic.\n            All of these records and papers were moved back to the\n            Library where the bundles were cleaned and opened. The\n            contents of each were placed in a Hollinger storage box,\n            and all notes on the paper wrappings and on the gray\n            cardboard sheets were recorded.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe more than 1200 bound accounting records of the Low\n            Moor Iron Company were surveyed by the grant project staff.\n            The contents of each volume were noted on a mimeographed\n            form, and later typed on 3 x 5\" cards to create a\n            readily-accessible file for the Manuscripts Reading Room.\n            This information was also typed on pages to be added to\n            this guide.\u003c/p\u003e"],"processinfo_heading_ssm":["Processing Information"],"processinfo_tesim":["By 1958, little storage space remained in Alderman\n            Library, and the Rare Books and Manuscripts Division was\n            especially crowded because of the rapid growth of its\n            collections. After an examination of its storage areas, the\n            division's staff decided to move the Low Moor records to\n            the attic of one of the student dormitories. The collection\n            had had little use chiefly because there was no finding\n            aid. There seemed little likelihood of extensive researcher\n            use until the collection could be processed.","In preparation for the move, the old letter boxes in\n            which much of the collection had arrived in the Library\n            were discarded. The records from each box were placed\n            between sheets of the heavy gray cardboard used to protect\n            unbound newspapers in the Library's stacks, and the spine\n            labels of the old letter boxes were copied onto the\n            cardboard. The resulting bundles were wrapped with brown\n            Kraft paper and tied up with string. The bundles were\n            numbered. Whatever original order the letter boxes may have\n            had was lost by the time they arrived in the Library, and\n            after the bundling, removal to a dormitory attic, and\n            subsequent return to the Library in 1976, all vestiges of\n            the original order were lost.","The bundles remained in the dormitory attic for almost\n            twenty years. Occasional visits were made by the division\n            staff to check on their condition, and on very rare\n            occasions, a researcher was brave enough to ask to be shown\n            the collection. Once the researcher saw the imposing amount\n            of material and the conditions in the attic, interest in\n            using the collection invariably died.","In late 1976 a grant from the National Endowment for the\n            Humanities was obtained to allow the Library to process the\n            Low Moor Iron Company papers, and the papers of Edward L.\n            Stone and the Borderland Coal Company, another large\n            collection of records stored in the same dormitory attic.\n            All of these records and papers were moved back to the\n            Library where the bundles were cleaned and opened. The\n            contents of each were placed in a Hollinger storage box,\n            and all notes on the paper wrappings and on the gray\n            cardboard sheets were recorded.","The more than 1200 bound accounting records of the Low\n            Moor Iron Company were surveyed by the grant project staff.\n            The contents of each volume were noted on a mimeographed\n            form, and later typed on 3 x 5\" cards to create a\n            readily-accessible file for the Manuscripts Reading Room.\n            This information was also typed on pages to be added to\n            this guide."],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe Low Moor Iron Company papers consist of\n         approximately 280 four-inch Hollinger archives boxes (ca.\n         95 linear feet) of records, ca. 1885-1927, and some 1200\n         bound volumes of the company's accounting records,\n         1873-1927, of this iron producing company located in Low\n         Moor (four miles southwest of Clifton Forge), Alleghany\n         County, Virginia.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThis material consists of records typical of those\n         produced by a firm of this type in the period, but as the\n         company owned its own coal and iron mines and limestone\n         quarries, there is considerable information about the\n         production of these raw materials. Large numbers of the\n         records that deal with the company's employees have\n         survived: time books, payroll books, hands ledgers, and the\n         like. Because these books sometimes include information\n         about the employee's trade or job with the company, and as\n         race is indicated in some of the records, these books\n         should provide date for studies of the structure and upward\n         mobility within the labor force, patterns of\n         ethnic--possibly racial--occupational penetration and\n         mobility, material conditions of the workers, and so on.\n         The papers should permit a range of studies detailing the\n         pattern and evolution of industrial organization in the\n         iron industry, and the evolution of markets and marketing\n         structures for the entire period. Because the company was\n         dependent upon railroads to move its raw materials to the\n         furnaces, and for the marketing of its products, there is\n         considerable information about railroads and their\n         relationship to their customers.\u003c/p\u003e"],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Scope and Content Information"],"scopecontent_tesim":["The Low Moor Iron Company papers consist of\n         approximately 280 four-inch Hollinger archives boxes (ca.\n         95 linear feet) of records, ca. 1885-1927, and some 1200\n         bound volumes of the company's accounting records,\n         1873-1927, of this iron producing company located in Low\n         Moor (four miles southwest of Clifton Forge), Alleghany\n         County, Virginia.","This material consists of records typical of those\n         produced by a firm of this type in the period, but as the\n         company owned its own coal and iron mines and limestone\n         quarries, there is considerable information about the\n         production of these raw materials. Large numbers of the\n         records that deal with the company's employees have\n         survived: time books, payroll books, hands ledgers, and the\n         like. Because these books sometimes include information\n         about the employee's trade or job with the company, and as\n         race is indicated in some of the records, these books\n         should provide date for studies of the structure and upward\n         mobility within the labor force, patterns of\n         ethnic--possibly racial--occupational penetration and\n         mobility, material conditions of the workers, and so on.\n         The papers should permit a range of studies detailing the\n         pattern and evolution of industrial organization in the\n         iron industry, and the evolution of markets and marketing\n         structures for the entire period. Because the company was\n         dependent upon railroads to move its raw materials to the\n         furnaces, and for the marketing of its products, there is\n         considerable information about railroads and their\n         relationship to their customers."],"userestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eSee the \n            \u003cextref type=\"simple\" href=\"https://www.library.virginia.edu/policies/use-of-materials\"\u003e\n            University of Virginia Library’s use policy.\u003c/extref\u003e\u003c/p\u003e"],"userestrict_heading_ssm":["Use Restrictions\n"],"userestrict_tesim":["See the \n             \n            University of Virginia Library’s use policy."],"language_ssim":["English"],"total_component_count_is":1879,"online_item_count_is":0,"component_level_isim":[0],"sort_isi":0,"timestamp":"2026-05-21T12:10:02.328Z"}]}},"label":"Breadcrumbs"}}},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_viu00917_c01_c06_c01"}},{"id":"viu_viu00917_c01_c20_c01","type":"Subseries","attributes":{"title":"A. Low Moor Furnace-Stock Reports \u0026\n                     Daily Operations","breadcrumbs":{"id":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_viu00917_c01_c20_c01#breadcrumbs","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":{"ref_ssi":"viu_viu00917_c01_c20_c01","ref_ssm":["viu_viu00917_c01_c20_c01"],"id":"viu_viu00917_c01_c20_c01","ead_ssi":"viu_viu00917","_root_":"viu_viu00917","_nest_parent_":"viu_viu00917_c01_c20","parent_ssi":"viu_viu00917_c01_c20","parent_ssim":["viu_viu00917","viu_viu00917_c01","viu_viu00917_c01_c20"],"parent_ids_ssim":["viu_viu00917","viu_viu00917_c01","viu_viu00917_c01_c20"],"parent_unittitles_ssm":["Papers of the Low Moor Iron Company \n         1873-1927","Bound Volumes","Operations-Furnaces"],"parent_unittitles_tesim":["Papers of the Low Moor Iron Company \n         1873-1927","Bound Volumes","Operations-Furnaces"],"text":["Papers of the Low Moor Iron Company \n         1873-1927","Bound Volumes","Operations-Furnaces","A. Low Moor Furnace-Stock Reports \u0026\n                     Daily Operations","6 volumes"],"title_filing_ssi":"A. Low Moor Furnace-Stock Reports \u0026\n                     Daily Operations","title_ssm":["A. Low Moor Furnace-Stock Reports \u0026\n                     Daily Operations"],"title_tesim":["A. Low Moor Furnace-Stock Reports \u0026\n                     Daily Operations"],"unitdate_other_ssim":["1880-1923"],"normalized_date_ssm":["1880/1923"],"normalized_title_ssm":["A. Low Moor Furnace-Stock Reports \u0026\n                     Daily Operations"],"component_level_isim":[3],"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"collection_ssim":["Papers of the Low Moor Iron Company \n         1873-1927"],"physdesc_tesim":["6 volumes"],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"child_component_count_isi":0,"level_ssm":["Subseries"],"level_ssim":["Subseries"],"sort_isi":107,"date_range_isim":[1880,1881,1882,1883,1884,1885,1886,1887,1888,1889,1890,1891,1892,1893,1894,1895,1896,1897,1898,1899,1900,1901,1902,1903,1904,1905,1906,1907,1908,1909,1910,1911,1912,1913,1914,1915,1916,1917,1918,1919,1920,1921,1922,1923],"_nest_path_":"/components#0/components#19/components#0","timestamp":"2026-05-21T12:10:02.328Z","collection":{"numFound":1,"start":0,"numFoundExact":true,"docs":[{"id":"viu_viu00917","ead_ssi":"viu_viu00917","_root_":"viu_viu00917","_nest_parent_":"viu_viu00917","ead_source_url_ssi":"data/uva-sc/viu00917.xml","title_ssm":["Papers of the Low Moor Iron Company \n         1873-1927"],"title_tesim":["Papers of the Low Moor Iron Company \n         1873-1927"],"level_ssm":["collection"],"level_ssim":["Collection"],"unitid_ssm":["662"],"text":["662","Papers of the Low Moor Iron Company \n         1873-1927","95 linear feer + 1200\n         volumes","Stored off-site. Users must request boxes 48 hours in advance of desired use. Neither drop-in nor next-day requests can be fulfilled. For additional information, contact Special Collections. \n","The word \"organization\" is used here with considerable\n         diffidence, for any researcher studying the container list\n         that follows will realize quickly that there is no\n         organization in the usual sense of the word.","As noted under \"Provenance,\" the Low Moor Iron Company\n         papers were subjected to a number of moves; when processing\n         began in the fall of 1976, no discernible scheme of\n         organization could be determined.","The first step was to review the series of coded numbers\n         placed on the bundles of papers before they were moved to\n         the dormitory attic, but these did not provide any sort of\n         useful organization. Next, the spine titles of the original\n         letter boxes were reviewed (they had been copied onto the\n         gray cardboard sheets before the move to the dormitory\n         attic), but they, too, proved useless.","These steps having provided no scheme, and after a\n         considerable hiatus due to a turnover in student processors\n         on the collection, the new student processors were\n         instructed to begin a box-by-box inventory of the contents\n         of the collection. During this inventory, old folders were\n         replaced with acid-free ones, and the original folder\n         headings were copied onto the new ones. Some removal of\n         paper clips was accomplished, and the materials were\n         reviewed and notes taken for the guide.","Some consolidation of materials was accomplished, and in\n         other cases, materials were moved. This work has created\n         some problems in the numbering of the boxes. Thus, the\n         researchers will find boxes marked \"6A\" and \"23C\"; he will\n         also discover that certain box numbers have been entirely\n         omitted. As the box numbers exist only to aid in the\n         location of material, it was not felt that the unusual\n         numbers and the omissions would cause problems in working\n         with the papers.","A certain amount of movement of boxes within the\n         collection, and of materials among boxes, probably would\n         ease use of it. But what processing was accomplished on\n         this project took far longer than had been anticipated, and\n         there was no time in the late spring of 1978, when the\n         processors had to complete their work with the project, to\n         undertake a mass movement of material. Thus, they stand in\n         the order in which we found them at the beginning of the\n         project.","The Low Moor Iron Company, the first producer of pig\n         iron in Virginia according to the company's claims, was a\n         self-contained manufacturing unit producing from its own\n         mines the coal, limestone, and iron ore needed for its iron\n         production. Located in Low Moor near Clifton Forge in\n         Alleghany County in western Virginia, an area rich in\n         mineral deposits, the company was in operation from\n         1872-1930, producing only pig iron; it never attempted to\n         produce finished iron products.","Coal came to the Low Moor furnaces from the Kay Moor\n         Mines at Kay Moor, West Virginia, about thirty miles from\n         Low Moor; limestone was produced from the Low Moor\n         limestone quarries; and iron ore came from the Fenwick,\n         Dolly Ann, Jordan, Rich Patch, Low Moor, and Longdale\n         Mines, most of them within twenty miles of Low Moor at\n         Covington or Clifton Forge.","The towns of Low Moor and Kay Moor were company towns in\n         every respect. Workers lived in company-owned houses,\n         bought food in company stores, worshiped at the company\n         church, saw movies in the company theater, were treated in\n         the company hospital, and were buried in the company\n         cemetery. Workers received part of their pay in scrip that\n         they exchanged for goods and services. According to a\n         statement from the Kay Moor Mines dated November 1904, Kay\n         Moor then employed 338 people, paid them an average wage of\n         $36.26 per month, and issued half of their pay in scrip.\n         Kay Moor had four stores; Low Moor had seven or eight. All\n         of these stores carried large inventories which are\n         detailed in the collection. These inventories are valuable\n         to anyone interested in determining the wants and needs of\n         a coal miner and his family.","In the late 1910's and 1920's Kay Moor had a company\n         theater called the Azure Theater which seated about 300\n         people. There were also plans for a company-owned social\n         center, to have pool tables, a soda fountain, and\n         provisions for dancing and skating. The company was in\n         tough economic straits by the 1920's, however, and there is\n         no evidence that the social center was built. The town of\n         Low Moor was so completely under the company's influence\n         that one of Low Moor Iron Company's assistant managers\n         served as the town sheriff. He often foreclosed on people\n         who did not pay their debts, and drove troublesome people\n         \"out of town on a rail\" as he put it.","The Low Moor Iron Company's fortunes fluctuated during\n         the various business cycles between the years 1880-1930.\n         Low Moor was one of the larger pig iron producers in\n         Virginia, but Virginia pig iron production was not\n         important nationally. Low Moor officials sometimes sold\n         their product themselves, but more often they used agents,\n         the prevalent method at the time. Low Moor Iron Company\n         used a variety of agents through the 1900's. James F. Bryan\n         acted as the exclusive agent for the sale of Kay Moor Coal\n         from September 21, 1903 to September, 1905. From about 1890\n         until about 1910 Dalton Nash and Company were the exclusive\n         eastern agents of Low Moor Iron. After that time the\n         exclusive agency went to Philips Isham and Company located\n         in New York. From about 1890 the western agency was handled\n         chiefly by Thomas Mack and Company. After 1902 Thomas Mack\n         and Company underwent a name change, becoming Walter\n         Wallingford and Company, with offices located in\n         Cincinnati, Pittsburgh, and Chicago.","Perhaps the Low Moor Iron Company's biggest problem over\n         the years was obtaining railroad cars for the\n         transportation of its finished product. Low Moor Iron\n         Company had its own cars for transporting its raw materials\n         among its various facilities. For the long haul necessary\n         for its finished goods, however, it depended upon the\n         services of the Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad, and the\n         relationship was not always a happy one. The Low Moor\n         Company complained many times to the C \u0026 O Railroad\n         about the discrepancies between long-and shorthaul freight\n         rates. Low Moor also had trouble getting cars from the C\n         \u0026 O. In a letter to one of Low Moor Company's agents\n         from an irate customer dated 1898, the customer wrote: \"We\n         wrote you on Saturday and endeavored to question upon your\n         mind the necessity of taking care of us with Low Moor iron.\n         We are on our uppers--there is not a pound of Low Moor iron\n         in the yard. Of the one hundred tons ordered some time ago,\n         not one pound of it has been received.\" This was, according\n         to the Low Moor Iron Company, because they could not get\n         the railroad cars. In a letter from Thomas Mack and Company\n         dated November 26, 1901, to General Manager E. C. Means:\n         \"We are hopeful that the car supply will get better because\n         of the number of orders you have of ours for prompt\n         shipment. Our customers are complaining that they are not\n         getting the iron fast enough. . . . We hope that the\n         railroad will be able to supply you with empty cars.\" In\n         another letter dated 1916 to John B. Guernsey, then acting\n         General Manager of the Low Moor Iron Company, \"We were not\n         supplied with coke cars for today's loading, and\n         consequently we have been practically down of Kay Moor\n         ovens all day.\"","The problem of procuring labor also plagued the Low Moor\n         Company. The company sometimes tried to hire immigrant\n         laborers and send the men directly to Low Moor from New\n         York City. There were problems with this, as is explained\n         in the following letter dated April 7, 1906: \n          To Mr. George Wickes \n             Supt. of Mines \n             Kay Moor, Virginia \n             Dear George, \n             Tony arrived with twenty one men last night. One\n            got away in Jersey two in Washington D.C., four in\n            Charlottesville. Some of the men are very good looking,\n            but taken as a whole they are the worst lot I have ever\n            seen: Irish, German-Jews, and Italians. . . . Our New\n            York transportations to this place have never been a\n            success. Signed, \n             Ed D. Wickes Supt. of Mines Low Moor usually employed labor agencies, one\n         of which was Atwood's Employment Agency. Often the Low Moor\n         Company would request certain nationalities, believing them\n         to be better workers than others. Sometimes the company\n         would request a gang of twenty made up of \"ten Greeks and\n         ten Italians.\" Many of the immigrants fled Low Moor and Kay\n         Moor when they learned that they would have to work\n         underground. There is a fair amount of material on\n         immigrant labor and its procurement in the collection, and\n         it is noted in the description of the box contents.","Low Moor Iron Company not only had trouble procuring\n         labor, but it also had trouble with labor already employed\n         in the mines and at the factory. Labor dissension and\n         strikes troubled the Kay Moor Mines through the 1900's. The\n         great coal strike of 1902 hurt the Low Moor Company's coal\n         mining operation, but by 1903 things were \"nearly back to\n         normal\" according to the mine superintendent. There was\n         still trouble at Kay Moor Mines, however. In a letter dated\n         April 26, 1906, to the treasurer of Low Moor Company, the\n         manager of the mines wrote about the trouble in \"trying to\n         get the agitators out.\" The mines were seventy-five men\n         short of the total labor force needed because many of the\n         coal miners returned to their farms during the spring.\n         There were rumblings of another strike at Kay Moor, the\n         result of which was to be a fourteen percent increase in\n         wages for the Kay Moor Mine workers via an agreement with\n         the United Mine Workers Union in December.","The Low Moor Iron Company grew along with the rest of\n         Virginia industry in the 1890's and 1900's. Starting with\n         only one furnace in the 1870's, it opened a second furnace\n         at Covington, Virginia, in 1891. In 1911 it opened a third\n         furnace, this time at Low Moor. Covington, with its heavy\n         industry, soon became known as the \"Pittsburgh of\n         Virginia.\" Virginia's pig iron production rose from 9,000\n         short tons in 1870 to 544,034 long tons in 1903. Judging\n         from the Low Moor Company's correspondence, the most\n         prosperous period for the company fell between the years\n         1895-1907. In the years between 1907-1917 problems befell\n         the Virginia pig iron industry. In a letter from William W.\n         Hearns, the president of the Virginia based Princess Pig\n         Iron Company, to U. S. Senator Thomas S. Martin, Hearns\n         writes of the problems of the Virginia pig iron industry:\n         \"There is not a blast furnace in Virginia that is making\n         any money from the manufacture of pig iron. The cause of\n         this is there is an exceedingly low price on pig iron in\n         the country at the present time, and the increased cost of\n         manufacturing is due to the increase in wages in all\n         lines.\" With the outbreak of World War I prices rose\n         dramatically, but in a market report to Low Moor dated\n         November 11, 1916, it was stated that: \"In spite of the\n         high prices, it is not a picnic to be in the iron industry.\n         There is a desperate shortage of cars and equipment in the\n         coal and iron districts, and in consequence there are\n         troubles of all kinds to get materials shipped. The\n         situation has grown serious.\"","When America became involved in the First World War, it\n         meant a boost for the Low Moor Iron Company. The government\n         helped it procure labor, and even helped it repair its\n         furnaces. The problem of supplies and cars for their\n         shipments, however, plagued the company more than ever. It\n         had a good deal of trouble getting all the raw materials it\n         needed due chiefly to the \"tight ship\" run by Harry F.\n         Byrd, Sr., U.S. Fuel Administrator for Virginia. After the\n         war very serious problems began to trouble the Low Moor\n         Iron Company. The demand for iron fell precipitously and a\n         short but severe depression ensued from 1919-1922. The\n         depression seemed to hit the iron industry especially hard.\n         Prices took a huge drop due to the lack of demand, and many\n         pre-war contracts had to be revalued. To compound the\n         company's problems, the Kay Moor Mines went on strike in\n         1919. This strike was quickly settled, as the market for\n         coal was so good that the Low Moor Company ceased taking\n         orders temporarily in 1921 as it could not fill the orders\n         it had on hand.","The Low Moor Company furnaces lay idle for some twenty\n         months. Finally, in November 1922 one of Low Moor's\n         furnaces was finally fired up. While prosperity gradually\n         returned to the rest of the country, the Low Moor Iron\n         Company never recovered. Production of pig iron in the\n         Virginia iron industry declined from 544,034 tons in 1903\n         to 148,053 tons in 1923, considered a good year for the\n         industry as a whole. In February 1926 Low Moor officials\n         talked of merging with two other iron companies in order to\n         revive the iron business for the three companies. The\n         merger, however, never occurred. By late 1926 the company\n         was in the process of liquidation. An advertisement in the\n         Charleston, West Virginia, Daily Mail dated April 30, 1927,\n         told of a huge warehouse sale at the Low Moor Iron Company.\n         The advertisement noted \"thousands of screws, pipe\n         fittings, valves, etc.\" The last piece of correspondence\n         from the Low Moor Iron Company in the collection is dated\n         1929. It deals with the sale of a machine.","Why did the iron industry in Virginia decline as it did?\n         Some say that lack of speed, efficiency, and a decent\n         transportation system for Alleghany County caused it. In a\n         letter from C. E. Bertie, secretary of the Virginia Pig\n         Iron Association, to the \n          Manufacturers Record dated 1925, Bertie claimed that it was the\n         tremendous rise in the cost of transportation. Virginia, he\n         claimed, had almost no home market. Over 80% of its normal\n         production was shipped out to other states. The failure of\n         the Interstate Commerce Commission to treat Virginia\n         furnaces as southern furnaces was the cause of much of the\n         trouble. From 1914-1925 there were four blanket increases\n         in freight rates in the country, of which only one applied\n         equally to all localities. Southern furnaces were received\n         only two increases--a 25% increase in 1918 and a 25%\n         increase in 1920--but northern furnaces had had 5%, 15%,\n         25%, and 40% increases in their transportation costs.\n         Virginia furnaces, although recognized as southern\n         furnaces, had had freight rates increased in line with the\n         northern furnaces. Prior to the war Virginia iron reached\n         all points in Ohio, Indiana, Michigan, and Illinois on a\n         competitive basis with southern furnaces. After World War I\n         the advantage was limited to a small portion of\n         southeastern Ohio. All of Indiana, Illinois, and Michigan\n         were now lost to the Virginia producers. The Virginia\n         producer, according to Bertie, felt that the freight rates\n         should be restored to a relationship with southern\n         furnaces. If what Bertie said was true, the other southern\n         states iron industries should not have been in the same\n         desperate economic straits as Virginia's, and statistics\n         should support this. In the 1920's production rose to new\n         heights in Alabama. In Tennessee, however, iron production\n         plunged to new lows during the 1920's. While the south\n         accounted for 10.2% of the entire U. S. production in the\n         years 1919-1924, Virginia accounted for less than 1% during\n         those years. In 1915 Virginia accounted for over 6% of the\n         U.S. iron production. One can see a decline in other areas\n         of the south than Virginia. While the discrepancies in the\n         freight rates may have helped cause the decline, clearly\n         there are other reasons.","During the 1900's there was a discovery of extremely\n         rich iron ore deposits in the mid-west. Much of this ore\n         was on or near the surface, making the mining of it both\n         easy and inexpensive. This in turn lowered production costs\n         of the pig iron. This caused iron production to shift to\n         that region, and resulted in a decline in the Virginia iron\n         industry. There was a sharp increase in iron production in\n         the mid-west through the 1920's. The iron ore in the\n         mid-west may have been of better quality than Virginia, but\n         the iron ore in Virginia was of sufficient quality to\n         produce a good pig iron. The western ore deposits were not\n         as conveniently located as Virginia deposits, but the\n         inexpensiveness of production more than made up for it.","In examining the rise and fall of the Low Moor Iron\n         Company, we can see a situation in which the conditions for\n         the manufacture of iron were nearly ideal. There was plenty\n         of land for expansion and resources for the manufacture of\n         the iron. The major internal problem faced by the Low Moor\n         Iron Company was that of transportation. External\n         developments, however, caused the final demise of the Low\n         Moor Iron Company.","Low Moor Iron Company Personnel:","Executive Staff: Managing Director, Colonel H. M.\n         Goodwin: ca. 1881. General Managers: H. G. Merry: ca.\n         1884-1902; E. C. Means: ca. 1905-1915; J. P. Guernsey: ca.\n         1915 (acting General Manager); F. U. Humbert: ca.\n         1916-1929. Assistant General Manager: E. B. Wilkinson: ca.\n         1909-1915. Treasurers and Assistant Treasurers: Edward Low:\n         ca. 1886-1898; Frank Lyman (in New York): ca. 1898-1919; S.\n         G. Cragill (Asst. Treasurer): ca. 1900-1915; H. A. Dalton:\n         ca. 1921-1929; John Lipscomb (Asst. Treasurer): ca.\n         1918-1928.","Factory and Mine Supervisors: Kay Moor Superintendents:\n         C. C. Cooke: ca. 1918; Ed. D. Wickes: ca. 1906; H. L.\n         Tansell: ca. 1903; A. H. Reed: ca. 1906. Kay Moor Managers:\n         J. W. Monteith: manager of mines. ca. 1918; promoted in\n         1925 to general superintendent in charge of mine plants,\n         coke ovens, shops, repairs, and construction; A. L.\n         Monteith: assistant superintendent of mines, ca. 1918;\n         George T. Wickes: manager of Covington mines, ca.\n         1906-1917; Ross Howell, ca. 1918. Stack Mines\n         Superintendents: J. H. Carpenter: ca. 1906; C. D.\n         Oberschain: ca. 1907; J. L. Harris: ca. 1903; John S. Ham:\n         ca. 1891-1901. Rich Patch Mines Superintendents: John R.\n         Thompson: foreman, ca. 1906. Low Moor assorted other\n         personnel: S. L. Tulley: trainmaster, ca. 1906; B. J.\n         Shenkley: foreman, Low Moor limestone quarries; L. Q. Wood:\n         assistant traffic manager, ca. 1919.","The Low Moor Iron Company ceased operations in 1930;\n            what happened to the records of the company in the years\n            immediately following is not known, but in 1939, the Green\n            Bookman, a Charlottesville bookshop, sold the records to\n            the University of Virginia Library.","The records arrived at the receiving room door of the\n            new Alderman Library on October 16, 1939, in a trailer\n            truck whose load was estimated to weigh about fourteen\n            tons. As the manuscripts staff dug around in the piles of\n            over 1200 account books, and countless boxes of papers they\n            realized that the company had saved almost all of its\n            papers including checks, invoices, vouchers, and receipts,\n            and certain of these records were destroyed as their\n            information was recorded in other records. Once the bulk of\n            the collection had been reduced, the remaining records were\n            transferred to the stack area of the Division of Rare Books\n            and Manuscripts.","By 1958, little storage space remained in Alderman\n            Library, and the Rare Books and Manuscripts Division was\n            especially crowded because of the rapid growth of its\n            collections. After an examination of its storage areas, the\n            division's staff decided to move the Low Moor records to\n            the attic of one of the student dormitories. The collection\n            had had little use chiefly because there was no finding\n            aid. There seemed little likelihood of extensive researcher\n            use until the collection could be processed.","In preparation for the move, the old letter boxes in\n            which much of the collection had arrived in the Library\n            were discarded. The records from each box were placed\n            between sheets of the heavy gray cardboard used to protect\n            unbound newspapers in the Library's stacks, and the spine\n            labels of the old letter boxes were copied onto the\n            cardboard. The resulting bundles were wrapped with brown\n            Kraft paper and tied up with string. The bundles were\n            numbered. Whatever original order the letter boxes may have\n            had was lost by the time they arrived in the Library, and\n            after the bundling, removal to a dormitory attic, and\n            subsequent return to the Library in 1976, all vestiges of\n            the original order were lost.","The bundles remained in the dormitory attic for almost\n            twenty years. Occasional visits were made by the division\n            staff to check on their condition, and on very rare\n            occasions, a researcher was brave enough to ask to be shown\n            the collection. Once the researcher saw the imposing amount\n            of material and the conditions in the attic, interest in\n            using the collection invariably died.","In late 1976 a grant from the National Endowment for the\n            Humanities was obtained to allow the Library to process the\n            Low Moor Iron Company papers, and the papers of Edward L.\n            Stone and the Borderland Coal Company, another large\n            collection of records stored in the same dormitory attic.\n            All of these records and papers were moved back to the\n            Library where the bundles were cleaned and opened. The\n            contents of each were placed in a Hollinger storage box,\n            and all notes on the paper wrappings and on the gray\n            cardboard sheets were recorded.","The more than 1200 bound accounting records of the Low\n            Moor Iron Company were surveyed by the grant project staff.\n            The contents of each volume were noted on a mimeographed\n            form, and later typed on 3 x 5\" cards to create a\n            readily-accessible file for the Manuscripts Reading Room.\n            This information was also typed on pages to be added to\n            this guide.","The Low Moor Iron Company papers consist of\n         approximately 280 four-inch Hollinger archives boxes (ca.\n         95 linear feet) of records, ca. 1885-1927, and some 1200\n         bound volumes of the company's accounting records,\n         1873-1927, of this iron producing company located in Low\n         Moor (four miles southwest of Clifton Forge), Alleghany\n         County, Virginia.","This material consists of records typical of those\n         produced by a firm of this type in the period, but as the\n         company owned its own coal and iron mines and limestone\n         quarries, there is considerable information about the\n         production of these raw materials. Large numbers of the\n         records that deal with the company's employees have\n         survived: time books, payroll books, hands ledgers, and the\n         like. Because these books sometimes include information\n         about the employee's trade or job with the company, and as\n         race is indicated in some of the records, these books\n         should provide date for studies of the structure and upward\n         mobility within the labor force, patterns of\n         ethnic--possibly racial--occupational penetration and\n         mobility, material conditions of the workers, and so on.\n         The papers should permit a range of studies detailing the\n         pattern and evolution of industrial organization in the\n         iron industry, and the evolution of markets and marketing\n         structures for the entire period. Because the company was\n         dependent upon railroads to move its raw materials to the\n         furnaces, and for the marketing of its products, there is\n         considerable information about railroads and their\n         relationship to their customers.","See the \n             \n            University of Virginia Library’s use policy.","English"],"unitid_tesim":["662"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Papers of the Low Moor Iron Company \n         1873-1927"],"collection_title_tesim":["Papers of the Low Moor Iron Company \n         1873-1927"],"collection_ssim":["Papers of the Low Moor Iron Company \n         1873-1927"],"repository_ssm":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"acqinfo_ssim":["This collection was purchased from Green Bookman in\n            1939."],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"physdesc_tesim":["95 linear feer + 1200\n         volumes"],"accessrestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eStored off-site. Users must request boxes 48 hours in advance of desired use. Neither drop-in nor next-day requests can be fulfilled. For additional information, contact Special Collections. \n\u003c/p\u003e"],"accessrestrict_heading_ssm":["Access Restrictions"],"accessrestrict_tesim":["Stored off-site. Users must request boxes 48 hours in advance of desired use. Neither drop-in nor next-day requests can be fulfilled. For additional information, contact Special Collections. \n"],"arrangement_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe word \"organization\" is used here with considerable\n         diffidence, for any researcher studying the container list\n         that follows will realize quickly that there is no\n         organization in the usual sense of the word.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAs noted under \"Provenance,\" the Low Moor Iron Company\n         papers were subjected to a number of moves; when processing\n         began in the fall of 1976, no discernible scheme of\n         organization could be determined.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe first step was to review the series of coded numbers\n         placed on the bundles of papers before they were moved to\n         the dormitory attic, but these did not provide any sort of\n         useful organization. Next, the spine titles of the original\n         letter boxes were reviewed (they had been copied onto the\n         gray cardboard sheets before the move to the dormitory\n         attic), but they, too, proved useless.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThese steps having provided no scheme, and after a\n         considerable hiatus due to a turnover in student processors\n         on the collection, the new student processors were\n         instructed to begin a box-by-box inventory of the contents\n         of the collection. During this inventory, old folders were\n         replaced with acid-free ones, and the original folder\n         headings were copied onto the new ones. Some removal of\n         paper clips was accomplished, and the materials were\n         reviewed and notes taken for the guide.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSome consolidation of materials was accomplished, and in\n         other cases, materials were moved. This work has created\n         some problems in the numbering of the boxes. Thus, the\n         researchers will find boxes marked \"6A\" and \"23C\"; he will\n         also discover that certain box numbers have been entirely\n         omitted. As the box numbers exist only to aid in the\n         location of material, it was not felt that the unusual\n         numbers and the omissions would cause problems in working\n         with the papers.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eA certain amount of movement of boxes within the\n         collection, and of materials among boxes, probably would\n         ease use of it. But what processing was accomplished on\n         this project took far longer than had been anticipated, and\n         there was no time in the late spring of 1978, when the\n         processors had to complete their work with the project, to\n         undertake a mass movement of material. Thus, they stand in\n         the order in which we found them at the beginning of the\n         project.\u003c/p\u003e"],"arrangement_heading_ssm":["Organization"],"arrangement_tesim":["The word \"organization\" is used here with considerable\n         diffidence, for any researcher studying the container list\n         that follows will realize quickly that there is no\n         organization in the usual sense of the word.","As noted under \"Provenance,\" the Low Moor Iron Company\n         papers were subjected to a number of moves; when processing\n         began in the fall of 1976, no discernible scheme of\n         organization could be determined.","The first step was to review the series of coded numbers\n         placed on the bundles of papers before they were moved to\n         the dormitory attic, but these did not provide any sort of\n         useful organization. Next, the spine titles of the original\n         letter boxes were reviewed (they had been copied onto the\n         gray cardboard sheets before the move to the dormitory\n         attic), but they, too, proved useless.","These steps having provided no scheme, and after a\n         considerable hiatus due to a turnover in student processors\n         on the collection, the new student processors were\n         instructed to begin a box-by-box inventory of the contents\n         of the collection. During this inventory, old folders were\n         replaced with acid-free ones, and the original folder\n         headings were copied onto the new ones. Some removal of\n         paper clips was accomplished, and the materials were\n         reviewed and notes taken for the guide.","Some consolidation of materials was accomplished, and in\n         other cases, materials were moved. This work has created\n         some problems in the numbering of the boxes. Thus, the\n         researchers will find boxes marked \"6A\" and \"23C\"; he will\n         also discover that certain box numbers have been entirely\n         omitted. As the box numbers exist only to aid in the\n         location of material, it was not felt that the unusual\n         numbers and the omissions would cause problems in working\n         with the papers.","A certain amount of movement of boxes within the\n         collection, and of materials among boxes, probably would\n         ease use of it. But what processing was accomplished on\n         this project took far longer than had been anticipated, and\n         there was no time in the late spring of 1978, when the\n         processors had to complete their work with the project, to\n         undertake a mass movement of material. Thus, they stand in\n         the order in which we found them at the beginning of the\n         project."],"bioghist_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe Low Moor Iron Company, the first producer of pig\n         iron in Virginia according to the company's claims, was a\n         self-contained manufacturing unit producing from its own\n         mines the coal, limestone, and iron ore needed for its iron\n         production. Located in Low Moor near Clifton Forge in\n         Alleghany County in western Virginia, an area rich in\n         mineral deposits, the company was in operation from\n         1872-1930, producing only pig iron; it never attempted to\n         produce finished iron products.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCoal came to the Low Moor furnaces from the Kay Moor\n         Mines at Kay Moor, West Virginia, about thirty miles from\n         Low Moor; limestone was produced from the Low Moor\n         limestone quarries; and iron ore came from the Fenwick,\n         Dolly Ann, Jordan, Rich Patch, Low Moor, and Longdale\n         Mines, most of them within twenty miles of Low Moor at\n         Covington or Clifton Forge.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe towns of Low Moor and Kay Moor were company towns in\n         every respect. Workers lived in company-owned houses,\n         bought food in company stores, worshiped at the company\n         church, saw movies in the company theater, were treated in\n         the company hospital, and were buried in the company\n         cemetery. Workers received part of their pay in scrip that\n         they exchanged for goods and services. According to a\n         statement from the Kay Moor Mines dated November 1904, Kay\n         Moor then employed 338 people, paid them an average wage of\n         $36.26 per month, and issued half of their pay in scrip.\n         Kay Moor had four stores; Low Moor had seven or eight. All\n         of these stores carried large inventories which are\n         detailed in the collection. These inventories are valuable\n         to anyone interested in determining the wants and needs of\n         a coal miner and his family.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIn the late 1910's and 1920's Kay Moor had a company\n         theater called the Azure Theater which seated about 300\n         people. There were also plans for a company-owned social\n         center, to have pool tables, a soda fountain, and\n         provisions for dancing and skating. The company was in\n         tough economic straits by the 1920's, however, and there is\n         no evidence that the social center was built. The town of\n         Low Moor was so completely under the company's influence\n         that one of Low Moor Iron Company's assistant managers\n         served as the town sheriff. He often foreclosed on people\n         who did not pay their debts, and drove troublesome people\n         \"out of town on a rail\" as he put it.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe Low Moor Iron Company's fortunes fluctuated during\n         the various business cycles between the years 1880-1930.\n         Low Moor was one of the larger pig iron producers in\n         Virginia, but Virginia pig iron production was not\n         important nationally. Low Moor officials sometimes sold\n         their product themselves, but more often they used agents,\n         the prevalent method at the time. Low Moor Iron Company\n         used a variety of agents through the 1900's. James F. Bryan\n         acted as the exclusive agent for the sale of Kay Moor Coal\n         from September 21, 1903 to September, 1905. From about 1890\n         until about 1910 Dalton Nash and Company were the exclusive\n         eastern agents of Low Moor Iron. After that time the\n         exclusive agency went to Philips Isham and Company located\n         in New York. From about 1890 the western agency was handled\n         chiefly by Thomas Mack and Company. After 1902 Thomas Mack\n         and Company underwent a name change, becoming Walter\n         Wallingford and Company, with offices located in\n         Cincinnati, Pittsburgh, and Chicago.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePerhaps the Low Moor Iron Company's biggest problem over\n         the years was obtaining railroad cars for the\n         transportation of its finished product. Low Moor Iron\n         Company had its own cars for transporting its raw materials\n         among its various facilities. For the long haul necessary\n         for its finished goods, however, it depended upon the\n         services of the Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad, and the\n         relationship was not always a happy one. The Low Moor\n         Company complained many times to the C \u0026amp; O Railroad\n         about the discrepancies between long-and shorthaul freight\n         rates. Low Moor also had trouble getting cars from the C\n         \u0026amp; O. In a letter to one of Low Moor Company's agents\n         from an irate customer dated 1898, the customer wrote: \"We\n         wrote you on Saturday and endeavored to question upon your\n         mind the necessity of taking care of us with Low Moor iron.\n         We are on our uppers--there is not a pound of Low Moor iron\n         in the yard. Of the one hundred tons ordered some time ago,\n         not one pound of it has been received.\" This was, according\n         to the Low Moor Iron Company, because they could not get\n         the railroad cars. In a letter from Thomas Mack and Company\n         dated November 26, 1901, to General Manager E. C. Means:\n         \"We are hopeful that the car supply will get better because\n         of the number of orders you have of ours for prompt\n         shipment. Our customers are complaining that they are not\n         getting the iron fast enough. . . . We hope that the\n         railroad will be able to supply you with empty cars.\" In\n         another letter dated 1916 to John B. Guernsey, then acting\n         General Manager of the Low Moor Iron Company, \"We were not\n         supplied with coke cars for today's loading, and\n         consequently we have been practically down of Kay Moor\n         ovens all day.\"\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe problem of procuring labor also plagued the Low Moor\n         Company. The company sometimes tried to hire immigrant\n         laborers and send the men directly to Low Moor from New\n         York City. There were problems with this, as is explained\n         in the following letter dated April 7, 1906: \n         \u003cblockquote\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eTo Mr. George Wickes \n            \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003eSupt. of Mines \n            \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003eKay Moor, Virginia \n            \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e\u003c/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eDear George, \n            \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003eTony arrived with twenty one men last night. One\n            got away in Jersey two in Washington D.C., four in\n            Charlottesville. Some of the men are very good looking,\n            but taken as a whole they are the worst lot I have ever\n            seen: Irish, German-Jews, and Italians. . . . Our New\n            York transportations to this place have never been a\n            success.\u003c/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eSigned, \n            \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003eEd D. Wickes Supt. of Mines\u003c/p\u003e\n\u003c/blockquote\u003eLow Moor usually employed labor agencies, one\n         of which was Atwood's Employment Agency. Often the Low Moor\n         Company would request certain nationalities, believing them\n         to be better workers than others. Sometimes the company\n         would request a gang of twenty made up of \"ten Greeks and\n         ten Italians.\" Many of the immigrants fled Low Moor and Kay\n         Moor when they learned that they would have to work\n         underground. There is a fair amount of material on\n         immigrant labor and its procurement in the collection, and\n         it is noted in the description of the box contents.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLow Moor Iron Company not only had trouble procuring\n         labor, but it also had trouble with labor already employed\n         in the mines and at the factory. Labor dissension and\n         strikes troubled the Kay Moor Mines through the 1900's. The\n         great coal strike of 1902 hurt the Low Moor Company's coal\n         mining operation, but by 1903 things were \"nearly back to\n         normal\" according to the mine superintendent. There was\n         still trouble at Kay Moor Mines, however. In a letter dated\n         April 26, 1906, to the treasurer of Low Moor Company, the\n         manager of the mines wrote about the trouble in \"trying to\n         get the agitators out.\" The mines were seventy-five men\n         short of the total labor force needed because many of the\n         coal miners returned to their farms during the spring.\n         There were rumblings of another strike at Kay Moor, the\n         result of which was to be a fourteen percent increase in\n         wages for the Kay Moor Mine workers via an agreement with\n         the United Mine Workers Union in December.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe Low Moor Iron Company grew along with the rest of\n         Virginia industry in the 1890's and 1900's. Starting with\n         only one furnace in the 1870's, it opened a second furnace\n         at Covington, Virginia, in 1891. In 1911 it opened a third\n         furnace, this time at Low Moor. Covington, with its heavy\n         industry, soon became known as the \"Pittsburgh of\n         Virginia.\" Virginia's pig iron production rose from 9,000\n         short tons in 1870 to 544,034 long tons in 1903. Judging\n         from the Low Moor Company's correspondence, the most\n         prosperous period for the company fell between the years\n         1895-1907. In the years between 1907-1917 problems befell\n         the Virginia pig iron industry. In a letter from William W.\n         Hearns, the president of the Virginia based Princess Pig\n         Iron Company, to U. S. Senator Thomas S. Martin, Hearns\n         writes of the problems of the Virginia pig iron industry:\n         \"There is not a blast furnace in Virginia that is making\n         any money from the manufacture of pig iron. The cause of\n         this is there is an exceedingly low price on pig iron in\n         the country at the present time, and the increased cost of\n         manufacturing is due to the increase in wages in all\n         lines.\" With the outbreak of World War I prices rose\n         dramatically, but in a market report to Low Moor dated\n         November 11, 1916, it was stated that: \"In spite of the\n         high prices, it is not a picnic to be in the iron industry.\n         There is a desperate shortage of cars and equipment in the\n         coal and iron districts, and in consequence there are\n         troubles of all kinds to get materials shipped. The\n         situation has grown serious.\"\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eWhen America became involved in the First World War, it\n         meant a boost for the Low Moor Iron Company. The government\n         helped it procure labor, and even helped it repair its\n         furnaces. The problem of supplies and cars for their\n         shipments, however, plagued the company more than ever. It\n         had a good deal of trouble getting all the raw materials it\n         needed due chiefly to the \"tight ship\" run by Harry F.\n         Byrd, Sr., U.S. Fuel Administrator for Virginia. After the\n         war very serious problems began to trouble the Low Moor\n         Iron Company. The demand for iron fell precipitously and a\n         short but severe depression ensued from 1919-1922. The\n         depression seemed to hit the iron industry especially hard.\n         Prices took a huge drop due to the lack of demand, and many\n         pre-war contracts had to be revalued. To compound the\n         company's problems, the Kay Moor Mines went on strike in\n         1919. This strike was quickly settled, as the market for\n         coal was so good that the Low Moor Company ceased taking\n         orders temporarily in 1921 as it could not fill the orders\n         it had on hand.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe Low Moor Company furnaces lay idle for some twenty\n         months. Finally, in November 1922 one of Low Moor's\n         furnaces was finally fired up. While prosperity gradually\n         returned to the rest of the country, the Low Moor Iron\n         Company never recovered. Production of pig iron in the\n         Virginia iron industry declined from 544,034 tons in 1903\n         to 148,053 tons in 1923, considered a good year for the\n         industry as a whole. In February 1926 Low Moor officials\n         talked of merging with two other iron companies in order to\n         revive the iron business for the three companies. The\n         merger, however, never occurred. By late 1926 the company\n         was in the process of liquidation. An advertisement in the\n         Charleston, West Virginia, Daily Mail dated April 30, 1927,\n         told of a huge warehouse sale at the Low Moor Iron Company.\n         The advertisement noted \"thousands of screws, pipe\n         fittings, valves, etc.\" The last piece of correspondence\n         from the Low Moor Iron Company in the collection is dated\n         1929. It deals with the sale of a machine.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eWhy did the iron industry in Virginia decline as it did?\n         Some say that lack of speed, efficiency, and a decent\n         transportation system for Alleghany County caused it. In a\n         letter from C. E. Bertie, secretary of the Virginia Pig\n         Iron Association, to the \n         \u003cbibref type=\"simple\" href=\"\"\u003e\u003ctitle type=\"simple\" href=\"\"\u003eManufacturers Record\u003c/title\u003e\u003c/bibref\u003edated 1925, Bertie claimed that it was the\n         tremendous rise in the cost of transportation. Virginia, he\n         claimed, had almost no home market. Over 80% of its normal\n         production was shipped out to other states. The failure of\n         the Interstate Commerce Commission to treat Virginia\n         furnaces as southern furnaces was the cause of much of the\n         trouble. From 1914-1925 there were four blanket increases\n         in freight rates in the country, of which only one applied\n         equally to all localities. Southern furnaces were received\n         only two increases--a 25% increase in 1918 and a 25%\n         increase in 1920--but northern furnaces had had 5%, 15%,\n         25%, and 40% increases in their transportation costs.\n         Virginia furnaces, although recognized as southern\n         furnaces, had had freight rates increased in line with the\n         northern furnaces. Prior to the war Virginia iron reached\n         all points in Ohio, Indiana, Michigan, and Illinois on a\n         competitive basis with southern furnaces. After World War I\n         the advantage was limited to a small portion of\n         southeastern Ohio. All of Indiana, Illinois, and Michigan\n         were now lost to the Virginia producers. The Virginia\n         producer, according to Bertie, felt that the freight rates\n         should be restored to a relationship with southern\n         furnaces. If what Bertie said was true, the other southern\n         states iron industries should not have been in the same\n         desperate economic straits as Virginia's, and statistics\n         should support this. In the 1920's production rose to new\n         heights in Alabama. In Tennessee, however, iron production\n         plunged to new lows during the 1920's. While the south\n         accounted for 10.2% of the entire U. S. production in the\n         years 1919-1924, Virginia accounted for less than 1% during\n         those years. In 1915 Virginia accounted for over 6% of the\n         U.S. iron production. One can see a decline in other areas\n         of the south than Virginia. While the discrepancies in the\n         freight rates may have helped cause the decline, clearly\n         there are other reasons.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eDuring the 1900's there was a discovery of extremely\n         rich iron ore deposits in the mid-west. Much of this ore\n         was on or near the surface, making the mining of it both\n         easy and inexpensive. This in turn lowered production costs\n         of the pig iron. This caused iron production to shift to\n         that region, and resulted in a decline in the Virginia iron\n         industry. There was a sharp increase in iron production in\n         the mid-west through the 1920's. The iron ore in the\n         mid-west may have been of better quality than Virginia, but\n         the iron ore in Virginia was of sufficient quality to\n         produce a good pig iron. The western ore deposits were not\n         as conveniently located as Virginia deposits, but the\n         inexpensiveness of production more than made up for it.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIn examining the rise and fall of the Low Moor Iron\n         Company, we can see a situation in which the conditions for\n         the manufacture of iron were nearly ideal. There was plenty\n         of land for expansion and resources for the manufacture of\n         the iron. The major internal problem faced by the Low Moor\n         Iron Company was that of transportation. External\n         developments, however, caused the final demise of the Low\n         Moor Iron Company.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLow Moor Iron Company Personnel:\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eExecutive Staff: Managing Director, Colonel H. M.\n         Goodwin: ca. 1881. General Managers: H. G. Merry: ca.\n         1884-1902; E. C. Means: ca. 1905-1915; J. P. Guernsey: ca.\n         1915 (acting General Manager); F. U. Humbert: ca.\n         1916-1929. Assistant General Manager: E. B. Wilkinson: ca.\n         1909-1915. Treasurers and Assistant Treasurers: Edward Low:\n         ca. 1886-1898; Frank Lyman (in New York): ca. 1898-1919; S.\n         G. Cragill (Asst. Treasurer): ca. 1900-1915; H. A. Dalton:\n         ca. 1921-1929; John Lipscomb (Asst. Treasurer): ca.\n         1918-1928.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eFactory and Mine Supervisors: Kay Moor Superintendents:\n         C. C. Cooke: ca. 1918; Ed. D. Wickes: ca. 1906; H. L.\n         Tansell: ca. 1903; A. H. Reed: ca. 1906. Kay Moor Managers:\n         J. W. Monteith: manager of mines. ca. 1918; promoted in\n         1925 to general superintendent in charge of mine plants,\n         coke ovens, shops, repairs, and construction; A. L.\n         Monteith: assistant superintendent of mines, ca. 1918;\n         George T. Wickes: manager of Covington mines, ca.\n         1906-1917; Ross Howell, ca. 1918. Stack Mines\n         Superintendents: J. H. Carpenter: ca. 1906; C. D.\n         Oberschain: ca. 1907; J. L. Harris: ca. 1903; John S. Ham:\n         ca. 1891-1901. Rich Patch Mines Superintendents: John R.\n         Thompson: foreman, ca. 1906. Low Moor assorted other\n         personnel: S. L. Tulley: trainmaster, ca. 1906; B. J.\n         Shenkley: foreman, Low Moor limestone quarries; L. Q. Wood:\n         assistant traffic manager, ca. 1919.\u003c/p\u003e"],"bioghist_heading_ssm":["Biographical/Historical Information"],"bioghist_tesim":["The Low Moor Iron Company, the first producer of pig\n         iron in Virginia according to the company's claims, was a\n         self-contained manufacturing unit producing from its own\n         mines the coal, limestone, and iron ore needed for its iron\n         production. Located in Low Moor near Clifton Forge in\n         Alleghany County in western Virginia, an area rich in\n         mineral deposits, the company was in operation from\n         1872-1930, producing only pig iron; it never attempted to\n         produce finished iron products.","Coal came to the Low Moor furnaces from the Kay Moor\n         Mines at Kay Moor, West Virginia, about thirty miles from\n         Low Moor; limestone was produced from the Low Moor\n         limestone quarries; and iron ore came from the Fenwick,\n         Dolly Ann, Jordan, Rich Patch, Low Moor, and Longdale\n         Mines, most of them within twenty miles of Low Moor at\n         Covington or Clifton Forge.","The towns of Low Moor and Kay Moor were company towns in\n         every respect. Workers lived in company-owned houses,\n         bought food in company stores, worshiped at the company\n         church, saw movies in the company theater, were treated in\n         the company hospital, and were buried in the company\n         cemetery. Workers received part of their pay in scrip that\n         they exchanged for goods and services. According to a\n         statement from the Kay Moor Mines dated November 1904, Kay\n         Moor then employed 338 people, paid them an average wage of\n         $36.26 per month, and issued half of their pay in scrip.\n         Kay Moor had four stores; Low Moor had seven or eight. All\n         of these stores carried large inventories which are\n         detailed in the collection. These inventories are valuable\n         to anyone interested in determining the wants and needs of\n         a coal miner and his family.","In the late 1910's and 1920's Kay Moor had a company\n         theater called the Azure Theater which seated about 300\n         people. There were also plans for a company-owned social\n         center, to have pool tables, a soda fountain, and\n         provisions for dancing and skating. The company was in\n         tough economic straits by the 1920's, however, and there is\n         no evidence that the social center was built. The town of\n         Low Moor was so completely under the company's influence\n         that one of Low Moor Iron Company's assistant managers\n         served as the town sheriff. He often foreclosed on people\n         who did not pay their debts, and drove troublesome people\n         \"out of town on a rail\" as he put it.","The Low Moor Iron Company's fortunes fluctuated during\n         the various business cycles between the years 1880-1930.\n         Low Moor was one of the larger pig iron producers in\n         Virginia, but Virginia pig iron production was not\n         important nationally. Low Moor officials sometimes sold\n         their product themselves, but more often they used agents,\n         the prevalent method at the time. Low Moor Iron Company\n         used a variety of agents through the 1900's. James F. Bryan\n         acted as the exclusive agent for the sale of Kay Moor Coal\n         from September 21, 1903 to September, 1905. From about 1890\n         until about 1910 Dalton Nash and Company were the exclusive\n         eastern agents of Low Moor Iron. After that time the\n         exclusive agency went to Philips Isham and Company located\n         in New York. From about 1890 the western agency was handled\n         chiefly by Thomas Mack and Company. After 1902 Thomas Mack\n         and Company underwent a name change, becoming Walter\n         Wallingford and Company, with offices located in\n         Cincinnati, Pittsburgh, and Chicago.","Perhaps the Low Moor Iron Company's biggest problem over\n         the years was obtaining railroad cars for the\n         transportation of its finished product. Low Moor Iron\n         Company had its own cars for transporting its raw materials\n         among its various facilities. For the long haul necessary\n         for its finished goods, however, it depended upon the\n         services of the Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad, and the\n         relationship was not always a happy one. The Low Moor\n         Company complained many times to the C \u0026 O Railroad\n         about the discrepancies between long-and shorthaul freight\n         rates. Low Moor also had trouble getting cars from the C\n         \u0026 O. In a letter to one of Low Moor Company's agents\n         from an irate customer dated 1898, the customer wrote: \"We\n         wrote you on Saturday and endeavored to question upon your\n         mind the necessity of taking care of us with Low Moor iron.\n         We are on our uppers--there is not a pound of Low Moor iron\n         in the yard. Of the one hundred tons ordered some time ago,\n         not one pound of it has been received.\" This was, according\n         to the Low Moor Iron Company, because they could not get\n         the railroad cars. In a letter from Thomas Mack and Company\n         dated November 26, 1901, to General Manager E. C. Means:\n         \"We are hopeful that the car supply will get better because\n         of the number of orders you have of ours for prompt\n         shipment. Our customers are complaining that they are not\n         getting the iron fast enough. . . . We hope that the\n         railroad will be able to supply you with empty cars.\" In\n         another letter dated 1916 to John B. Guernsey, then acting\n         General Manager of the Low Moor Iron Company, \"We were not\n         supplied with coke cars for today's loading, and\n         consequently we have been practically down of Kay Moor\n         ovens all day.\"","The problem of procuring labor also plagued the Low Moor\n         Company. The company sometimes tried to hire immigrant\n         laborers and send the men directly to Low Moor from New\n         York City. There were problems with this, as is explained\n         in the following letter dated April 7, 1906: \n          To Mr. George Wickes \n             Supt. of Mines \n             Kay Moor, Virginia \n             Dear George, \n             Tony arrived with twenty one men last night. One\n            got away in Jersey two in Washington D.C., four in\n            Charlottesville. Some of the men are very good looking,\n            but taken as a whole they are the worst lot I have ever\n            seen: Irish, German-Jews, and Italians. . . . Our New\n            York transportations to this place have never been a\n            success. Signed, \n             Ed D. Wickes Supt. of Mines Low Moor usually employed labor agencies, one\n         of which was Atwood's Employment Agency. Often the Low Moor\n         Company would request certain nationalities, believing them\n         to be better workers than others. Sometimes the company\n         would request a gang of twenty made up of \"ten Greeks and\n         ten Italians.\" Many of the immigrants fled Low Moor and Kay\n         Moor when they learned that they would have to work\n         underground. There is a fair amount of material on\n         immigrant labor and its procurement in the collection, and\n         it is noted in the description of the box contents.","Low Moor Iron Company not only had trouble procuring\n         labor, but it also had trouble with labor already employed\n         in the mines and at the factory. Labor dissension and\n         strikes troubled the Kay Moor Mines through the 1900's. The\n         great coal strike of 1902 hurt the Low Moor Company's coal\n         mining operation, but by 1903 things were \"nearly back to\n         normal\" according to the mine superintendent. There was\n         still trouble at Kay Moor Mines, however. In a letter dated\n         April 26, 1906, to the treasurer of Low Moor Company, the\n         manager of the mines wrote about the trouble in \"trying to\n         get the agitators out.\" The mines were seventy-five men\n         short of the total labor force needed because many of the\n         coal miners returned to their farms during the spring.\n         There were rumblings of another strike at Kay Moor, the\n         result of which was to be a fourteen percent increase in\n         wages for the Kay Moor Mine workers via an agreement with\n         the United Mine Workers Union in December.","The Low Moor Iron Company grew along with the rest of\n         Virginia industry in the 1890's and 1900's. Starting with\n         only one furnace in the 1870's, it opened a second furnace\n         at Covington, Virginia, in 1891. In 1911 it opened a third\n         furnace, this time at Low Moor. Covington, with its heavy\n         industry, soon became known as the \"Pittsburgh of\n         Virginia.\" Virginia's pig iron production rose from 9,000\n         short tons in 1870 to 544,034 long tons in 1903. Judging\n         from the Low Moor Company's correspondence, the most\n         prosperous period for the company fell between the years\n         1895-1907. In the years between 1907-1917 problems befell\n         the Virginia pig iron industry. In a letter from William W.\n         Hearns, the president of the Virginia based Princess Pig\n         Iron Company, to U. S. Senator Thomas S. Martin, Hearns\n         writes of the problems of the Virginia pig iron industry:\n         \"There is not a blast furnace in Virginia that is making\n         any money from the manufacture of pig iron. The cause of\n         this is there is an exceedingly low price on pig iron in\n         the country at the present time, and the increased cost of\n         manufacturing is due to the increase in wages in all\n         lines.\" With the outbreak of World War I prices rose\n         dramatically, but in a market report to Low Moor dated\n         November 11, 1916, it was stated that: \"In spite of the\n         high prices, it is not a picnic to be in the iron industry.\n         There is a desperate shortage of cars and equipment in the\n         coal and iron districts, and in consequence there are\n         troubles of all kinds to get materials shipped. The\n         situation has grown serious.\"","When America became involved in the First World War, it\n         meant a boost for the Low Moor Iron Company. The government\n         helped it procure labor, and even helped it repair its\n         furnaces. The problem of supplies and cars for their\n         shipments, however, plagued the company more than ever. It\n         had a good deal of trouble getting all the raw materials it\n         needed due chiefly to the \"tight ship\" run by Harry F.\n         Byrd, Sr., U.S. Fuel Administrator for Virginia. After the\n         war very serious problems began to trouble the Low Moor\n         Iron Company. The demand for iron fell precipitously and a\n         short but severe depression ensued from 1919-1922. The\n         depression seemed to hit the iron industry especially hard.\n         Prices took a huge drop due to the lack of demand, and many\n         pre-war contracts had to be revalued. To compound the\n         company's problems, the Kay Moor Mines went on strike in\n         1919. This strike was quickly settled, as the market for\n         coal was so good that the Low Moor Company ceased taking\n         orders temporarily in 1921 as it could not fill the orders\n         it had on hand.","The Low Moor Company furnaces lay idle for some twenty\n         months. Finally, in November 1922 one of Low Moor's\n         furnaces was finally fired up. While prosperity gradually\n         returned to the rest of the country, the Low Moor Iron\n         Company never recovered. Production of pig iron in the\n         Virginia iron industry declined from 544,034 tons in 1903\n         to 148,053 tons in 1923, considered a good year for the\n         industry as a whole. In February 1926 Low Moor officials\n         talked of merging with two other iron companies in order to\n         revive the iron business for the three companies. The\n         merger, however, never occurred. By late 1926 the company\n         was in the process of liquidation. An advertisement in the\n         Charleston, West Virginia, Daily Mail dated April 30, 1927,\n         told of a huge warehouse sale at the Low Moor Iron Company.\n         The advertisement noted \"thousands of screws, pipe\n         fittings, valves, etc.\" The last piece of correspondence\n         from the Low Moor Iron Company in the collection is dated\n         1929. It deals with the sale of a machine.","Why did the iron industry in Virginia decline as it did?\n         Some say that lack of speed, efficiency, and a decent\n         transportation system for Alleghany County caused it. In a\n         letter from C. E. Bertie, secretary of the Virginia Pig\n         Iron Association, to the \n          Manufacturers Record dated 1925, Bertie claimed that it was the\n         tremendous rise in the cost of transportation. Virginia, he\n         claimed, had almost no home market. Over 80% of its normal\n         production was shipped out to other states. The failure of\n         the Interstate Commerce Commission to treat Virginia\n         furnaces as southern furnaces was the cause of much of the\n         trouble. From 1914-1925 there were four blanket increases\n         in freight rates in the country, of which only one applied\n         equally to all localities. Southern furnaces were received\n         only two increases--a 25% increase in 1918 and a 25%\n         increase in 1920--but northern furnaces had had 5%, 15%,\n         25%, and 40% increases in their transportation costs.\n         Virginia furnaces, although recognized as southern\n         furnaces, had had freight rates increased in line with the\n         northern furnaces. Prior to the war Virginia iron reached\n         all points in Ohio, Indiana, Michigan, and Illinois on a\n         competitive basis with southern furnaces. After World War I\n         the advantage was limited to a small portion of\n         southeastern Ohio. All of Indiana, Illinois, and Michigan\n         were now lost to the Virginia producers. The Virginia\n         producer, according to Bertie, felt that the freight rates\n         should be restored to a relationship with southern\n         furnaces. If what Bertie said was true, the other southern\n         states iron industries should not have been in the same\n         desperate economic straits as Virginia's, and statistics\n         should support this. In the 1920's production rose to new\n         heights in Alabama. In Tennessee, however, iron production\n         plunged to new lows during the 1920's. While the south\n         accounted for 10.2% of the entire U. S. production in the\n         years 1919-1924, Virginia accounted for less than 1% during\n         those years. In 1915 Virginia accounted for over 6% of the\n         U.S. iron production. One can see a decline in other areas\n         of the south than Virginia. While the discrepancies in the\n         freight rates may have helped cause the decline, clearly\n         there are other reasons.","During the 1900's there was a discovery of extremely\n         rich iron ore deposits in the mid-west. Much of this ore\n         was on or near the surface, making the mining of it both\n         easy and inexpensive. This in turn lowered production costs\n         of the pig iron. This caused iron production to shift to\n         that region, and resulted in a decline in the Virginia iron\n         industry. There was a sharp increase in iron production in\n         the mid-west through the 1920's. The iron ore in the\n         mid-west may have been of better quality than Virginia, but\n         the iron ore in Virginia was of sufficient quality to\n         produce a good pig iron. The western ore deposits were not\n         as conveniently located as Virginia deposits, but the\n         inexpensiveness of production more than made up for it.","In examining the rise and fall of the Low Moor Iron\n         Company, we can see a situation in which the conditions for\n         the manufacture of iron were nearly ideal. There was plenty\n         of land for expansion and resources for the manufacture of\n         the iron. The major internal problem faced by the Low Moor\n         Iron Company was that of transportation. External\n         developments, however, caused the final demise of the Low\n         Moor Iron Company.","Low Moor Iron Company Personnel:","Executive Staff: Managing Director, Colonel H. M.\n         Goodwin: ca. 1881. General Managers: H. G. Merry: ca.\n         1884-1902; E. C. Means: ca. 1905-1915; J. P. Guernsey: ca.\n         1915 (acting General Manager); F. U. Humbert: ca.\n         1916-1929. Assistant General Manager: E. B. Wilkinson: ca.\n         1909-1915. Treasurers and Assistant Treasurers: Edward Low:\n         ca. 1886-1898; Frank Lyman (in New York): ca. 1898-1919; S.\n         G. Cragill (Asst. Treasurer): ca. 1900-1915; H. A. Dalton:\n         ca. 1921-1929; John Lipscomb (Asst. Treasurer): ca.\n         1918-1928.","Factory and Mine Supervisors: Kay Moor Superintendents:\n         C. C. Cooke: ca. 1918; Ed. D. Wickes: ca. 1906; H. L.\n         Tansell: ca. 1903; A. H. Reed: ca. 1906. Kay Moor Managers:\n         J. W. Monteith: manager of mines. ca. 1918; promoted in\n         1925 to general superintendent in charge of mine plants,\n         coke ovens, shops, repairs, and construction; A. L.\n         Monteith: assistant superintendent of mines, ca. 1918;\n         George T. Wickes: manager of Covington mines, ca.\n         1906-1917; Ross Howell, ca. 1918. Stack Mines\n         Superintendents: J. H. Carpenter: ca. 1906; C. D.\n         Oberschain: ca. 1907; J. L. Harris: ca. 1903; John S. Ham:\n         ca. 1891-1901. Rich Patch Mines Superintendents: John R.\n         Thompson: foreman, ca. 1906. Low Moor assorted other\n         personnel: S. L. Tulley: trainmaster, ca. 1906; B. J.\n         Shenkley: foreman, Low Moor limestone quarries; L. Q. Wood:\n         assistant traffic manager, ca. 1919."],"custodhist_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe Low Moor Iron Company ceased operations in 1930;\n            what happened to the records of the company in the years\n            immediately following is not known, but in 1939, the Green\n            Bookman, a Charlottesville bookshop, sold the records to\n            the University of Virginia Library.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe records arrived at the receiving room door of the\n            new Alderman Library on October 16, 1939, in a trailer\n            truck whose load was estimated to weigh about fourteen\n            tons. As the manuscripts staff dug around in the piles of\n            over 1200 account books, and countless boxes of papers they\n            realized that the company had saved almost all of its\n            papers including checks, invoices, vouchers, and receipts,\n            and certain of these records were destroyed as their\n            information was recorded in other records. Once the bulk of\n            the collection had been reduced, the remaining records were\n            transferred to the stack area of the Division of Rare Books\n            and Manuscripts.\u003c/p\u003e"],"custodhist_heading_ssm":["Provenance"],"custodhist_tesim":["The Low Moor Iron Company ceased operations in 1930;\n            what happened to the records of the company in the years\n            immediately following is not known, but in 1939, the Green\n            Bookman, a Charlottesville bookshop, sold the records to\n            the University of Virginia Library.","The records arrived at the receiving room door of the\n            new Alderman Library on October 16, 1939, in a trailer\n            truck whose load was estimated to weigh about fourteen\n            tons. As the manuscripts staff dug around in the piles of\n            over 1200 account books, and countless boxes of papers they\n            realized that the company had saved almost all of its\n            papers including checks, invoices, vouchers, and receipts,\n            and certain of these records were destroyed as their\n            information was recorded in other records. Once the bulk of\n            the collection had been reduced, the remaining records were\n            transferred to the stack area of the Division of Rare Books\n            and Manuscripts."],"otherfindaid_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eSome 1200 bound accounting record books of the Low Moor\n            Iron Company came into the custody of the Library with the\n            loose papers. When the project staff investigated these\n            volumes in the dormitory attic where they were stored, they\n            found that the volumes had been shelved by size rather than\n            by series. Thus, a letterbook may stand next to a stock\n            report book for a furnace, which is, in turn, next to a\n            store account book for the Kay Moor Mines' store. No series\n            are shelved in order.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMembers of the project staff surveyed the volumes,\n            completing for each volume two copies of a mimeographed\n            survey form, and assigning to each volume a number. One\n            copy of the survey report form was placed in the volume,\n            and the second was returned to the Library.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eFrom the survey report forms, 3 x 5 inch index\n            cards--with a carbon copy of each--were typed. One set of\n            index cards has been kept in order by the numbers assigned\n            to the volumes as they stand on the shelves. This provides\n            a shelf list for the use of the library staff. The other\n            set of cards was sorted into categories as a finding aid.\n            On the list that follows, the researcher will find a number\n            of major headings such as \"Accounts,\" \"Inventories,\"\n            \"Letter Books,\" and \"Shipments-Outgoing.\"\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eInsofar as it has been possible to determine from the\n            data on the survey report forms, the volumes have been\n            assigned to categories. Most of the major categories, or\n            headings, have sub-headings. Within those sub-headings, the\n            volumes have been arranged chronologically. The\n            investigators realize that after careful study of some of\n            these volumes, they will be revealed as belonging to other\n            categories than those in which they have initially been\n            placed. The card index will allow such movement.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAvailable in the Manuscripts/Archives Reading Room in\n            the Library is the sorted card index file. There is a card\n            for every volume in this file whereas, on the pages that\n            follow, volumes have been summarized under the headings and\n            sub-headings. In each case, the number of volumes has been\n            given in the summarized list; the date ranges given are\n            inclusive in most cases, and do not reveal the many gaps in\n            sequences unless the number of volumes is small and the\n            date range wide. Occasional remarks about the content of\n            volumes have been supplied if the contents are not obvious\n            from the heading or sub-heading.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eResearchers wishing to examine any of these volumes will\n            have to use the card index file in order to be able to give\n            to the staff the volume number assigned to the individual\n            volumes that are to be inspected.\u003c/p\u003e"],"otherfindaid_heading_ssm":["Other Finding Aid"],"otherfindaid_tesim":["Some 1200 bound accounting record books of the Low Moor\n            Iron Company came into the custody of the Library with the\n            loose papers. When the project staff investigated these\n            volumes in the dormitory attic where they were stored, they\n            found that the volumes had been shelved by size rather than\n            by series. Thus, a letterbook may stand next to a stock\n            report book for a furnace, which is, in turn, next to a\n            store account book for the Kay Moor Mines' store. No series\n            are shelved in order.","Members of the project staff surveyed the volumes,\n            completing for each volume two copies of a mimeographed\n            survey form, and assigning to each volume a number. One\n            copy of the survey report form was placed in the volume,\n            and the second was returned to the Library.","From the survey report forms, 3 x 5 inch index\n            cards--with a carbon copy of each--were typed. One set of\n            index cards has been kept in order by the numbers assigned\n            to the volumes as they stand on the shelves. This provides\n            a shelf list for the use of the library staff. The other\n            set of cards was sorted into categories as a finding aid.\n            On the list that follows, the researcher will find a number\n            of major headings such as \"Accounts,\" \"Inventories,\"\n            \"Letter Books,\" and \"Shipments-Outgoing.\"","Insofar as it has been possible to determine from the\n            data on the survey report forms, the volumes have been\n            assigned to categories. Most of the major categories, or\n            headings, have sub-headings. Within those sub-headings, the\n            volumes have been arranged chronologically. The\n            investigators realize that after careful study of some of\n            these volumes, they will be revealed as belonging to other\n            categories than those in which they have initially been\n            placed. The card index will allow such movement.","Available in the Manuscripts/Archives Reading Room in\n            the Library is the sorted card index file. There is a card\n            for every volume in this file whereas, on the pages that\n            follow, volumes have been summarized under the headings and\n            sub-headings. In each case, the number of volumes has been\n            given in the summarized list; the date ranges given are\n            inclusive in most cases, and do not reveal the many gaps in\n            sequences unless the number of volumes is small and the\n            date range wide. Occasional remarks about the content of\n            volumes have been supplied if the contents are not obvious\n            from the heading or sub-heading.","Researchers wishing to examine any of these volumes will\n            have to use the card index file in order to be able to give\n            to the staff the volume number assigned to the individual\n            volumes that are to be inspected."],"prefercite_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003ePapers of the Low Moor Iron Company, Accession #662,\n            Special Collections, University of Virginia Library,\n            Charlottesville, Va.\u003c/p\u003e"],"prefercite_tesim":["Papers of the Low Moor Iron Company, Accession #662,\n            Special Collections, University of Virginia Library,\n            Charlottesville, Va."],"processinfo_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eBy 1958, little storage space remained in Alderman\n            Library, and the Rare Books and Manuscripts Division was\n            especially crowded because of the rapid growth of its\n            collections. After an examination of its storage areas, the\n            division's staff decided to move the Low Moor records to\n            the attic of one of the student dormitories. The collection\n            had had little use chiefly because there was no finding\n            aid. There seemed little likelihood of extensive researcher\n            use until the collection could be processed.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIn preparation for the move, the old letter boxes in\n            which much of the collection had arrived in the Library\n            were discarded. The records from each box were placed\n            between sheets of the heavy gray cardboard used to protect\n            unbound newspapers in the Library's stacks, and the spine\n            labels of the old letter boxes were copied onto the\n            cardboard. The resulting bundles were wrapped with brown\n            Kraft paper and tied up with string. The bundles were\n            numbered. Whatever original order the letter boxes may have\n            had was lost by the time they arrived in the Library, and\n            after the bundling, removal to a dormitory attic, and\n            subsequent return to the Library in 1976, all vestiges of\n            the original order were lost.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe bundles remained in the dormitory attic for almost\n            twenty years. Occasional visits were made by the division\n            staff to check on their condition, and on very rare\n            occasions, a researcher was brave enough to ask to be shown\n            the collection. Once the researcher saw the imposing amount\n            of material and the conditions in the attic, interest in\n            using the collection invariably died.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIn late 1976 a grant from the National Endowment for the\n            Humanities was obtained to allow the Library to process the\n            Low Moor Iron Company papers, and the papers of Edward L.\n            Stone and the Borderland Coal Company, another large\n            collection of records stored in the same dormitory attic.\n            All of these records and papers were moved back to the\n            Library where the bundles were cleaned and opened. The\n            contents of each were placed in a Hollinger storage box,\n            and all notes on the paper wrappings and on the gray\n            cardboard sheets were recorded.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe more than 1200 bound accounting records of the Low\n            Moor Iron Company were surveyed by the grant project staff.\n            The contents of each volume were noted on a mimeographed\n            form, and later typed on 3 x 5\" cards to create a\n            readily-accessible file for the Manuscripts Reading Room.\n            This information was also typed on pages to be added to\n            this guide.\u003c/p\u003e"],"processinfo_heading_ssm":["Processing Information"],"processinfo_tesim":["By 1958, little storage space remained in Alderman\n            Library, and the Rare Books and Manuscripts Division was\n            especially crowded because of the rapid growth of its\n            collections. After an examination of its storage areas, the\n            division's staff decided to move the Low Moor records to\n            the attic of one of the student dormitories. The collection\n            had had little use chiefly because there was no finding\n            aid. There seemed little likelihood of extensive researcher\n            use until the collection could be processed.","In preparation for the move, the old letter boxes in\n            which much of the collection had arrived in the Library\n            were discarded. The records from each box were placed\n            between sheets of the heavy gray cardboard used to protect\n            unbound newspapers in the Library's stacks, and the spine\n            labels of the old letter boxes were copied onto the\n            cardboard. The resulting bundles were wrapped with brown\n            Kraft paper and tied up with string. The bundles were\n            numbered. Whatever original order the letter boxes may have\n            had was lost by the time they arrived in the Library, and\n            after the bundling, removal to a dormitory attic, and\n            subsequent return to the Library in 1976, all vestiges of\n            the original order were lost.","The bundles remained in the dormitory attic for almost\n            twenty years. Occasional visits were made by the division\n            staff to check on their condition, and on very rare\n            occasions, a researcher was brave enough to ask to be shown\n            the collection. Once the researcher saw the imposing amount\n            of material and the conditions in the attic, interest in\n            using the collection invariably died.","In late 1976 a grant from the National Endowment for the\n            Humanities was obtained to allow the Library to process the\n            Low Moor Iron Company papers, and the papers of Edward L.\n            Stone and the Borderland Coal Company, another large\n            collection of records stored in the same dormitory attic.\n            All of these records and papers were moved back to the\n            Library where the bundles were cleaned and opened. The\n            contents of each were placed in a Hollinger storage box,\n            and all notes on the paper wrappings and on the gray\n            cardboard sheets were recorded.","The more than 1200 bound accounting records of the Low\n            Moor Iron Company were surveyed by the grant project staff.\n            The contents of each volume were noted on a mimeographed\n            form, and later typed on 3 x 5\" cards to create a\n            readily-accessible file for the Manuscripts Reading Room.\n            This information was also typed on pages to be added to\n            this guide."],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe Low Moor Iron Company papers consist of\n         approximately 280 four-inch Hollinger archives boxes (ca.\n         95 linear feet) of records, ca. 1885-1927, and some 1200\n         bound volumes of the company's accounting records,\n         1873-1927, of this iron producing company located in Low\n         Moor (four miles southwest of Clifton Forge), Alleghany\n         County, Virginia.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThis material consists of records typical of those\n         produced by a firm of this type in the period, but as the\n         company owned its own coal and iron mines and limestone\n         quarries, there is considerable information about the\n         production of these raw materials. Large numbers of the\n         records that deal with the company's employees have\n         survived: time books, payroll books, hands ledgers, and the\n         like. Because these books sometimes include information\n         about the employee's trade or job with the company, and as\n         race is indicated in some of the records, these books\n         should provide date for studies of the structure and upward\n         mobility within the labor force, patterns of\n         ethnic--possibly racial--occupational penetration and\n         mobility, material conditions of the workers, and so on.\n         The papers should permit a range of studies detailing the\n         pattern and evolution of industrial organization in the\n         iron industry, and the evolution of markets and marketing\n         structures for the entire period. Because the company was\n         dependent upon railroads to move its raw materials to the\n         furnaces, and for the marketing of its products, there is\n         considerable information about railroads and their\n         relationship to their customers.\u003c/p\u003e"],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Scope and Content Information"],"scopecontent_tesim":["The Low Moor Iron Company papers consist of\n         approximately 280 four-inch Hollinger archives boxes (ca.\n         95 linear feet) of records, ca. 1885-1927, and some 1200\n         bound volumes of the company's accounting records,\n         1873-1927, of this iron producing company located in Low\n         Moor (four miles southwest of Clifton Forge), Alleghany\n         County, Virginia.","This material consists of records typical of those\n         produced by a firm of this type in the period, but as the\n         company owned its own coal and iron mines and limestone\n         quarries, there is considerable information about the\n         production of these raw materials. Large numbers of the\n         records that deal with the company's employees have\n         survived: time books, payroll books, hands ledgers, and the\n         like. Because these books sometimes include information\n         about the employee's trade or job with the company, and as\n         race is indicated in some of the records, these books\n         should provide date for studies of the structure and upward\n         mobility within the labor force, patterns of\n         ethnic--possibly racial--occupational penetration and\n         mobility, material conditions of the workers, and so on.\n         The papers should permit a range of studies detailing the\n         pattern and evolution of industrial organization in the\n         iron industry, and the evolution of markets and marketing\n         structures for the entire period. Because the company was\n         dependent upon railroads to move its raw materials to the\n         furnaces, and for the marketing of its products, there is\n         considerable information about railroads and their\n         relationship to their customers."],"userestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eSee the \n            \u003cextref type=\"simple\" href=\"https://www.library.virginia.edu/policies/use-of-materials\"\u003e\n            University of Virginia Library’s use policy.\u003c/extref\u003e\u003c/p\u003e"],"userestrict_heading_ssm":["Use Restrictions\n"],"userestrict_tesim":["See the \n             \n            University of Virginia Library’s use policy."],"language_ssim":["English"],"total_component_count_is":1879,"online_item_count_is":0,"component_level_isim":[0],"sort_isi":0,"timestamp":"2026-05-21T12:10:02.328Z"}]}},"label":"Breadcrumbs"}}},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_viu00917_c01_c20_c01"}},{"id":"viu_viu00917_c01_c21_c01","type":"Subseries","attributes":{"title":"A. Low Moor Payrolls; incomplete\n                     numbered series, 5, 6, 6, 10-12, 12,\n                     13-15","breadcrumbs":{"id":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_viu00917_c01_c21_c01#breadcrumbs","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":{"ref_ssi":"viu_viu00917_c01_c21_c01","ref_ssm":["viu_viu00917_c01_c21_c01"],"id":"viu_viu00917_c01_c21_c01","ead_ssi":"viu_viu00917","_root_":"viu_viu00917","_nest_parent_":"viu_viu00917_c01_c21","parent_ssi":"viu_viu00917_c01_c21","parent_ssim":["viu_viu00917","viu_viu00917_c01","viu_viu00917_c01_c21"],"parent_ids_ssim":["viu_viu00917","viu_viu00917_c01","viu_viu00917_c01_c21"],"parent_unittitles_ssm":["Papers of the Low Moor Iron Company \n         1873-1927","Bound Volumes","Payroll Books"],"parent_unittitles_tesim":["Papers of the Low Moor Iron Company \n         1873-1927","Bound Volumes","Payroll Books"],"text":["Papers of the Low Moor Iron Company \n         1873-1927","Bound Volumes","Payroll Books","A. Low Moor Payrolls; incomplete\n                     numbered series, 5, 6, 6, 10-12, 12,\n                     13-15","10 volumes"],"title_filing_ssi":"A. Low Moor Payrolls; incomplete\n                     numbered series, 5, 6, 6, 10-12, 12,\n                     13-15","title_ssm":["A. Low Moor Payrolls; incomplete\n                     numbered series, 5, 6, 6, 10-12, 12,\n                     13-15"],"title_tesim":["A. Low Moor Payrolls; incomplete\n                     numbered series, 5, 6, 6, 10-12, 12,\n                     13-15"],"unitdate_other_ssim":["1897-1924"],"normalized_date_ssm":["1897/1924"],"normalized_title_ssm":["A. Low Moor Payrolls; incomplete\n                     numbered series, 5, 6, 6, 10-12, 12,\n                     13-15"],"component_level_isim":[3],"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"collection_ssim":["Papers of the Low Moor Iron Company \n         1873-1927"],"physdesc_tesim":["10 volumes"],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"child_component_count_isi":0,"level_ssm":["Subseries"],"level_ssim":["Subseries"],"sort_isi":110,"date_range_isim":[1897,1898,1899,1900,1901,1902,1903,1904,1905,1906,1907,1908,1909,1910,1911,1912,1913,1914,1915,1916,1917,1918,1919,1920,1921,1922,1923,1924],"_nest_path_":"/components#0/components#20/components#0","timestamp":"2026-05-21T12:10:02.328Z","collection":{"numFound":1,"start":0,"numFoundExact":true,"docs":[{"id":"viu_viu00917","ead_ssi":"viu_viu00917","_root_":"viu_viu00917","_nest_parent_":"viu_viu00917","ead_source_url_ssi":"data/uva-sc/viu00917.xml","title_ssm":["Papers of the Low Moor Iron Company \n         1873-1927"],"title_tesim":["Papers of the Low Moor Iron Company \n         1873-1927"],"level_ssm":["collection"],"level_ssim":["Collection"],"unitid_ssm":["662"],"text":["662","Papers of the Low Moor Iron Company \n         1873-1927","95 linear feer + 1200\n         volumes","Stored off-site. Users must request boxes 48 hours in advance of desired use. Neither drop-in nor next-day requests can be fulfilled. For additional information, contact Special Collections. \n","The word \"organization\" is used here with considerable\n         diffidence, for any researcher studying the container list\n         that follows will realize quickly that there is no\n         organization in the usual sense of the word.","As noted under \"Provenance,\" the Low Moor Iron Company\n         papers were subjected to a number of moves; when processing\n         began in the fall of 1976, no discernible scheme of\n         organization could be determined.","The first step was to review the series of coded numbers\n         placed on the bundles of papers before they were moved to\n         the dormitory attic, but these did not provide any sort of\n         useful organization. Next, the spine titles of the original\n         letter boxes were reviewed (they had been copied onto the\n         gray cardboard sheets before the move to the dormitory\n         attic), but they, too, proved useless.","These steps having provided no scheme, and after a\n         considerable hiatus due to a turnover in student processors\n         on the collection, the new student processors were\n         instructed to begin a box-by-box inventory of the contents\n         of the collection. During this inventory, old folders were\n         replaced with acid-free ones, and the original folder\n         headings were copied onto the new ones. Some removal of\n         paper clips was accomplished, and the materials were\n         reviewed and notes taken for the guide.","Some consolidation of materials was accomplished, and in\n         other cases, materials were moved. This work has created\n         some problems in the numbering of the boxes. Thus, the\n         researchers will find boxes marked \"6A\" and \"23C\"; he will\n         also discover that certain box numbers have been entirely\n         omitted. As the box numbers exist only to aid in the\n         location of material, it was not felt that the unusual\n         numbers and the omissions would cause problems in working\n         with the papers.","A certain amount of movement of boxes within the\n         collection, and of materials among boxes, probably would\n         ease use of it. But what processing was accomplished on\n         this project took far longer than had been anticipated, and\n         there was no time in the late spring of 1978, when the\n         processors had to complete their work with the project, to\n         undertake a mass movement of material. Thus, they stand in\n         the order in which we found them at the beginning of the\n         project.","The Low Moor Iron Company, the first producer of pig\n         iron in Virginia according to the company's claims, was a\n         self-contained manufacturing unit producing from its own\n         mines the coal, limestone, and iron ore needed for its iron\n         production. Located in Low Moor near Clifton Forge in\n         Alleghany County in western Virginia, an area rich in\n         mineral deposits, the company was in operation from\n         1872-1930, producing only pig iron; it never attempted to\n         produce finished iron products.","Coal came to the Low Moor furnaces from the Kay Moor\n         Mines at Kay Moor, West Virginia, about thirty miles from\n         Low Moor; limestone was produced from the Low Moor\n         limestone quarries; and iron ore came from the Fenwick,\n         Dolly Ann, Jordan, Rich Patch, Low Moor, and Longdale\n         Mines, most of them within twenty miles of Low Moor at\n         Covington or Clifton Forge.","The towns of Low Moor and Kay Moor were company towns in\n         every respect. Workers lived in company-owned houses,\n         bought food in company stores, worshiped at the company\n         church, saw movies in the company theater, were treated in\n         the company hospital, and were buried in the company\n         cemetery. Workers received part of their pay in scrip that\n         they exchanged for goods and services. According to a\n         statement from the Kay Moor Mines dated November 1904, Kay\n         Moor then employed 338 people, paid them an average wage of\n         $36.26 per month, and issued half of their pay in scrip.\n         Kay Moor had four stores; Low Moor had seven or eight. All\n         of these stores carried large inventories which are\n         detailed in the collection. These inventories are valuable\n         to anyone interested in determining the wants and needs of\n         a coal miner and his family.","In the late 1910's and 1920's Kay Moor had a company\n         theater called the Azure Theater which seated about 300\n         people. There were also plans for a company-owned social\n         center, to have pool tables, a soda fountain, and\n         provisions for dancing and skating. The company was in\n         tough economic straits by the 1920's, however, and there is\n         no evidence that the social center was built. The town of\n         Low Moor was so completely under the company's influence\n         that one of Low Moor Iron Company's assistant managers\n         served as the town sheriff. He often foreclosed on people\n         who did not pay their debts, and drove troublesome people\n         \"out of town on a rail\" as he put it.","The Low Moor Iron Company's fortunes fluctuated during\n         the various business cycles between the years 1880-1930.\n         Low Moor was one of the larger pig iron producers in\n         Virginia, but Virginia pig iron production was not\n         important nationally. Low Moor officials sometimes sold\n         their product themselves, but more often they used agents,\n         the prevalent method at the time. Low Moor Iron Company\n         used a variety of agents through the 1900's. James F. Bryan\n         acted as the exclusive agent for the sale of Kay Moor Coal\n         from September 21, 1903 to September, 1905. From about 1890\n         until about 1910 Dalton Nash and Company were the exclusive\n         eastern agents of Low Moor Iron. After that time the\n         exclusive agency went to Philips Isham and Company located\n         in New York. From about 1890 the western agency was handled\n         chiefly by Thomas Mack and Company. After 1902 Thomas Mack\n         and Company underwent a name change, becoming Walter\n         Wallingford and Company, with offices located in\n         Cincinnati, Pittsburgh, and Chicago.","Perhaps the Low Moor Iron Company's biggest problem over\n         the years was obtaining railroad cars for the\n         transportation of its finished product. Low Moor Iron\n         Company had its own cars for transporting its raw materials\n         among its various facilities. For the long haul necessary\n         for its finished goods, however, it depended upon the\n         services of the Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad, and the\n         relationship was not always a happy one. The Low Moor\n         Company complained many times to the C \u0026 O Railroad\n         about the discrepancies between long-and shorthaul freight\n         rates. Low Moor also had trouble getting cars from the C\n         \u0026 O. In a letter to one of Low Moor Company's agents\n         from an irate customer dated 1898, the customer wrote: \"We\n         wrote you on Saturday and endeavored to question upon your\n         mind the necessity of taking care of us with Low Moor iron.\n         We are on our uppers--there is not a pound of Low Moor iron\n         in the yard. Of the one hundred tons ordered some time ago,\n         not one pound of it has been received.\" This was, according\n         to the Low Moor Iron Company, because they could not get\n         the railroad cars. In a letter from Thomas Mack and Company\n         dated November 26, 1901, to General Manager E. C. Means:\n         \"We are hopeful that the car supply will get better because\n         of the number of orders you have of ours for prompt\n         shipment. Our customers are complaining that they are not\n         getting the iron fast enough. . . . We hope that the\n         railroad will be able to supply you with empty cars.\" In\n         another letter dated 1916 to John B. Guernsey, then acting\n         General Manager of the Low Moor Iron Company, \"We were not\n         supplied with coke cars for today's loading, and\n         consequently we have been practically down of Kay Moor\n         ovens all day.\"","The problem of procuring labor also plagued the Low Moor\n         Company. The company sometimes tried to hire immigrant\n         laborers and send the men directly to Low Moor from New\n         York City. There were problems with this, as is explained\n         in the following letter dated April 7, 1906: \n          To Mr. George Wickes \n             Supt. of Mines \n             Kay Moor, Virginia \n             Dear George, \n             Tony arrived with twenty one men last night. One\n            got away in Jersey two in Washington D.C., four in\n            Charlottesville. Some of the men are very good looking,\n            but taken as a whole they are the worst lot I have ever\n            seen: Irish, German-Jews, and Italians. . . . Our New\n            York transportations to this place have never been a\n            success. Signed, \n             Ed D. Wickes Supt. of Mines Low Moor usually employed labor agencies, one\n         of which was Atwood's Employment Agency. Often the Low Moor\n         Company would request certain nationalities, believing them\n         to be better workers than others. Sometimes the company\n         would request a gang of twenty made up of \"ten Greeks and\n         ten Italians.\" Many of the immigrants fled Low Moor and Kay\n         Moor when they learned that they would have to work\n         underground. There is a fair amount of material on\n         immigrant labor and its procurement in the collection, and\n         it is noted in the description of the box contents.","Low Moor Iron Company not only had trouble procuring\n         labor, but it also had trouble with labor already employed\n         in the mines and at the factory. Labor dissension and\n         strikes troubled the Kay Moor Mines through the 1900's. The\n         great coal strike of 1902 hurt the Low Moor Company's coal\n         mining operation, but by 1903 things were \"nearly back to\n         normal\" according to the mine superintendent. There was\n         still trouble at Kay Moor Mines, however. In a letter dated\n         April 26, 1906, to the treasurer of Low Moor Company, the\n         manager of the mines wrote about the trouble in \"trying to\n         get the agitators out.\" The mines were seventy-five men\n         short of the total labor force needed because many of the\n         coal miners returned to their farms during the spring.\n         There were rumblings of another strike at Kay Moor, the\n         result of which was to be a fourteen percent increase in\n         wages for the Kay Moor Mine workers via an agreement with\n         the United Mine Workers Union in December.","The Low Moor Iron Company grew along with the rest of\n         Virginia industry in the 1890's and 1900's. Starting with\n         only one furnace in the 1870's, it opened a second furnace\n         at Covington, Virginia, in 1891. In 1911 it opened a third\n         furnace, this time at Low Moor. Covington, with its heavy\n         industry, soon became known as the \"Pittsburgh of\n         Virginia.\" Virginia's pig iron production rose from 9,000\n         short tons in 1870 to 544,034 long tons in 1903. Judging\n         from the Low Moor Company's correspondence, the most\n         prosperous period for the company fell between the years\n         1895-1907. In the years between 1907-1917 problems befell\n         the Virginia pig iron industry. In a letter from William W.\n         Hearns, the president of the Virginia based Princess Pig\n         Iron Company, to U. S. Senator Thomas S. Martin, Hearns\n         writes of the problems of the Virginia pig iron industry:\n         \"There is not a blast furnace in Virginia that is making\n         any money from the manufacture of pig iron. The cause of\n         this is there is an exceedingly low price on pig iron in\n         the country at the present time, and the increased cost of\n         manufacturing is due to the increase in wages in all\n         lines.\" With the outbreak of World War I prices rose\n         dramatically, but in a market report to Low Moor dated\n         November 11, 1916, it was stated that: \"In spite of the\n         high prices, it is not a picnic to be in the iron industry.\n         There is a desperate shortage of cars and equipment in the\n         coal and iron districts, and in consequence there are\n         troubles of all kinds to get materials shipped. The\n         situation has grown serious.\"","When America became involved in the First World War, it\n         meant a boost for the Low Moor Iron Company. The government\n         helped it procure labor, and even helped it repair its\n         furnaces. The problem of supplies and cars for their\n         shipments, however, plagued the company more than ever. It\n         had a good deal of trouble getting all the raw materials it\n         needed due chiefly to the \"tight ship\" run by Harry F.\n         Byrd, Sr., U.S. Fuel Administrator for Virginia. After the\n         war very serious problems began to trouble the Low Moor\n         Iron Company. The demand for iron fell precipitously and a\n         short but severe depression ensued from 1919-1922. The\n         depression seemed to hit the iron industry especially hard.\n         Prices took a huge drop due to the lack of demand, and many\n         pre-war contracts had to be revalued. To compound the\n         company's problems, the Kay Moor Mines went on strike in\n         1919. This strike was quickly settled, as the market for\n         coal was so good that the Low Moor Company ceased taking\n         orders temporarily in 1921 as it could not fill the orders\n         it had on hand.","The Low Moor Company furnaces lay idle for some twenty\n         months. Finally, in November 1922 one of Low Moor's\n         furnaces was finally fired up. While prosperity gradually\n         returned to the rest of the country, the Low Moor Iron\n         Company never recovered. Production of pig iron in the\n         Virginia iron industry declined from 544,034 tons in 1903\n         to 148,053 tons in 1923, considered a good year for the\n         industry as a whole. In February 1926 Low Moor officials\n         talked of merging with two other iron companies in order to\n         revive the iron business for the three companies. The\n         merger, however, never occurred. By late 1926 the company\n         was in the process of liquidation. An advertisement in the\n         Charleston, West Virginia, Daily Mail dated April 30, 1927,\n         told of a huge warehouse sale at the Low Moor Iron Company.\n         The advertisement noted \"thousands of screws, pipe\n         fittings, valves, etc.\" The last piece of correspondence\n         from the Low Moor Iron Company in the collection is dated\n         1929. It deals with the sale of a machine.","Why did the iron industry in Virginia decline as it did?\n         Some say that lack of speed, efficiency, and a decent\n         transportation system for Alleghany County caused it. In a\n         letter from C. E. Bertie, secretary of the Virginia Pig\n         Iron Association, to the \n          Manufacturers Record dated 1925, Bertie claimed that it was the\n         tremendous rise in the cost of transportation. Virginia, he\n         claimed, had almost no home market. Over 80% of its normal\n         production was shipped out to other states. The failure of\n         the Interstate Commerce Commission to treat Virginia\n         furnaces as southern furnaces was the cause of much of the\n         trouble. From 1914-1925 there were four blanket increases\n         in freight rates in the country, of which only one applied\n         equally to all localities. Southern furnaces were received\n         only two increases--a 25% increase in 1918 and a 25%\n         increase in 1920--but northern furnaces had had 5%, 15%,\n         25%, and 40% increases in their transportation costs.\n         Virginia furnaces, although recognized as southern\n         furnaces, had had freight rates increased in line with the\n         northern furnaces. Prior to the war Virginia iron reached\n         all points in Ohio, Indiana, Michigan, and Illinois on a\n         competitive basis with southern furnaces. After World War I\n         the advantage was limited to a small portion of\n         southeastern Ohio. All of Indiana, Illinois, and Michigan\n         were now lost to the Virginia producers. The Virginia\n         producer, according to Bertie, felt that the freight rates\n         should be restored to a relationship with southern\n         furnaces. If what Bertie said was true, the other southern\n         states iron industries should not have been in the same\n         desperate economic straits as Virginia's, and statistics\n         should support this. In the 1920's production rose to new\n         heights in Alabama. In Tennessee, however, iron production\n         plunged to new lows during the 1920's. While the south\n         accounted for 10.2% of the entire U. S. production in the\n         years 1919-1924, Virginia accounted for less than 1% during\n         those years. In 1915 Virginia accounted for over 6% of the\n         U.S. iron production. One can see a decline in other areas\n         of the south than Virginia. While the discrepancies in the\n         freight rates may have helped cause the decline, clearly\n         there are other reasons.","During the 1900's there was a discovery of extremely\n         rich iron ore deposits in the mid-west. Much of this ore\n         was on or near the surface, making the mining of it both\n         easy and inexpensive. This in turn lowered production costs\n         of the pig iron. This caused iron production to shift to\n         that region, and resulted in a decline in the Virginia iron\n         industry. There was a sharp increase in iron production in\n         the mid-west through the 1920's. The iron ore in the\n         mid-west may have been of better quality than Virginia, but\n         the iron ore in Virginia was of sufficient quality to\n         produce a good pig iron. The western ore deposits were not\n         as conveniently located as Virginia deposits, but the\n         inexpensiveness of production more than made up for it.","In examining the rise and fall of the Low Moor Iron\n         Company, we can see a situation in which the conditions for\n         the manufacture of iron were nearly ideal. There was plenty\n         of land for expansion and resources for the manufacture of\n         the iron. The major internal problem faced by the Low Moor\n         Iron Company was that of transportation. External\n         developments, however, caused the final demise of the Low\n         Moor Iron Company.","Low Moor Iron Company Personnel:","Executive Staff: Managing Director, Colonel H. M.\n         Goodwin: ca. 1881. General Managers: H. G. Merry: ca.\n         1884-1902; E. C. Means: ca. 1905-1915; J. P. Guernsey: ca.\n         1915 (acting General Manager); F. U. Humbert: ca.\n         1916-1929. Assistant General Manager: E. B. Wilkinson: ca.\n         1909-1915. Treasurers and Assistant Treasurers: Edward Low:\n         ca. 1886-1898; Frank Lyman (in New York): ca. 1898-1919; S.\n         G. Cragill (Asst. Treasurer): ca. 1900-1915; H. A. Dalton:\n         ca. 1921-1929; John Lipscomb (Asst. Treasurer): ca.\n         1918-1928.","Factory and Mine Supervisors: Kay Moor Superintendents:\n         C. C. Cooke: ca. 1918; Ed. D. Wickes: ca. 1906; H. L.\n         Tansell: ca. 1903; A. H. Reed: ca. 1906. Kay Moor Managers:\n         J. W. Monteith: manager of mines. ca. 1918; promoted in\n         1925 to general superintendent in charge of mine plants,\n         coke ovens, shops, repairs, and construction; A. L.\n         Monteith: assistant superintendent of mines, ca. 1918;\n         George T. Wickes: manager of Covington mines, ca.\n         1906-1917; Ross Howell, ca. 1918. Stack Mines\n         Superintendents: J. H. Carpenter: ca. 1906; C. D.\n         Oberschain: ca. 1907; J. L. Harris: ca. 1903; John S. Ham:\n         ca. 1891-1901. Rich Patch Mines Superintendents: John R.\n         Thompson: foreman, ca. 1906. Low Moor assorted other\n         personnel: S. L. Tulley: trainmaster, ca. 1906; B. J.\n         Shenkley: foreman, Low Moor limestone quarries; L. Q. Wood:\n         assistant traffic manager, ca. 1919.","The Low Moor Iron Company ceased operations in 1930;\n            what happened to the records of the company in the years\n            immediately following is not known, but in 1939, the Green\n            Bookman, a Charlottesville bookshop, sold the records to\n            the University of Virginia Library.","The records arrived at the receiving room door of the\n            new Alderman Library on October 16, 1939, in a trailer\n            truck whose load was estimated to weigh about fourteen\n            tons. As the manuscripts staff dug around in the piles of\n            over 1200 account books, and countless boxes of papers they\n            realized that the company had saved almost all of its\n            papers including checks, invoices, vouchers, and receipts,\n            and certain of these records were destroyed as their\n            information was recorded in other records. Once the bulk of\n            the collection had been reduced, the remaining records were\n            transferred to the stack area of the Division of Rare Books\n            and Manuscripts.","By 1958, little storage space remained in Alderman\n            Library, and the Rare Books and Manuscripts Division was\n            especially crowded because of the rapid growth of its\n            collections. After an examination of its storage areas, the\n            division's staff decided to move the Low Moor records to\n            the attic of one of the student dormitories. The collection\n            had had little use chiefly because there was no finding\n            aid. There seemed little likelihood of extensive researcher\n            use until the collection could be processed.","In preparation for the move, the old letter boxes in\n            which much of the collection had arrived in the Library\n            were discarded. The records from each box were placed\n            between sheets of the heavy gray cardboard used to protect\n            unbound newspapers in the Library's stacks, and the spine\n            labels of the old letter boxes were copied onto the\n            cardboard. The resulting bundles were wrapped with brown\n            Kraft paper and tied up with string. The bundles were\n            numbered. Whatever original order the letter boxes may have\n            had was lost by the time they arrived in the Library, and\n            after the bundling, removal to a dormitory attic, and\n            subsequent return to the Library in 1976, all vestiges of\n            the original order were lost.","The bundles remained in the dormitory attic for almost\n            twenty years. Occasional visits were made by the division\n            staff to check on their condition, and on very rare\n            occasions, a researcher was brave enough to ask to be shown\n            the collection. Once the researcher saw the imposing amount\n            of material and the conditions in the attic, interest in\n            using the collection invariably died.","In late 1976 a grant from the National Endowment for the\n            Humanities was obtained to allow the Library to process the\n            Low Moor Iron Company papers, and the papers of Edward L.\n            Stone and the Borderland Coal Company, another large\n            collection of records stored in the same dormitory attic.\n            All of these records and papers were moved back to the\n            Library where the bundles were cleaned and opened. The\n            contents of each were placed in a Hollinger storage box,\n            and all notes on the paper wrappings and on the gray\n            cardboard sheets were recorded.","The more than 1200 bound accounting records of the Low\n            Moor Iron Company were surveyed by the grant project staff.\n            The contents of each volume were noted on a mimeographed\n            form, and later typed on 3 x 5\" cards to create a\n            readily-accessible file for the Manuscripts Reading Room.\n            This information was also typed on pages to be added to\n            this guide.","The Low Moor Iron Company papers consist of\n         approximately 280 four-inch Hollinger archives boxes (ca.\n         95 linear feet) of records, ca. 1885-1927, and some 1200\n         bound volumes of the company's accounting records,\n         1873-1927, of this iron producing company located in Low\n         Moor (four miles southwest of Clifton Forge), Alleghany\n         County, Virginia.","This material consists of records typical of those\n         produced by a firm of this type in the period, but as the\n         company owned its own coal and iron mines and limestone\n         quarries, there is considerable information about the\n         production of these raw materials. Large numbers of the\n         records that deal with the company's employees have\n         survived: time books, payroll books, hands ledgers, and the\n         like. Because these books sometimes include information\n         about the employee's trade or job with the company, and as\n         race is indicated in some of the records, these books\n         should provide date for studies of the structure and upward\n         mobility within the labor force, patterns of\n         ethnic--possibly racial--occupational penetration and\n         mobility, material conditions of the workers, and so on.\n         The papers should permit a range of studies detailing the\n         pattern and evolution of industrial organization in the\n         iron industry, and the evolution of markets and marketing\n         structures for the entire period. Because the company was\n         dependent upon railroads to move its raw materials to the\n         furnaces, and for the marketing of its products, there is\n         considerable information about railroads and their\n         relationship to their customers.","See the \n             \n            University of Virginia Library’s use policy.","English"],"unitid_tesim":["662"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Papers of the Low Moor Iron Company \n         1873-1927"],"collection_title_tesim":["Papers of the Low Moor Iron Company \n         1873-1927"],"collection_ssim":["Papers of the Low Moor Iron Company \n         1873-1927"],"repository_ssm":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"acqinfo_ssim":["This collection was purchased from Green Bookman in\n            1939."],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"physdesc_tesim":["95 linear feer + 1200\n         volumes"],"accessrestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eStored off-site. Users must request boxes 48 hours in advance of desired use. Neither drop-in nor next-day requests can be fulfilled. For additional information, contact Special Collections. \n\u003c/p\u003e"],"accessrestrict_heading_ssm":["Access Restrictions"],"accessrestrict_tesim":["Stored off-site. Users must request boxes 48 hours in advance of desired use. Neither drop-in nor next-day requests can be fulfilled. For additional information, contact Special Collections. \n"],"arrangement_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe word \"organization\" is used here with considerable\n         diffidence, for any researcher studying the container list\n         that follows will realize quickly that there is no\n         organization in the usual sense of the word.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAs noted under \"Provenance,\" the Low Moor Iron Company\n         papers were subjected to a number of moves; when processing\n         began in the fall of 1976, no discernible scheme of\n         organization could be determined.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe first step was to review the series of coded numbers\n         placed on the bundles of papers before they were moved to\n         the dormitory attic, but these did not provide any sort of\n         useful organization. Next, the spine titles of the original\n         letter boxes were reviewed (they had been copied onto the\n         gray cardboard sheets before the move to the dormitory\n         attic), but they, too, proved useless.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThese steps having provided no scheme, and after a\n         considerable hiatus due to a turnover in student processors\n         on the collection, the new student processors were\n         instructed to begin a box-by-box inventory of the contents\n         of the collection. During this inventory, old folders were\n         replaced with acid-free ones, and the original folder\n         headings were copied onto the new ones. Some removal of\n         paper clips was accomplished, and the materials were\n         reviewed and notes taken for the guide.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSome consolidation of materials was accomplished, and in\n         other cases, materials were moved. This work has created\n         some problems in the numbering of the boxes. Thus, the\n         researchers will find boxes marked \"6A\" and \"23C\"; he will\n         also discover that certain box numbers have been entirely\n         omitted. As the box numbers exist only to aid in the\n         location of material, it was not felt that the unusual\n         numbers and the omissions would cause problems in working\n         with the papers.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eA certain amount of movement of boxes within the\n         collection, and of materials among boxes, probably would\n         ease use of it. But what processing was accomplished on\n         this project took far longer than had been anticipated, and\n         there was no time in the late spring of 1978, when the\n         processors had to complete their work with the project, to\n         undertake a mass movement of material. Thus, they stand in\n         the order in which we found them at the beginning of the\n         project.\u003c/p\u003e"],"arrangement_heading_ssm":["Organization"],"arrangement_tesim":["The word \"organization\" is used here with considerable\n         diffidence, for any researcher studying the container list\n         that follows will realize quickly that there is no\n         organization in the usual sense of the word.","As noted under \"Provenance,\" the Low Moor Iron Company\n         papers were subjected to a number of moves; when processing\n         began in the fall of 1976, no discernible scheme of\n         organization could be determined.","The first step was to review the series of coded numbers\n         placed on the bundles of papers before they were moved to\n         the dormitory attic, but these did not provide any sort of\n         useful organization. Next, the spine titles of the original\n         letter boxes were reviewed (they had been copied onto the\n         gray cardboard sheets before the move to the dormitory\n         attic), but they, too, proved useless.","These steps having provided no scheme, and after a\n         considerable hiatus due to a turnover in student processors\n         on the collection, the new student processors were\n         instructed to begin a box-by-box inventory of the contents\n         of the collection. During this inventory, old folders were\n         replaced with acid-free ones, and the original folder\n         headings were copied onto the new ones. Some removal of\n         paper clips was accomplished, and the materials were\n         reviewed and notes taken for the guide.","Some consolidation of materials was accomplished, and in\n         other cases, materials were moved. This work has created\n         some problems in the numbering of the boxes. Thus, the\n         researchers will find boxes marked \"6A\" and \"23C\"; he will\n         also discover that certain box numbers have been entirely\n         omitted. As the box numbers exist only to aid in the\n         location of material, it was not felt that the unusual\n         numbers and the omissions would cause problems in working\n         with the papers.","A certain amount of movement of boxes within the\n         collection, and of materials among boxes, probably would\n         ease use of it. But what processing was accomplished on\n         this project took far longer than had been anticipated, and\n         there was no time in the late spring of 1978, when the\n         processors had to complete their work with the project, to\n         undertake a mass movement of material. Thus, they stand in\n         the order in which we found them at the beginning of the\n         project."],"bioghist_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe Low Moor Iron Company, the first producer of pig\n         iron in Virginia according to the company's claims, was a\n         self-contained manufacturing unit producing from its own\n         mines the coal, limestone, and iron ore needed for its iron\n         production. Located in Low Moor near Clifton Forge in\n         Alleghany County in western Virginia, an area rich in\n         mineral deposits, the company was in operation from\n         1872-1930, producing only pig iron; it never attempted to\n         produce finished iron products.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCoal came to the Low Moor furnaces from the Kay Moor\n         Mines at Kay Moor, West Virginia, about thirty miles from\n         Low Moor; limestone was produced from the Low Moor\n         limestone quarries; and iron ore came from the Fenwick,\n         Dolly Ann, Jordan, Rich Patch, Low Moor, and Longdale\n         Mines, most of them within twenty miles of Low Moor at\n         Covington or Clifton Forge.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe towns of Low Moor and Kay Moor were company towns in\n         every respect. Workers lived in company-owned houses,\n         bought food in company stores, worshiped at the company\n         church, saw movies in the company theater, were treated in\n         the company hospital, and were buried in the company\n         cemetery. Workers received part of their pay in scrip that\n         they exchanged for goods and services. According to a\n         statement from the Kay Moor Mines dated November 1904, Kay\n         Moor then employed 338 people, paid them an average wage of\n         $36.26 per month, and issued half of their pay in scrip.\n         Kay Moor had four stores; Low Moor had seven or eight. All\n         of these stores carried large inventories which are\n         detailed in the collection. These inventories are valuable\n         to anyone interested in determining the wants and needs of\n         a coal miner and his family.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIn the late 1910's and 1920's Kay Moor had a company\n         theater called the Azure Theater which seated about 300\n         people. There were also plans for a company-owned social\n         center, to have pool tables, a soda fountain, and\n         provisions for dancing and skating. The company was in\n         tough economic straits by the 1920's, however, and there is\n         no evidence that the social center was built. The town of\n         Low Moor was so completely under the company's influence\n         that one of Low Moor Iron Company's assistant managers\n         served as the town sheriff. He often foreclosed on people\n         who did not pay their debts, and drove troublesome people\n         \"out of town on a rail\" as he put it.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe Low Moor Iron Company's fortunes fluctuated during\n         the various business cycles between the years 1880-1930.\n         Low Moor was one of the larger pig iron producers in\n         Virginia, but Virginia pig iron production was not\n         important nationally. Low Moor officials sometimes sold\n         their product themselves, but more often they used agents,\n         the prevalent method at the time. Low Moor Iron Company\n         used a variety of agents through the 1900's. James F. Bryan\n         acted as the exclusive agent for the sale of Kay Moor Coal\n         from September 21, 1903 to September, 1905. From about 1890\n         until about 1910 Dalton Nash and Company were the exclusive\n         eastern agents of Low Moor Iron. After that time the\n         exclusive agency went to Philips Isham and Company located\n         in New York. From about 1890 the western agency was handled\n         chiefly by Thomas Mack and Company. After 1902 Thomas Mack\n         and Company underwent a name change, becoming Walter\n         Wallingford and Company, with offices located in\n         Cincinnati, Pittsburgh, and Chicago.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePerhaps the Low Moor Iron Company's biggest problem over\n         the years was obtaining railroad cars for the\n         transportation of its finished product. Low Moor Iron\n         Company had its own cars for transporting its raw materials\n         among its various facilities. For the long haul necessary\n         for its finished goods, however, it depended upon the\n         services of the Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad, and the\n         relationship was not always a happy one. The Low Moor\n         Company complained many times to the C \u0026amp; O Railroad\n         about the discrepancies between long-and shorthaul freight\n         rates. Low Moor also had trouble getting cars from the C\n         \u0026amp; O. In a letter to one of Low Moor Company's agents\n         from an irate customer dated 1898, the customer wrote: \"We\n         wrote you on Saturday and endeavored to question upon your\n         mind the necessity of taking care of us with Low Moor iron.\n         We are on our uppers--there is not a pound of Low Moor iron\n         in the yard. Of the one hundred tons ordered some time ago,\n         not one pound of it has been received.\" This was, according\n         to the Low Moor Iron Company, because they could not get\n         the railroad cars. In a letter from Thomas Mack and Company\n         dated November 26, 1901, to General Manager E. C. Means:\n         \"We are hopeful that the car supply will get better because\n         of the number of orders you have of ours for prompt\n         shipment. Our customers are complaining that they are not\n         getting the iron fast enough. . . . We hope that the\n         railroad will be able to supply you with empty cars.\" In\n         another letter dated 1916 to John B. Guernsey, then acting\n         General Manager of the Low Moor Iron Company, \"We were not\n         supplied with coke cars for today's loading, and\n         consequently we have been practically down of Kay Moor\n         ovens all day.\"\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe problem of procuring labor also plagued the Low Moor\n         Company. The company sometimes tried to hire immigrant\n         laborers and send the men directly to Low Moor from New\n         York City. There were problems with this, as is explained\n         in the following letter dated April 7, 1906: \n         \u003cblockquote\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eTo Mr. George Wickes \n            \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003eSupt. of Mines \n            \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003eKay Moor, Virginia \n            \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e\u003c/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eDear George, \n            \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003eTony arrived with twenty one men last night. One\n            got away in Jersey two in Washington D.C., four in\n            Charlottesville. Some of the men are very good looking,\n            but taken as a whole they are the worst lot I have ever\n            seen: Irish, German-Jews, and Italians. . . . Our New\n            York transportations to this place have never been a\n            success.\u003c/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eSigned, \n            \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003eEd D. Wickes Supt. of Mines\u003c/p\u003e\n\u003c/blockquote\u003eLow Moor usually employed labor agencies, one\n         of which was Atwood's Employment Agency. Often the Low Moor\n         Company would request certain nationalities, believing them\n         to be better workers than others. Sometimes the company\n         would request a gang of twenty made up of \"ten Greeks and\n         ten Italians.\" Many of the immigrants fled Low Moor and Kay\n         Moor when they learned that they would have to work\n         underground. There is a fair amount of material on\n         immigrant labor and its procurement in the collection, and\n         it is noted in the description of the box contents.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLow Moor Iron Company not only had trouble procuring\n         labor, but it also had trouble with labor already employed\n         in the mines and at the factory. Labor dissension and\n         strikes troubled the Kay Moor Mines through the 1900's. The\n         great coal strike of 1902 hurt the Low Moor Company's coal\n         mining operation, but by 1903 things were \"nearly back to\n         normal\" according to the mine superintendent. There was\n         still trouble at Kay Moor Mines, however. In a letter dated\n         April 26, 1906, to the treasurer of Low Moor Company, the\n         manager of the mines wrote about the trouble in \"trying to\n         get the agitators out.\" The mines were seventy-five men\n         short of the total labor force needed because many of the\n         coal miners returned to their farms during the spring.\n         There were rumblings of another strike at Kay Moor, the\n         result of which was to be a fourteen percent increase in\n         wages for the Kay Moor Mine workers via an agreement with\n         the United Mine Workers Union in December.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe Low Moor Iron Company grew along with the rest of\n         Virginia industry in the 1890's and 1900's. Starting with\n         only one furnace in the 1870's, it opened a second furnace\n         at Covington, Virginia, in 1891. In 1911 it opened a third\n         furnace, this time at Low Moor. Covington, with its heavy\n         industry, soon became known as the \"Pittsburgh of\n         Virginia.\" Virginia's pig iron production rose from 9,000\n         short tons in 1870 to 544,034 long tons in 1903. Judging\n         from the Low Moor Company's correspondence, the most\n         prosperous period for the company fell between the years\n         1895-1907. In the years between 1907-1917 problems befell\n         the Virginia pig iron industry. In a letter from William W.\n         Hearns, the president of the Virginia based Princess Pig\n         Iron Company, to U. S. Senator Thomas S. Martin, Hearns\n         writes of the problems of the Virginia pig iron industry:\n         \"There is not a blast furnace in Virginia that is making\n         any money from the manufacture of pig iron. The cause of\n         this is there is an exceedingly low price on pig iron in\n         the country at the present time, and the increased cost of\n         manufacturing is due to the increase in wages in all\n         lines.\" With the outbreak of World War I prices rose\n         dramatically, but in a market report to Low Moor dated\n         November 11, 1916, it was stated that: \"In spite of the\n         high prices, it is not a picnic to be in the iron industry.\n         There is a desperate shortage of cars and equipment in the\n         coal and iron districts, and in consequence there are\n         troubles of all kinds to get materials shipped. The\n         situation has grown serious.\"\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eWhen America became involved in the First World War, it\n         meant a boost for the Low Moor Iron Company. The government\n         helped it procure labor, and even helped it repair its\n         furnaces. The problem of supplies and cars for their\n         shipments, however, plagued the company more than ever. It\n         had a good deal of trouble getting all the raw materials it\n         needed due chiefly to the \"tight ship\" run by Harry F.\n         Byrd, Sr., U.S. Fuel Administrator for Virginia. After the\n         war very serious problems began to trouble the Low Moor\n         Iron Company. The demand for iron fell precipitously and a\n         short but severe depression ensued from 1919-1922. The\n         depression seemed to hit the iron industry especially hard.\n         Prices took a huge drop due to the lack of demand, and many\n         pre-war contracts had to be revalued. To compound the\n         company's problems, the Kay Moor Mines went on strike in\n         1919. This strike was quickly settled, as the market for\n         coal was so good that the Low Moor Company ceased taking\n         orders temporarily in 1921 as it could not fill the orders\n         it had on hand.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe Low Moor Company furnaces lay idle for some twenty\n         months. Finally, in November 1922 one of Low Moor's\n         furnaces was finally fired up. While prosperity gradually\n         returned to the rest of the country, the Low Moor Iron\n         Company never recovered. Production of pig iron in the\n         Virginia iron industry declined from 544,034 tons in 1903\n         to 148,053 tons in 1923, considered a good year for the\n         industry as a whole. In February 1926 Low Moor officials\n         talked of merging with two other iron companies in order to\n         revive the iron business for the three companies. The\n         merger, however, never occurred. By late 1926 the company\n         was in the process of liquidation. An advertisement in the\n         Charleston, West Virginia, Daily Mail dated April 30, 1927,\n         told of a huge warehouse sale at the Low Moor Iron Company.\n         The advertisement noted \"thousands of screws, pipe\n         fittings, valves, etc.\" The last piece of correspondence\n         from the Low Moor Iron Company in the collection is dated\n         1929. It deals with the sale of a machine.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eWhy did the iron industry in Virginia decline as it did?\n         Some say that lack of speed, efficiency, and a decent\n         transportation system for Alleghany County caused it. In a\n         letter from C. E. Bertie, secretary of the Virginia Pig\n         Iron Association, to the \n         \u003cbibref type=\"simple\" href=\"\"\u003e\u003ctitle type=\"simple\" href=\"\"\u003eManufacturers Record\u003c/title\u003e\u003c/bibref\u003edated 1925, Bertie claimed that it was the\n         tremendous rise in the cost of transportation. Virginia, he\n         claimed, had almost no home market. Over 80% of its normal\n         production was shipped out to other states. The failure of\n         the Interstate Commerce Commission to treat Virginia\n         furnaces as southern furnaces was the cause of much of the\n         trouble. From 1914-1925 there were four blanket increases\n         in freight rates in the country, of which only one applied\n         equally to all localities. Southern furnaces were received\n         only two increases--a 25% increase in 1918 and a 25%\n         increase in 1920--but northern furnaces had had 5%, 15%,\n         25%, and 40% increases in their transportation costs.\n         Virginia furnaces, although recognized as southern\n         furnaces, had had freight rates increased in line with the\n         northern furnaces. Prior to the war Virginia iron reached\n         all points in Ohio, Indiana, Michigan, and Illinois on a\n         competitive basis with southern furnaces. After World War I\n         the advantage was limited to a small portion of\n         southeastern Ohio. All of Indiana, Illinois, and Michigan\n         were now lost to the Virginia producers. The Virginia\n         producer, according to Bertie, felt that the freight rates\n         should be restored to a relationship with southern\n         furnaces. If what Bertie said was true, the other southern\n         states iron industries should not have been in the same\n         desperate economic straits as Virginia's, and statistics\n         should support this. In the 1920's production rose to new\n         heights in Alabama. In Tennessee, however, iron production\n         plunged to new lows during the 1920's. While the south\n         accounted for 10.2% of the entire U. S. production in the\n         years 1919-1924, Virginia accounted for less than 1% during\n         those years. In 1915 Virginia accounted for over 6% of the\n         U.S. iron production. One can see a decline in other areas\n         of the south than Virginia. While the discrepancies in the\n         freight rates may have helped cause the decline, clearly\n         there are other reasons.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eDuring the 1900's there was a discovery of extremely\n         rich iron ore deposits in the mid-west. Much of this ore\n         was on or near the surface, making the mining of it both\n         easy and inexpensive. This in turn lowered production costs\n         of the pig iron. This caused iron production to shift to\n         that region, and resulted in a decline in the Virginia iron\n         industry. There was a sharp increase in iron production in\n         the mid-west through the 1920's. The iron ore in the\n         mid-west may have been of better quality than Virginia, but\n         the iron ore in Virginia was of sufficient quality to\n         produce a good pig iron. The western ore deposits were not\n         as conveniently located as Virginia deposits, but the\n         inexpensiveness of production more than made up for it.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIn examining the rise and fall of the Low Moor Iron\n         Company, we can see a situation in which the conditions for\n         the manufacture of iron were nearly ideal. There was plenty\n         of land for expansion and resources for the manufacture of\n         the iron. The major internal problem faced by the Low Moor\n         Iron Company was that of transportation. External\n         developments, however, caused the final demise of the Low\n         Moor Iron Company.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLow Moor Iron Company Personnel:\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eExecutive Staff: Managing Director, Colonel H. M.\n         Goodwin: ca. 1881. General Managers: H. G. Merry: ca.\n         1884-1902; E. C. Means: ca. 1905-1915; J. P. Guernsey: ca.\n         1915 (acting General Manager); F. U. Humbert: ca.\n         1916-1929. Assistant General Manager: E. B. Wilkinson: ca.\n         1909-1915. Treasurers and Assistant Treasurers: Edward Low:\n         ca. 1886-1898; Frank Lyman (in New York): ca. 1898-1919; S.\n         G. Cragill (Asst. Treasurer): ca. 1900-1915; H. A. Dalton:\n         ca. 1921-1929; John Lipscomb (Asst. Treasurer): ca.\n         1918-1928.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eFactory and Mine Supervisors: Kay Moor Superintendents:\n         C. C. Cooke: ca. 1918; Ed. D. Wickes: ca. 1906; H. L.\n         Tansell: ca. 1903; A. H. Reed: ca. 1906. Kay Moor Managers:\n         J. W. Monteith: manager of mines. ca. 1918; promoted in\n         1925 to general superintendent in charge of mine plants,\n         coke ovens, shops, repairs, and construction; A. L.\n         Monteith: assistant superintendent of mines, ca. 1918;\n         George T. Wickes: manager of Covington mines, ca.\n         1906-1917; Ross Howell, ca. 1918. Stack Mines\n         Superintendents: J. H. Carpenter: ca. 1906; C. D.\n         Oberschain: ca. 1907; J. L. Harris: ca. 1903; John S. Ham:\n         ca. 1891-1901. Rich Patch Mines Superintendents: John R.\n         Thompson: foreman, ca. 1906. Low Moor assorted other\n         personnel: S. L. Tulley: trainmaster, ca. 1906; B. J.\n         Shenkley: foreman, Low Moor limestone quarries; L. Q. Wood:\n         assistant traffic manager, ca. 1919.\u003c/p\u003e"],"bioghist_heading_ssm":["Biographical/Historical Information"],"bioghist_tesim":["The Low Moor Iron Company, the first producer of pig\n         iron in Virginia according to the company's claims, was a\n         self-contained manufacturing unit producing from its own\n         mines the coal, limestone, and iron ore needed for its iron\n         production. Located in Low Moor near Clifton Forge in\n         Alleghany County in western Virginia, an area rich in\n         mineral deposits, the company was in operation from\n         1872-1930, producing only pig iron; it never attempted to\n         produce finished iron products.","Coal came to the Low Moor furnaces from the Kay Moor\n         Mines at Kay Moor, West Virginia, about thirty miles from\n         Low Moor; limestone was produced from the Low Moor\n         limestone quarries; and iron ore came from the Fenwick,\n         Dolly Ann, Jordan, Rich Patch, Low Moor, and Longdale\n         Mines, most of them within twenty miles of Low Moor at\n         Covington or Clifton Forge.","The towns of Low Moor and Kay Moor were company towns in\n         every respect. Workers lived in company-owned houses,\n         bought food in company stores, worshiped at the company\n         church, saw movies in the company theater, were treated in\n         the company hospital, and were buried in the company\n         cemetery. Workers received part of their pay in scrip that\n         they exchanged for goods and services. According to a\n         statement from the Kay Moor Mines dated November 1904, Kay\n         Moor then employed 338 people, paid them an average wage of\n         $36.26 per month, and issued half of their pay in scrip.\n         Kay Moor had four stores; Low Moor had seven or eight. All\n         of these stores carried large inventories which are\n         detailed in the collection. These inventories are valuable\n         to anyone interested in determining the wants and needs of\n         a coal miner and his family.","In the late 1910's and 1920's Kay Moor had a company\n         theater called the Azure Theater which seated about 300\n         people. There were also plans for a company-owned social\n         center, to have pool tables, a soda fountain, and\n         provisions for dancing and skating. The company was in\n         tough economic straits by the 1920's, however, and there is\n         no evidence that the social center was built. The town of\n         Low Moor was so completely under the company's influence\n         that one of Low Moor Iron Company's assistant managers\n         served as the town sheriff. He often foreclosed on people\n         who did not pay their debts, and drove troublesome people\n         \"out of town on a rail\" as he put it.","The Low Moor Iron Company's fortunes fluctuated during\n         the various business cycles between the years 1880-1930.\n         Low Moor was one of the larger pig iron producers in\n         Virginia, but Virginia pig iron production was not\n         important nationally. Low Moor officials sometimes sold\n         their product themselves, but more often they used agents,\n         the prevalent method at the time. Low Moor Iron Company\n         used a variety of agents through the 1900's. James F. Bryan\n         acted as the exclusive agent for the sale of Kay Moor Coal\n         from September 21, 1903 to September, 1905. From about 1890\n         until about 1910 Dalton Nash and Company were the exclusive\n         eastern agents of Low Moor Iron. After that time the\n         exclusive agency went to Philips Isham and Company located\n         in New York. From about 1890 the western agency was handled\n         chiefly by Thomas Mack and Company. After 1902 Thomas Mack\n         and Company underwent a name change, becoming Walter\n         Wallingford and Company, with offices located in\n         Cincinnati, Pittsburgh, and Chicago.","Perhaps the Low Moor Iron Company's biggest problem over\n         the years was obtaining railroad cars for the\n         transportation of its finished product. Low Moor Iron\n         Company had its own cars for transporting its raw materials\n         among its various facilities. For the long haul necessary\n         for its finished goods, however, it depended upon the\n         services of the Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad, and the\n         relationship was not always a happy one. The Low Moor\n         Company complained many times to the C \u0026 O Railroad\n         about the discrepancies between long-and shorthaul freight\n         rates. Low Moor also had trouble getting cars from the C\n         \u0026 O. In a letter to one of Low Moor Company's agents\n         from an irate customer dated 1898, the customer wrote: \"We\n         wrote you on Saturday and endeavored to question upon your\n         mind the necessity of taking care of us with Low Moor iron.\n         We are on our uppers--there is not a pound of Low Moor iron\n         in the yard. Of the one hundred tons ordered some time ago,\n         not one pound of it has been received.\" This was, according\n         to the Low Moor Iron Company, because they could not get\n         the railroad cars. In a letter from Thomas Mack and Company\n         dated November 26, 1901, to General Manager E. C. Means:\n         \"We are hopeful that the car supply will get better because\n         of the number of orders you have of ours for prompt\n         shipment. Our customers are complaining that they are not\n         getting the iron fast enough. . . . We hope that the\n         railroad will be able to supply you with empty cars.\" In\n         another letter dated 1916 to John B. Guernsey, then acting\n         General Manager of the Low Moor Iron Company, \"We were not\n         supplied with coke cars for today's loading, and\n         consequently we have been practically down of Kay Moor\n         ovens all day.\"","The problem of procuring labor also plagued the Low Moor\n         Company. The company sometimes tried to hire immigrant\n         laborers and send the men directly to Low Moor from New\n         York City. There were problems with this, as is explained\n         in the following letter dated April 7, 1906: \n          To Mr. George Wickes \n             Supt. of Mines \n             Kay Moor, Virginia \n             Dear George, \n             Tony arrived with twenty one men last night. One\n            got away in Jersey two in Washington D.C., four in\n            Charlottesville. Some of the men are very good looking,\n            but taken as a whole they are the worst lot I have ever\n            seen: Irish, German-Jews, and Italians. . . . Our New\n            York transportations to this place have never been a\n            success. Signed, \n             Ed D. Wickes Supt. of Mines Low Moor usually employed labor agencies, one\n         of which was Atwood's Employment Agency. Often the Low Moor\n         Company would request certain nationalities, believing them\n         to be better workers than others. Sometimes the company\n         would request a gang of twenty made up of \"ten Greeks and\n         ten Italians.\" Many of the immigrants fled Low Moor and Kay\n         Moor when they learned that they would have to work\n         underground. There is a fair amount of material on\n         immigrant labor and its procurement in the collection, and\n         it is noted in the description of the box contents.","Low Moor Iron Company not only had trouble procuring\n         labor, but it also had trouble with labor already employed\n         in the mines and at the factory. Labor dissension and\n         strikes troubled the Kay Moor Mines through the 1900's. The\n         great coal strike of 1902 hurt the Low Moor Company's coal\n         mining operation, but by 1903 things were \"nearly back to\n         normal\" according to the mine superintendent. There was\n         still trouble at Kay Moor Mines, however. In a letter dated\n         April 26, 1906, to the treasurer of Low Moor Company, the\n         manager of the mines wrote about the trouble in \"trying to\n         get the agitators out.\" The mines were seventy-five men\n         short of the total labor force needed because many of the\n         coal miners returned to their farms during the spring.\n         There were rumblings of another strike at Kay Moor, the\n         result of which was to be a fourteen percent increase in\n         wages for the Kay Moor Mine workers via an agreement with\n         the United Mine Workers Union in December.","The Low Moor Iron Company grew along with the rest of\n         Virginia industry in the 1890's and 1900's. Starting with\n         only one furnace in the 1870's, it opened a second furnace\n         at Covington, Virginia, in 1891. In 1911 it opened a third\n         furnace, this time at Low Moor. Covington, with its heavy\n         industry, soon became known as the \"Pittsburgh of\n         Virginia.\" Virginia's pig iron production rose from 9,000\n         short tons in 1870 to 544,034 long tons in 1903. Judging\n         from the Low Moor Company's correspondence, the most\n         prosperous period for the company fell between the years\n         1895-1907. In the years between 1907-1917 problems befell\n         the Virginia pig iron industry. In a letter from William W.\n         Hearns, the president of the Virginia based Princess Pig\n         Iron Company, to U. S. Senator Thomas S. Martin, Hearns\n         writes of the problems of the Virginia pig iron industry:\n         \"There is not a blast furnace in Virginia that is making\n         any money from the manufacture of pig iron. The cause of\n         this is there is an exceedingly low price on pig iron in\n         the country at the present time, and the increased cost of\n         manufacturing is due to the increase in wages in all\n         lines.\" With the outbreak of World War I prices rose\n         dramatically, but in a market report to Low Moor dated\n         November 11, 1916, it was stated that: \"In spite of the\n         high prices, it is not a picnic to be in the iron industry.\n         There is a desperate shortage of cars and equipment in the\n         coal and iron districts, and in consequence there are\n         troubles of all kinds to get materials shipped. The\n         situation has grown serious.\"","When America became involved in the First World War, it\n         meant a boost for the Low Moor Iron Company. The government\n         helped it procure labor, and even helped it repair its\n         furnaces. The problem of supplies and cars for their\n         shipments, however, plagued the company more than ever. It\n         had a good deal of trouble getting all the raw materials it\n         needed due chiefly to the \"tight ship\" run by Harry F.\n         Byrd, Sr., U.S. Fuel Administrator for Virginia. After the\n         war very serious problems began to trouble the Low Moor\n         Iron Company. The demand for iron fell precipitously and a\n         short but severe depression ensued from 1919-1922. The\n         depression seemed to hit the iron industry especially hard.\n         Prices took a huge drop due to the lack of demand, and many\n         pre-war contracts had to be revalued. To compound the\n         company's problems, the Kay Moor Mines went on strike in\n         1919. This strike was quickly settled, as the market for\n         coal was so good that the Low Moor Company ceased taking\n         orders temporarily in 1921 as it could not fill the orders\n         it had on hand.","The Low Moor Company furnaces lay idle for some twenty\n         months. Finally, in November 1922 one of Low Moor's\n         furnaces was finally fired up. While prosperity gradually\n         returned to the rest of the country, the Low Moor Iron\n         Company never recovered. Production of pig iron in the\n         Virginia iron industry declined from 544,034 tons in 1903\n         to 148,053 tons in 1923, considered a good year for the\n         industry as a whole. In February 1926 Low Moor officials\n         talked of merging with two other iron companies in order to\n         revive the iron business for the three companies. The\n         merger, however, never occurred. By late 1926 the company\n         was in the process of liquidation. An advertisement in the\n         Charleston, West Virginia, Daily Mail dated April 30, 1927,\n         told of a huge warehouse sale at the Low Moor Iron Company.\n         The advertisement noted \"thousands of screws, pipe\n         fittings, valves, etc.\" The last piece of correspondence\n         from the Low Moor Iron Company in the collection is dated\n         1929. It deals with the sale of a machine.","Why did the iron industry in Virginia decline as it did?\n         Some say that lack of speed, efficiency, and a decent\n         transportation system for Alleghany County caused it. In a\n         letter from C. E. Bertie, secretary of the Virginia Pig\n         Iron Association, to the \n          Manufacturers Record dated 1925, Bertie claimed that it was the\n         tremendous rise in the cost of transportation. Virginia, he\n         claimed, had almost no home market. Over 80% of its normal\n         production was shipped out to other states. The failure of\n         the Interstate Commerce Commission to treat Virginia\n         furnaces as southern furnaces was the cause of much of the\n         trouble. From 1914-1925 there were four blanket increases\n         in freight rates in the country, of which only one applied\n         equally to all localities. Southern furnaces were received\n         only two increases--a 25% increase in 1918 and a 25%\n         increase in 1920--but northern furnaces had had 5%, 15%,\n         25%, and 40% increases in their transportation costs.\n         Virginia furnaces, although recognized as southern\n         furnaces, had had freight rates increased in line with the\n         northern furnaces. Prior to the war Virginia iron reached\n         all points in Ohio, Indiana, Michigan, and Illinois on a\n         competitive basis with southern furnaces. After World War I\n         the advantage was limited to a small portion of\n         southeastern Ohio. All of Indiana, Illinois, and Michigan\n         were now lost to the Virginia producers. The Virginia\n         producer, according to Bertie, felt that the freight rates\n         should be restored to a relationship with southern\n         furnaces. If what Bertie said was true, the other southern\n         states iron industries should not have been in the same\n         desperate economic straits as Virginia's, and statistics\n         should support this. In the 1920's production rose to new\n         heights in Alabama. In Tennessee, however, iron production\n         plunged to new lows during the 1920's. While the south\n         accounted for 10.2% of the entire U. S. production in the\n         years 1919-1924, Virginia accounted for less than 1% during\n         those years. In 1915 Virginia accounted for over 6% of the\n         U.S. iron production. One can see a decline in other areas\n         of the south than Virginia. While the discrepancies in the\n         freight rates may have helped cause the decline, clearly\n         there are other reasons.","During the 1900's there was a discovery of extremely\n         rich iron ore deposits in the mid-west. Much of this ore\n         was on or near the surface, making the mining of it both\n         easy and inexpensive. This in turn lowered production costs\n         of the pig iron. This caused iron production to shift to\n         that region, and resulted in a decline in the Virginia iron\n         industry. There was a sharp increase in iron production in\n         the mid-west through the 1920's. The iron ore in the\n         mid-west may have been of better quality than Virginia, but\n         the iron ore in Virginia was of sufficient quality to\n         produce a good pig iron. The western ore deposits were not\n         as conveniently located as Virginia deposits, but the\n         inexpensiveness of production more than made up for it.","In examining the rise and fall of the Low Moor Iron\n         Company, we can see a situation in which the conditions for\n         the manufacture of iron were nearly ideal. There was plenty\n         of land for expansion and resources for the manufacture of\n         the iron. The major internal problem faced by the Low Moor\n         Iron Company was that of transportation. External\n         developments, however, caused the final demise of the Low\n         Moor Iron Company.","Low Moor Iron Company Personnel:","Executive Staff: Managing Director, Colonel H. M.\n         Goodwin: ca. 1881. General Managers: H. G. Merry: ca.\n         1884-1902; E. C. Means: ca. 1905-1915; J. P. Guernsey: ca.\n         1915 (acting General Manager); F. U. Humbert: ca.\n         1916-1929. Assistant General Manager: E. B. Wilkinson: ca.\n         1909-1915. Treasurers and Assistant Treasurers: Edward Low:\n         ca. 1886-1898; Frank Lyman (in New York): ca. 1898-1919; S.\n         G. Cragill (Asst. Treasurer): ca. 1900-1915; H. A. Dalton:\n         ca. 1921-1929; John Lipscomb (Asst. Treasurer): ca.\n         1918-1928.","Factory and Mine Supervisors: Kay Moor Superintendents:\n         C. C. Cooke: ca. 1918; Ed. D. Wickes: ca. 1906; H. L.\n         Tansell: ca. 1903; A. H. Reed: ca. 1906. Kay Moor Managers:\n         J. W. Monteith: manager of mines. ca. 1918; promoted in\n         1925 to general superintendent in charge of mine plants,\n         coke ovens, shops, repairs, and construction; A. L.\n         Monteith: assistant superintendent of mines, ca. 1918;\n         George T. Wickes: manager of Covington mines, ca.\n         1906-1917; Ross Howell, ca. 1918. Stack Mines\n         Superintendents: J. H. Carpenter: ca. 1906; C. D.\n         Oberschain: ca. 1907; J. L. Harris: ca. 1903; John S. Ham:\n         ca. 1891-1901. Rich Patch Mines Superintendents: John R.\n         Thompson: foreman, ca. 1906. Low Moor assorted other\n         personnel: S. L. Tulley: trainmaster, ca. 1906; B. J.\n         Shenkley: foreman, Low Moor limestone quarries; L. Q. Wood:\n         assistant traffic manager, ca. 1919."],"custodhist_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe Low Moor Iron Company ceased operations in 1930;\n            what happened to the records of the company in the years\n            immediately following is not known, but in 1939, the Green\n            Bookman, a Charlottesville bookshop, sold the records to\n            the University of Virginia Library.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe records arrived at the receiving room door of the\n            new Alderman Library on October 16, 1939, in a trailer\n            truck whose load was estimated to weigh about fourteen\n            tons. As the manuscripts staff dug around in the piles of\n            over 1200 account books, and countless boxes of papers they\n            realized that the company had saved almost all of its\n            papers including checks, invoices, vouchers, and receipts,\n            and certain of these records were destroyed as their\n            information was recorded in other records. Once the bulk of\n            the collection had been reduced, the remaining records were\n            transferred to the stack area of the Division of Rare Books\n            and Manuscripts.\u003c/p\u003e"],"custodhist_heading_ssm":["Provenance"],"custodhist_tesim":["The Low Moor Iron Company ceased operations in 1930;\n            what happened to the records of the company in the years\n            immediately following is not known, but in 1939, the Green\n            Bookman, a Charlottesville bookshop, sold the records to\n            the University of Virginia Library.","The records arrived at the receiving room door of the\n            new Alderman Library on October 16, 1939, in a trailer\n            truck whose load was estimated to weigh about fourteen\n            tons. As the manuscripts staff dug around in the piles of\n            over 1200 account books, and countless boxes of papers they\n            realized that the company had saved almost all of its\n            papers including checks, invoices, vouchers, and receipts,\n            and certain of these records were destroyed as their\n            information was recorded in other records. Once the bulk of\n            the collection had been reduced, the remaining records were\n            transferred to the stack area of the Division of Rare Books\n            and Manuscripts."],"otherfindaid_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eSome 1200 bound accounting record books of the Low Moor\n            Iron Company came into the custody of the Library with the\n            loose papers. When the project staff investigated these\n            volumes in the dormitory attic where they were stored, they\n            found that the volumes had been shelved by size rather than\n            by series. Thus, a letterbook may stand next to a stock\n            report book for a furnace, which is, in turn, next to a\n            store account book for the Kay Moor Mines' store. No series\n            are shelved in order.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMembers of the project staff surveyed the volumes,\n            completing for each volume two copies of a mimeographed\n            survey form, and assigning to each volume a number. One\n            copy of the survey report form was placed in the volume,\n            and the second was returned to the Library.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eFrom the survey report forms, 3 x 5 inch index\n            cards--with a carbon copy of each--were typed. One set of\n            index cards has been kept in order by the numbers assigned\n            to the volumes as they stand on the shelves. This provides\n            a shelf list for the use of the library staff. The other\n            set of cards was sorted into categories as a finding aid.\n            On the list that follows, the researcher will find a number\n            of major headings such as \"Accounts,\" \"Inventories,\"\n            \"Letter Books,\" and \"Shipments-Outgoing.\"\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eInsofar as it has been possible to determine from the\n            data on the survey report forms, the volumes have been\n            assigned to categories. Most of the major categories, or\n            headings, have sub-headings. Within those sub-headings, the\n            volumes have been arranged chronologically. The\n            investigators realize that after careful study of some of\n            these volumes, they will be revealed as belonging to other\n            categories than those in which they have initially been\n            placed. The card index will allow such movement.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAvailable in the Manuscripts/Archives Reading Room in\n            the Library is the sorted card index file. There is a card\n            for every volume in this file whereas, on the pages that\n            follow, volumes have been summarized under the headings and\n            sub-headings. In each case, the number of volumes has been\n            given in the summarized list; the date ranges given are\n            inclusive in most cases, and do not reveal the many gaps in\n            sequences unless the number of volumes is small and the\n            date range wide. Occasional remarks about the content of\n            volumes have been supplied if the contents are not obvious\n            from the heading or sub-heading.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eResearchers wishing to examine any of these volumes will\n            have to use the card index file in order to be able to give\n            to the staff the volume number assigned to the individual\n            volumes that are to be inspected.\u003c/p\u003e"],"otherfindaid_heading_ssm":["Other Finding Aid"],"otherfindaid_tesim":["Some 1200 bound accounting record books of the Low Moor\n            Iron Company came into the custody of the Library with the\n            loose papers. When the project staff investigated these\n            volumes in the dormitory attic where they were stored, they\n            found that the volumes had been shelved by size rather than\n            by series. Thus, a letterbook may stand next to a stock\n            report book for a furnace, which is, in turn, next to a\n            store account book for the Kay Moor Mines' store. No series\n            are shelved in order.","Members of the project staff surveyed the volumes,\n            completing for each volume two copies of a mimeographed\n            survey form, and assigning to each volume a number. One\n            copy of the survey report form was placed in the volume,\n            and the second was returned to the Library.","From the survey report forms, 3 x 5 inch index\n            cards--with a carbon copy of each--were typed. One set of\n            index cards has been kept in order by the numbers assigned\n            to the volumes as they stand on the shelves. This provides\n            a shelf list for the use of the library staff. The other\n            set of cards was sorted into categories as a finding aid.\n            On the list that follows, the researcher will find a number\n            of major headings such as \"Accounts,\" \"Inventories,\"\n            \"Letter Books,\" and \"Shipments-Outgoing.\"","Insofar as it has been possible to determine from the\n            data on the survey report forms, the volumes have been\n            assigned to categories. Most of the major categories, or\n            headings, have sub-headings. Within those sub-headings, the\n            volumes have been arranged chronologically. The\n            investigators realize that after careful study of some of\n            these volumes, they will be revealed as belonging to other\n            categories than those in which they have initially been\n            placed. The card index will allow such movement.","Available in the Manuscripts/Archives Reading Room in\n            the Library is the sorted card index file. There is a card\n            for every volume in this file whereas, on the pages that\n            follow, volumes have been summarized under the headings and\n            sub-headings. In each case, the number of volumes has been\n            given in the summarized list; the date ranges given are\n            inclusive in most cases, and do not reveal the many gaps in\n            sequences unless the number of volumes is small and the\n            date range wide. Occasional remarks about the content of\n            volumes have been supplied if the contents are not obvious\n            from the heading or sub-heading.","Researchers wishing to examine any of these volumes will\n            have to use the card index file in order to be able to give\n            to the staff the volume number assigned to the individual\n            volumes that are to be inspected."],"prefercite_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003ePapers of the Low Moor Iron Company, Accession #662,\n            Special Collections, University of Virginia Library,\n            Charlottesville, Va.\u003c/p\u003e"],"prefercite_tesim":["Papers of the Low Moor Iron Company, Accession #662,\n            Special Collections, University of Virginia Library,\n            Charlottesville, Va."],"processinfo_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eBy 1958, little storage space remained in Alderman\n            Library, and the Rare Books and Manuscripts Division was\n            especially crowded because of the rapid growth of its\n            collections. After an examination of its storage areas, the\n            division's staff decided to move the Low Moor records to\n            the attic of one of the student dormitories. The collection\n            had had little use chiefly because there was no finding\n            aid. There seemed little likelihood of extensive researcher\n            use until the collection could be processed.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIn preparation for the move, the old letter boxes in\n            which much of the collection had arrived in the Library\n            were discarded. The records from each box were placed\n            between sheets of the heavy gray cardboard used to protect\n            unbound newspapers in the Library's stacks, and the spine\n            labels of the old letter boxes were copied onto the\n            cardboard. The resulting bundles were wrapped with brown\n            Kraft paper and tied up with string. The bundles were\n            numbered. Whatever original order the letter boxes may have\n            had was lost by the time they arrived in the Library, and\n            after the bundling, removal to a dormitory attic, and\n            subsequent return to the Library in 1976, all vestiges of\n            the original order were lost.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe bundles remained in the dormitory attic for almost\n            twenty years. Occasional visits were made by the division\n            staff to check on their condition, and on very rare\n            occasions, a researcher was brave enough to ask to be shown\n            the collection. Once the researcher saw the imposing amount\n            of material and the conditions in the attic, interest in\n            using the collection invariably died.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIn late 1976 a grant from the National Endowment for the\n            Humanities was obtained to allow the Library to process the\n            Low Moor Iron Company papers, and the papers of Edward L.\n            Stone and the Borderland Coal Company, another large\n            collection of records stored in the same dormitory attic.\n            All of these records and papers were moved back to the\n            Library where the bundles were cleaned and opened. The\n            contents of each were placed in a Hollinger storage box,\n            and all notes on the paper wrappings and on the gray\n            cardboard sheets were recorded.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe more than 1200 bound accounting records of the Low\n            Moor Iron Company were surveyed by the grant project staff.\n            The contents of each volume were noted on a mimeographed\n            form, and later typed on 3 x 5\" cards to create a\n            readily-accessible file for the Manuscripts Reading Room.\n            This information was also typed on pages to be added to\n            this guide.\u003c/p\u003e"],"processinfo_heading_ssm":["Processing Information"],"processinfo_tesim":["By 1958, little storage space remained in Alderman\n            Library, and the Rare Books and Manuscripts Division was\n            especially crowded because of the rapid growth of its\n            collections. After an examination of its storage areas, the\n            division's staff decided to move the Low Moor records to\n            the attic of one of the student dormitories. The collection\n            had had little use chiefly because there was no finding\n            aid. There seemed little likelihood of extensive researcher\n            use until the collection could be processed.","In preparation for the move, the old letter boxes in\n            which much of the collection had arrived in the Library\n            were discarded. The records from each box were placed\n            between sheets of the heavy gray cardboard used to protect\n            unbound newspapers in the Library's stacks, and the spine\n            labels of the old letter boxes were copied onto the\n            cardboard. The resulting bundles were wrapped with brown\n            Kraft paper and tied up with string. The bundles were\n            numbered. Whatever original order the letter boxes may have\n            had was lost by the time they arrived in the Library, and\n            after the bundling, removal to a dormitory attic, and\n            subsequent return to the Library in 1976, all vestiges of\n            the original order were lost.","The bundles remained in the dormitory attic for almost\n            twenty years. Occasional visits were made by the division\n            staff to check on their condition, and on very rare\n            occasions, a researcher was brave enough to ask to be shown\n            the collection. Once the researcher saw the imposing amount\n            of material and the conditions in the attic, interest in\n            using the collection invariably died.","In late 1976 a grant from the National Endowment for the\n            Humanities was obtained to allow the Library to process the\n            Low Moor Iron Company papers, and the papers of Edward L.\n            Stone and the Borderland Coal Company, another large\n            collection of records stored in the same dormitory attic.\n            All of these records and papers were moved back to the\n            Library where the bundles were cleaned and opened. The\n            contents of each were placed in a Hollinger storage box,\n            and all notes on the paper wrappings and on the gray\n            cardboard sheets were recorded.","The more than 1200 bound accounting records of the Low\n            Moor Iron Company were surveyed by the grant project staff.\n            The contents of each volume were noted on a mimeographed\n            form, and later typed on 3 x 5\" cards to create a\n            readily-accessible file for the Manuscripts Reading Room.\n            This information was also typed on pages to be added to\n            this guide."],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe Low Moor Iron Company papers consist of\n         approximately 280 four-inch Hollinger archives boxes (ca.\n         95 linear feet) of records, ca. 1885-1927, and some 1200\n         bound volumes of the company's accounting records,\n         1873-1927, of this iron producing company located in Low\n         Moor (four miles southwest of Clifton Forge), Alleghany\n         County, Virginia.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThis material consists of records typical of those\n         produced by a firm of this type in the period, but as the\n         company owned its own coal and iron mines and limestone\n         quarries, there is considerable information about the\n         production of these raw materials. Large numbers of the\n         records that deal with the company's employees have\n         survived: time books, payroll books, hands ledgers, and the\n         like. Because these books sometimes include information\n         about the employee's trade or job with the company, and as\n         race is indicated in some of the records, these books\n         should provide date for studies of the structure and upward\n         mobility within the labor force, patterns of\n         ethnic--possibly racial--occupational penetration and\n         mobility, material conditions of the workers, and so on.\n         The papers should permit a range of studies detailing the\n         pattern and evolution of industrial organization in the\n         iron industry, and the evolution of markets and marketing\n         structures for the entire period. Because the company was\n         dependent upon railroads to move its raw materials to the\n         furnaces, and for the marketing of its products, there is\n         considerable information about railroads and their\n         relationship to their customers.\u003c/p\u003e"],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Scope and Content Information"],"scopecontent_tesim":["The Low Moor Iron Company papers consist of\n         approximately 280 four-inch Hollinger archives boxes (ca.\n         95 linear feet) of records, ca. 1885-1927, and some 1200\n         bound volumes of the company's accounting records,\n         1873-1927, of this iron producing company located in Low\n         Moor (four miles southwest of Clifton Forge), Alleghany\n         County, Virginia.","This material consists of records typical of those\n         produced by a firm of this type in the period, but as the\n         company owned its own coal and iron mines and limestone\n         quarries, there is considerable information about the\n         production of these raw materials. Large numbers of the\n         records that deal with the company's employees have\n         survived: time books, payroll books, hands ledgers, and the\n         like. Because these books sometimes include information\n         about the employee's trade or job with the company, and as\n         race is indicated in some of the records, these books\n         should provide date for studies of the structure and upward\n         mobility within the labor force, patterns of\n         ethnic--possibly racial--occupational penetration and\n         mobility, material conditions of the workers, and so on.\n         The papers should permit a range of studies detailing the\n         pattern and evolution of industrial organization in the\n         iron industry, and the evolution of markets and marketing\n         structures for the entire period. Because the company was\n         dependent upon railroads to move its raw materials to the\n         furnaces, and for the marketing of its products, there is\n         considerable information about railroads and their\n         relationship to their customers."],"userestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eSee the \n            \u003cextref type=\"simple\" href=\"https://www.library.virginia.edu/policies/use-of-materials\"\u003e\n            University of Virginia Library’s use policy.\u003c/extref\u003e\u003c/p\u003e"],"userestrict_heading_ssm":["Use Restrictions\n"],"userestrict_tesim":["See the \n             \n            University of Virginia Library’s use policy."],"language_ssim":["English"],"total_component_count_is":1879,"online_item_count_is":0,"component_level_isim":[0],"sort_isi":0,"timestamp":"2026-05-21T12:10:02.328Z"}]}},"label":"Breadcrumbs"}}},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_viu00917_c01_c21_c01"}},{"id":"viu_repositories_7_resources_212_c12_c01","type":"Subseries","attributes":{"title":"Alpha Omega Alpha","breadcrumbs":{"id":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_repositories_7_resources_212_c12_c01#breadcrumbs","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":{"ref_ssi":"viu_repositories_7_resources_212_c12_c01","ref_ssm":["viu_repositories_7_resources_212_c12_c01"],"id":"viu_repositories_7_resources_212_c12_c01","ead_ssi":"viu_repositories_7_resources_212","_root_":"viu_repositories_7_resources_212","_nest_parent_":"viu_repositories_7_resources_212_c12","parent_ssi":"viu_repositories_7_resources_212_c12","parent_ssim":["viu_repositories_7_resources_212","viu_repositories_7_resources_212_c12"],"parent_ids_ssim":["viu_repositories_7_resources_212","viu_repositories_7_resources_212_c12"],"parent_unittitles_ssm":["University of Virginia School of Medicine records","Student organization records and publications"],"parent_unittitles_tesim":["University of Virginia School of Medicine records","Student organization records and publications"],"text":["University of Virginia School of Medicine records","Student organization records and publications","Alpha Omega Alpha","\nAlpha Omega Alpha was founded in 1902 and is the national medical honor society. It started at the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Chicago when a small number of medical students, led by William Webster Root, wanted to foster professional values and good conduct in fellow medical students and sometimes in their faculty. Modeled after Phi Beta Kappa, they stated that membership in the new society would be based on both academic achievement and professional conduct.\n","\nBy 2012 there were more than 130 chapters in medical schools throughout the United Sates. The AOA mission statement found on their website indicates that it is \"dedicated to the belief that in the profession of medicine we will improve care for all by recognizing high educational achievement, honoring gifted teaching, encouraging the development of leaders in academia and the community, supporting the ideals of humanism, and promoting service to others.\"\n","\nThe University of Virginia chapter started in 1919 and was the 23rd member. The first school in Virginia to join, its chapter is named Alpha Virginia. Each chapter may elect to membership no more than one-sixth of the anticipated number of graduates. Those elected must come from the top quartile of students academically. According to the UVa School of Medicine Student Handbook on the SOM website, those chosen from UVa must not only exhibit the necessary academic attainment, but also leadership, professionalism, a sense of ethics, promise of future success in medicine, and commitment to service. At UVa generally 6-9 students are elected by their peers after their second year, and another 17 or so are elected after their third year.\n","Three volumes from to the Alpha Omega Alpha records were originally processed as a distinct collection, labelled MS-53. These three volumes consisted of a chapter roll and minutes book from 1919 to 1955, a roll and minutes book from 1955 to 1969, and a treasurer's ledger covering 1922 to 1978."],"title_filing_ssi":"Alpha Omega Alpha","title_ssm":["Alpha Omega Alpha"],"title_tesim":["Alpha Omega Alpha"],"unitdate_inclusive_ssm":["1919-2017"],"normalized_date_ssm":["1919/2017"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Alpha Omega Alpha"],"component_level_isim":[2],"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"collection_ssim":["University of Virginia School of Medicine records"],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"child_component_count_isi":9,"level_ssm":["Subseries"],"level_ssim":["Subseries"],"sort_isi":567,"parent_access_restrict_tesm":["There are no restrictions on access to student organization records and student publications."],"parent_access_terms_tesm":["Copyright restrictions may apply."],"date_range_isim":[1919,1920,1921,1922,1923,1924,1925,1926,1927,1928,1929,1930,1931,1932,1933,1934,1935,1936,1937,1938,1939,1940,1941,1942,1943,1944,1945,1946,1947,1948,1949,1950,1951,1952,1953,1954,1955,1956,1957,1958,1959,1960,1961,1962,1963,1964,1965,1966,1967,1968,1969,1970,1971,1972,1973,1974,1975,1976,1977,1978,1979,1980,1981,1982,1983,1984,1985,1986,1987,1988,1989,1990,1991,1992,1993,1994,1995,1996,1997,1998,1999,2000,2001,2002,2003,2004,2005,2006,2007,2008,2009,2010,2011,2012,2013,2014,2015,2016,2017],"bioghist_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003e\nAlpha Omega Alpha was founded in 1902 and is the national medical honor society. It started at the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Chicago when a small number of medical students, led by William Webster Root, wanted to foster professional values and good conduct in fellow medical students and sometimes in their faculty. Modeled after Phi Beta Kappa, they stated that membership in the new society would be based on both academic achievement and professional conduct.\n\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\nBy 2012 there were more than 130 chapters in medical schools throughout the United Sates. The AOA mission statement found on their website indicates that it is \"dedicated to the belief that in the profession of medicine we will improve care for all by recognizing high educational achievement, honoring gifted teaching, encouraging the development of leaders in academia and the community, supporting the ideals of humanism, and promoting service to others.\"\n\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\nThe University of Virginia chapter started in 1919 and was the 23rd member. The first school in Virginia to join, its chapter is named Alpha Virginia. Each chapter may elect to membership no more than one-sixth of the anticipated number of graduates. Those elected must come from the top quartile of students academically. According to the UVa School of Medicine Student Handbook on the SOM website, those chosen from UVa must not only exhibit the necessary academic attainment, but also leadership, professionalism, a sense of ethics, promise of future success in medicine, and commitment to service. At UVa generally 6-9 students are elected by their peers after their second year, and another 17 or so are elected after their third year.\n\u003c/p\u003e"],"bioghist_heading_ssm":["Biographical / Historical"],"bioghist_tesim":["\nAlpha Omega Alpha was founded in 1902 and is the national medical honor society. It started at the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Chicago when a small number of medical students, led by William Webster Root, wanted to foster professional values and good conduct in fellow medical students and sometimes in their faculty. Modeled after Phi Beta Kappa, they stated that membership in the new society would be based on both academic achievement and professional conduct.\n","\nBy 2012 there were more than 130 chapters in medical schools throughout the United Sates. The AOA mission statement found on their website indicates that it is \"dedicated to the belief that in the profession of medicine we will improve care for all by recognizing high educational achievement, honoring gifted teaching, encouraging the development of leaders in academia and the community, supporting the ideals of humanism, and promoting service to others.\"\n","\nThe University of Virginia chapter started in 1919 and was the 23rd member. The first school in Virginia to join, its chapter is named Alpha Virginia. Each chapter may elect to membership no more than one-sixth of the anticipated number of graduates. Those elected must come from the top quartile of students academically. According to the UVa School of Medicine Student Handbook on the SOM website, those chosen from UVa must not only exhibit the necessary academic attainment, but also leadership, professionalism, a sense of ethics, promise of future success in medicine, and commitment to service. At UVa generally 6-9 students are elected by their peers after their second year, and another 17 or so are elected after their third year.\n"],"odd_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThree volumes from to the Alpha Omega Alpha records were originally processed as a distinct collection, labelled MS-53. These three volumes consisted of a chapter roll and minutes book from 1919 to 1955, a roll and minutes book from 1955 to 1969, and a treasurer's ledger covering 1922 to 1978.\u003c/p\u003e"],"odd_heading_ssm":["General"],"odd_tesim":["Three volumes from to the Alpha Omega Alpha records were originally processed as a distinct collection, labelled MS-53. These three volumes consisted of a chapter roll and minutes book from 1919 to 1955, a roll and minutes book from 1955 to 1969, and a treasurer's ledger covering 1922 to 1978."],"_nest_path_":"/components#11/components#0","timestamp":"2026-05-30T07:04:56.149Z","collection":{"numFound":1,"start":0,"numFoundExact":true,"docs":[{"id":"viu_repositories_7_resources_212","ead_ssi":"viu_repositories_7_resources_212","_root_":"viu_repositories_7_resources_212","_nest_parent_":"viu_repositories_7_resources_212","ead_source_url_ssi":"data/oai/UVA/repositories_7_resources_212.xml","aspace_url_ssi":"https://archives.lib.virginia.edu/ark:/59853/142986","title_ssm":["University of Virginia School of Medicine records"],"title_tesim":["University of Virginia School of Medicine records"],"unitdate_ssm":["1825-present"],"unitdate_inclusive_ssm":["1825-present"],"level_ssm":["collection"],"level_ssim":["Collection"],"unitid_ssm":["RG.17.1","Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","/repositories/7/resources/212"],"text":["RG.17.1","Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","/repositories/7/resources/212","University of Virginia School of Medicine records","University of Virginia","All materials in this collection are available for public access unless otherwise noted. Restrictions on access are made in accordance with the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (HIPAA), the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act of 1974 (FERPA), the Virginia Freedom of Information Act, and any related policies or regulations.","Access restrictions may differ between the collections filed in this series.","There may be restrictions on access to some annual and biennial reports. Records in this series must be reviewed for personally identifiable information and anonymous donor information before release. This protected information may need to be redacted before access is given.","There are no known access restrictions.","There are no restrictions on access to the commencement records.","There may be restrictions on access to some of the planning documents and reports. Records in this series must be reviewed before access is given.","There are no restrictions on access to the educational accreditation files.","There are no restrictions on access to the photographs and negatives.","There are no restrictions on access to the public relations files.","There are no restrictions on access to the publications of the School of Medicine.","There are no restrictions on access to the journals and magazines in this subseries.","There are no restrictions on access to the newsletters in this subseries.","There are no restrictions on access to the publications of the School of Medicine.","Archives staff must review materials before release to researchers, materials may contain proprietary information protected by VA FOIA (see VA FOIA 2.2-3705.6).","There are no restrictions on access to student organization records and student publications.","There are no restrictions on access to administrative organization and structure files.","There are no restrictions on access to the policies, procedures, and handbooks.","There are no restrictions on access to the syllabi and course materials.","Records in this series must be reviewed for personally identifiable information, wealth assessments, and anonymous donor information before release. Protected information may need to be redacted before access is given.","Records in this series must be reviewed for personally identifiable information and anonymous donor information before release. This protected information may need to be redacted before access is given.","Content is restricted.","There are no restrictions on access to the course schedules and catalogs.","Records in this series must be reviewed for personally identifiable information and anonymous donor information before release. This protected information may need to be redacted before access is given.","There are no restrcitions on access to the admissions publications.","There are no restrcitions on access to the admissions publications.","There are no restrictions on access to the conference reports and programs.","Restrictions on access to the records in this series varies between the constituent subseries.","The biographies and biographical files are open to researchers. However, before providing access, archivists must review the requested records for personally identifiable information (PII). This protected information may need to be redacted before access is given.","There are no restrictions on access to the materials in this subseries.","There are no restrictions on access to the materials in this subseries.","There are no restrictions on access to the materials in this subseries.","Access to scrapbooks may be restricted. Records in this sub-series must be reviewed before access is given.","Restrictions on access to the records in this series may vary.","Restrictions on access to the records in this series may vary. Records in this series must be reviewed before release. Protected information may need to be redacted before access is given.","Access to these materials is partially restricted under the provisions of the official policies of the University of Virginia.","Some content restricted due to FERPA.","Some content restricted due to FERPA.","Access to these materials is partially restricted under the provisions of the official policies of the University of Virginia.","Access to materials in this series may be restricted according to the provisions of the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA), Virginia law, and Univeristy of Virginia policies. Permission to see student records must be obtained through formal procedures established by the University of Virginia that comply with federal and state law.","There are no restrcitions on access to the directories.","There are no restrictions on access to the committee records and meeting minutes.","There are no restrictions on access to awards, honors, and commemorations records.","There are no restrictions on access to the lectures and presentations.","\nThe UVA School of Medicine records (RG-17-1) is part of a larger records group for the UVA Health System (RG-17). The School of Medicine records are further arranged into subdivisions, generally based on format. These subdivisions in many cases were chosen to reflect the Records Retention and Disposition Schedules Record Series maintained by the Library of Virginia (LVA); however, in some cases subdivisions do no have clear equivalents in the LVA schema. Some subdivisions (noted as \"Series\" in ArchivesSpace) are further divided into Sub-Series). Files are arranged alphabetically, by date, or by some other system best-suited to the contents.\n","\nSubdivisions in use for the UVA Health System records (RG-17) are listed below:\n","Department and Legacy Collections Annual Reports Correspondence and Subject Files of Selected Deans [Not currently included in RG-17-1] Correspondence and Subject Files of Major Department Heads Commencement Records Planning Documents and Reports Motion Pictures [Not currently included in RG-17-1] Final Accreditation Files Photographs, Slides, and Negatives Public Relations Files [Not currently included in RG-17-1] Publications Audiovisual Recordings [Not currently included in RG-17-1] Final Research Reports [Not currently included in RG-17-1] Student Organization Records and Publications Webpages Organizational Charts Policies, Procedures, and Handbooks Syllabi and Other Course Materials Major Donor Records [Not included in RG-17-1] Fundraising Planning and Reporting [Not currently included in RG-17-1] Trust and Endowment Records [Not currently included in RG-17-1] Course Schedules and Catalogs Library Accession Records [Not currently included in RG-17-1] Library Deaccessioning Records [Not currently included in RG-17-1] Admissions Publications Foundation Agreements and Management Reports Final Budget [Not currently included in RG-17-1] Conference Programs and Reports Legacy Patient Records [Not currently included in RG-17-1] Histories and Biographical Files Management Reports Other Reports (Historically Significant) Medical Student Records Directories Meeting Minutes Awards and Honors Lectures and Presentations Roll Books [Not currently included in RG-17-1] Other Logs and Ledgers [Not currently included in RG-17-1] Exhibit Materials [Not currently included in RG-17-1]","Department and Legacy collections are arranged into subseries. The subseries are then arranged alphabetically. The arrangements of the files and items in each subseries vary by collection.","Annual reports are arranged according to the department or unit described in the reports. Each department is assigned a file. The files are arranged in their series alphabetically by their title. Inside the files, reports are arranged in chronological order by the date of creation for the reports.  Annual reports for the School of Medicine as a whole will be placed in a file titled \"School of Medicine\". The file will be placed at the beginning of the series regardless of its position alphabetically in the series.","The correspondence and subject files in this series are arranged into subseries accourding to the indiviual who created the records. The subseries are then arranged alphabetically by the last name of each individual. Arrangement of materials at the subseries level may vary.","Materials in this subseries are arranged in chronological order.","The bulk of the commencement records are arranged into two subseries. The first subseries contains materials related to final exercises and graduation excercises. The second subseries contains materials related to baccalaureate services. Materials in these two subseries are grouped together into files according to the date of exercises and services. The files are then arranged in chronological order. ","Commencement records that do not belong in either of the two subseires described above are filed into a third subseries called \"Other commencement records\". All of the materials in this subseries are arranged chronologically according to their date of creation.","In this series, a file is created for each planning report and its associated documents. The files are arranged chronologically by the date of creation for the materials they contain.","This series consists of records that document the formal accreditation of the School of Medicine or other educational programs by a relevant educational accreditation body. This series may include, but is not limited to: self study reports, final reports, and questions and responses.","The photographs and negatives are arranged into subseries by either subject or office of creation. The subseries are then arranged alphabetically by title. The arrangements of the files in the subseries vary.","The public relations files are arranged into subseries according to types of materials (e.g. clippings collections and press releases). The subseries are then arranged alphabetically. The arrangements of the files in the subseries vary.","The publications are arranged into subseries according to types of materials (e.g. journals and magazines, newsletters, weblogs, patient education resources). The subseries are then arranged alphabetically. The arrangements of the files in the subseries vary.","Journals and magazines are arranged into files by title. The files are then arranged alphabetically by title.","The newsletters are arranged into files according to title. The files are then arranged alphabetically by title.","The final research reports and associated documents are arranged into files according to the title of the report. The files are then arranged alphabetically.","Student organization records are grouped into subseries according to the organization name. The subseries are arranged alphabetically by the name of the organization. Three additional subseries come after the student organizations in the following order: 1. Medical student class plays and talent shows 2. Yearbooks 3. Other student publications. The arrangements of files and items in the subseries vary.","The materials in this series are arranged by the department or unit with which they are associated. Each department is assigned a file. The files are arranged in the series alphabetically by their title. Inside the files, materials are arranged in chronological order by their date of creation.  Records for the School of Medicine as a whole will be placed in a file titled \"School of Medicine\". The file will be placed at the beginning of the series regardless of its position alphabetically in the series.","The policies, procedures, and handbooks are arragned into the following subseries in this order: Policies, Faculty procedures and handbooks, Staff procedures and handbooks, Student procedures and handbooks, and Other procedures and handbooks. The arrangements of the files in the subseries vary.","Syllabi and other course materials are arranged into sub-series by course subject or title. The sub-series are then arranged alphabetically by the course subject or title. At the end of the series, there is a sub-series for files that contain materials from more than one course. Within each subseries, materials are arranged chronologically into files.","Materials are arranged chronologically within the series.","Materials in this series are arranged chronologically.","The course schedules and catalogs are arranged into files. The files are then arranged chronologically by date of creation. When a catalog is reocurring (e.g. annually), all of the records in that series are placed together in a single file.","Arrangement within this series may vary.","Admissions publications are arranged into subseries by the educational programs to which they are related (e.g. undergraduate medical education). These subseries are arranged alphabetically. A final subseries consists of admissions publications for \"Other educational programs\" that don't fit neatly in any of the other subseries.","Residencies and fellowships informational brochures for the entire Medical Center are collected in a file named \"University of Virginia Medical Center.\" Department-specific brochures are arranged alphabetically into files below the general file.","Conference records and programs are arranged into files by conference title. The files are arranged chronologically. All of the instances of a reoccurring conference are gathered together into the same file.","The materials in this series are arranged into 5 subseries: ","1. Biographies and biographical files \n2. Department histories \n3. Historically significant events \n4. History essays, articles, and monographs \n5. Scrapbooks   ","The arrangements of files in each subseries vary.","Materials are arranged into files by the name of the person they describe. The files are then arranged alphabetically by the last name of the person. Because of the presence of legacy content from multiple sources, there may be multiple biographical files for the same individual.","Department histories are arranged alphabetically according to the name of the department with which they are associated.","Files in this subseries are arranged chronologically.","Essays, articles, and monographs in this subseries are arranged chronologically by their date of creation.","Materials in this sub-series are arranged chronologically.","The reports are arranged into files. The files are then arranged chronologically by their date of creation. When a report is reocurring (e.g. monthly operating reports), all of the reports in that series are placed together in a single file.","The reports are arranged into files. The files are then arranged chronologically by their date of creation. When a report is reoccurring, all of the reports in that series are placed together in a single file.","The medical student records are arranged into subseries that represent periods of time. The student record is placed into a given time period according to the student's date of graduation or their last day of attendance. The arrangements of the files in the subseries vary.","The directories are arranged into files. The files are then arranged chronologically by date. When a directory is reocurring (e.g. annually), all of the reports in that series are placed together in a single file.","Original Arrangement Note: \"Files are arranged by chronological order.\"","The records in this series are arranged into subseries according to committee or department (when the department is holding a general committee meeting). The subseries are then arranged alphabetically by title. The arrangements of the files in the subseries vary.","The awards, honors, and commemorations are arranged into files. The files are then arranged chronologically by date. When an award, honor, or commemoration is reoccurring (e.g. annually), all of the records in that series are placed together in a single file.","The records for stand-alone lectures and presentations are arranged into a subseries called \"Single lectures and presentations\". The records of lectures and presentations that belong to a program or lecture series are arranged into subseries named after the program or lecture series. Following the subseries titled \"Single lectures and presentations\", the remaining lecture series are arranged alphabetically by title. Records in all of the subseries are arranged into files titled with the names of the lectures and presentations. The files are then arranged chronologically by date of creation.","Materials in this sub-series are arranged chronologically.","Materials in this sub-series are arranged chronologically.","Materials in this sub-series are arranged chronologically.","Historical Overview of the School of Medicine\n","","\nThe School of Medicine* at the University of Virginia has been a key part of the University since its establishment in 1819 by Thomas Jefferson. In his early plans, Jefferson recommended the creation of a School of Anatomy and Medicine with a rigorous academic model, where students could attain medical education in nine months, a term that was twice as long as many schools at the time. Students would read, attend lectures, and watch demonstrations, but there would be few opportunities for them to work firsthand with patients, because there was no teaching hospital in Charlottesville. When the University opened its doors to students in 1825, Dr. Robley Dunglison taught all of the classes offered by the School of Anatomy and Medicine. Beginning in 1827, medical classes were held in the Anatomical Theatre, a building designed by Jefferson (though completed after his death) to accomodate a space for anatomical dissections. The study of anatomy was an important piece of early medical education; however, there was no systematic way for medical schools to obtain bodies for dissection prior to the Virginia Anatomical Act of 1884, and so cadavers were frequently procured through illegal and unethical means. Often this involved body snatching from local graves, most commonly those found in cemeteries of Virginia's slave, free black, and poor white populations. \n","","\nDunglison remained at UVA until 1833, and during that time he persuaded the UVA Board of Visitors to hire additional faculty for his medical department. In the mid-19th century, the UVA medical school was known for providing a good theoretical education. Academic activities were largely stagnant during the years of the Civil War, when Professor of Anatomy and Surgery James L. Cabell oversaw a Confederate military hospital erected in part on the Grounds of UVA, and later when Charlottesville was occupied by Union troops at the end of the war. In the decades after the Civil War, a period of biomedical revolution began to redefine the practice of medicine. In response, UVA initiated educational reforms to its medical curriculum, gradually lengthening the degree program to four years by the end of the 19th century, and introducing coursework in new fields like bacteriology and histology. In order to create increasingly important clinical opportunities for students, UVA committed to building its own facilities, including a dispensary for out-patient care in 1892 and finally a hospital, which opened in 1901. While science and medicine had entered a period of dramatic revolution, social systems were less inclined to evolve, and access to medical education at UVA remained restricted for many members of the population.\n","","\nIn the early 20th century, the University of Virginia was transforming into a modern university, dedicated to both education and research. At the center of this change were UVA's health sciences programs. The University invested heavily in the School of Medicine, increasing the number of faculty in order to support emerging medical specialties and a new research mission. This period was also marked by the culmination of a fierce debate over the dual existence of state-supported medical programs in both Charlottesville and Richmond, VA. In 1921, a state-appointed commission recommended the relocation of the UVA School of Medicine to Richmond. UVA mobilized alumni and recruited political allies in order to wage a fierce campaign for the preservation of its medical program. They were ultimately successful, with the General Assembly deciding in favor of UVA. The period that followed was marked by continued expansion to the University's academic medical center, including greater specialization across the field of medicine and an increase of students, faculty, and associated personnel throughout the health sciences programs.\n","","\nAlso of note during this time, in 1920 a resolution of the UVA Board of Visitors agreed to admit women into graduate and professional degree programs at UVA. The first woman to graduate from the School of Medicine, Sarah Ruth Dean, a transfer student, did so in 1922. In 1924, Lila Morse Bonner became the second woman to graduate from the School of Medicine and the first to attend all four years of medical school at UVA.\n","","\nBy the 1940s, public confidence in the health professions was strong among much of the U.S. public. After World War II, there was broad support for wider investment in academic medical centers. At UVA, federal grants were used to build new facilities, including the construction of a multi-story hospital tower. However, also at this time, access to education, employment opportunities, and health care at UVA continued to be unequal. With the rise of the Civil Rights movement, a combination of factors including, community activism, federal legislation, and court rulings compelled the University to start removing barriers to access. In 1953, Edward Bertram Nash and Edward Thomas Wood became the first two African Americans to be admitted to the UVA School of Medicine. Both went on to graduate in 1957.\n","","\nThroughout the second half of the 20th century, the UVA health system continued to expand. A new medical education building was dedicated in 1972. (Originally named for Harvey E. Jordan, a former Dean of the School of Medicine and known proponent of eugenics; the building was renamed in honor of Dr. Vivian W. Pinn in 2016). This era of expansion also saw the opening of a nursing education building, health sciences library, primary care center, and finally, in 1989, a massive new hospital building. The 1980s and 1990s also saw efforts at the School of Medicine to increase access to the health professions among under-represented groups, including women and people of color.\n","","\nRapid developments in the health sciences continued to demand new facilities for research and education. The Claude Moore Medical Education Building opened as the new central location for the School of Medicine in 2010. Also in 2010, the School of Medicine launched a four college system, designed to preserve close student-faculty relationships and maintain a high-quality student experience while accommodating increased medical class size and a revised curriculum. Ten years later, the School of Medicine embraced further expansions with the launch of its Inova Campus in Northern Virginia, which provides clerkship opportunities for some upperclass medical students. The first cohort to spend their third and fourth years of medical school at the Northern Virginia campus arrived there in 2021.\n","","\n*Note about naming conventions: Briefly known as the \"School of Anatomy and Medicine\" (1825-1827), the name \"School of Medicine\" was adopted by the Board of Visitors in July 1827. However, shortly later the name \"Department of Medicine\" came to be used (though some records still refer to the institution as \"School of Medicine\"). By the 1950s, the preferred name was again \"School of Medicine\". \n","\nDeans of the UVA School of Medicine\n","Richard Henry Whitehead, MD, 1905-1916 Theodore Hough, PhD, [Acting Dean: 1916-1917], 1917-1924 James Caroll Flippin, MD, [Acting Dean: 1925-1927] 1927-1939 Harvey Ernest Jordan, PhD, 1939-1949 Vernon W. Lippard, MD, 1949-1953 Thomas Harrison Hunter, MD, 1953-1964 [Leave of Absence: 1962-1964] Kenneth R. Crispell, MD, [Acting Dean: 1962-1964], 1964-1971 James T. Hamlin III, MD, [Acting Dean: 1971-1972] William R. Drucker, MD, 1972-1977 Norman J. Knorr, MD, 1977-1986 Robert M. Carey, MD, 1986-2002 Arthur \"Tim\" Garson Jr., MD, MPH 2002-2007 Sharon L. Hostler, MD, Interim Dean: 2007-2008 Steven T. DeKosky, MD, 2008-2013 Nancy E. Dunlap, MD, PhD, 2013-2014 Randolph J. Canterbury, MD, Interim Dean: 2014-2015 David S. Wilkes, MD, 2015-2021 Melina R. Kibbe, MD, 2021-","\nPrior to Richard Henry Whitehead's appointment by the Board of Visitors to the position of Dean of the Medical Faculty (as found in the UVA Board of Visitors Meeting Minutes, July 20, 1905), the position of Dean at the UVA School of Medicine was not in use. The appointment dates listed above are derived from the Board of Visitors Meeting Minutes.\n","\nDr. Craig joined the School of Medicine at the University of Virginia in 1972 as Professor of Internal Medicine and Associate Dean of the School of Medicine. The materials in this subseries reflect major developments of the Medical Center during the early portion of his career at the University of Virginia.\n","\nAlpha Omega Alpha was founded in 1902 and is the national medical honor society. It started at the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Chicago when a small number of medical students, led by William Webster Root, wanted to foster professional values and good conduct in fellow medical students and sometimes in their faculty. Modeled after Phi Beta Kappa, they stated that membership in the new society would be based on both academic achievement and professional conduct.\n","\nBy 2012 there were more than 130 chapters in medical schools throughout the United Sates. The AOA mission statement found on their website indicates that it is \"dedicated to the belief that in the profession of medicine we will improve care for all by recognizing high educational achievement, honoring gifted teaching, encouraging the development of leaders in academia and the community, supporting the ideals of humanism, and promoting service to others.\"\n","\nThe University of Virginia chapter started in 1919 and was the 23rd member. The first school in Virginia to join, its chapter is named Alpha Virginia. Each chapter may elect to membership no more than one-sixth of the anticipated number of graduates. Those elected must come from the top quartile of students academically. According to the UVa School of Medicine Student Handbook on the SOM website, those chosen from UVa must not only exhibit the necessary academic attainment, but also leadership, professionalism, a sense of ethics, promise of future success in medicine, and commitment to service. At UVa generally 6-9 students are elected by their peers after their second year, and another 17 or so are elected after their third year.\n","\"Since its inception in the summer of 1967, the Mulholland Society has served as the UVa School of Medicine's coherent student voice. Collectively, the organization's goals are two-fold. First, the Society looks outward, endeavoring to promote the various interests and concerns of all medical students to the faculty and staff of the health system and the University and Charlottesville community at large. Second, the Society looks inward, seeking to provide an outlet for the academic, social, athletic, and personal interests. The Mulholland Society is named in honor of the late Dr. Henry Bearden Mulholland, a distinguished figure in American medicine and a member of the faculty from 1917 to 1962.\"","\nDescription from the Mulholland Society website: https://students.med.virginia.edu/mulholland/about/ (2022 January)\n","The exam was given by Albert H. Tuttle. Handwriting is by John Staige Davis.","Original Biographical/Historical Note: \"The University of Virginia School of Medicine was established as one of the University's original eight schools when UVa opened in 1824, and in 1901 the University of Virginia Hospital was opened with Dr. Paul Barringer as Superintendent. Since its opening in 1901, the University of Virginia Hospital has expanded its physicians, departments, and Hospital facilities. The list of the UVa physicians from 1951 to 1990 show general changes that took place in the Hospital through these years, including the increase in the number of physicians, promotion process of the physicians, and specialization of the Hospital departments.\"","Potentially Harmful Materials Statement:\nMaterials in this collection may contain distressing or disturbing content in a written, visual, or/and audiovisual format. Viewers should proceed with caution.","Photograph is possibly misidentified.","Photograph is possibly misidentified.","Three volumes from to the Alpha Omega Alpha records were originally processed as a distinct collection, labelled MS-53. These three volumes consisted of a chapter roll and minutes book from 1919 to 1955, a roll and minutes book from 1955 to 1969, and a treasurer's ledger covering 1922 to 1978.","Legacy Identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy biographical file. Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy biographical file. Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy biographical file. Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Digitized copy available.","Digitized copy available.","Originally processed as part of the School of Medicine Reports collection.","Materials in Box 77 comprise a set of directories previously collected and organized as \"Housestaff listings.\" These files contain the names, associated departments, and contact information for residents and interns.","Digitized copy available.","Digitized copy available.","Digitized copy available.","This file was originally processed as a separate collection, MS-25, titled the \"UVA Hospital Professional Staff Files, 1951-1990\". It has been incorporated into RG-17-1, however, its original order and arrangement has not been revised. Box 1 has been relabelled Box 88 and Box 2 relabelled Box 89.","The name of this group changes several times: 1976-1994 it is called the Pediatric Executive Committee; 1994-2005 it is called the Children's Medical Center Administrative Council; 2005-2011 it is called the Pediatric Administrative Council.","Potentially Harmful Materials Statement:","These videos may contain distressing or disturbing content in an audiovisual format. Viewers should proceed with caution. ","RG-17-1 includes records from multiple legacy collections held by the Claude Moore Health Sciences Library, including the UVA School of Medicine Reports (MS-66), UVA School of Medicine Biographical Files (MS-36), UVA Hospital Professional Staff Files (MS-25), UVA School of Medicine Chapter of Alpha Omega Alpha records (MS-53), and UVA Department of Medicine Housestaff and Chief Residents Photograph collection (MS-62). RG-17-1 also includes materials previously cataloged as separate items in Virgo (such as journals, newsletters, and reports), and materials from semi-processed legacy accessions, including the UVA School of Medicine Council on Medical Education records (Viuh-2015-26), UVA School of Medicine Faculty Files (Viuh-2015-27), and UVA School of Medicine Faculty Minutes (Viuh-2015-28). Bound materials are housed separately from the rest of the collection, and are generally referenced by individual item records (e.g. \"BIR-100\").","The items in this subseries formed a legacy collection originally processed in 2005 by Jiyoun Lee. This small legacy collection was referred to as the \"Reports from the Office of the Associate Dean of the Medical School, 1972-1977, MS-24\".","Placeholder Sub-Series: No content at this time.","Placeholder Sub-Series: No content at this time.","Placeholder Series: No content at this time.","Placeholder Sub-Series: No content at this time.","\nSome items in this series represent legacy content from two collections: \"University of Virginia School of Medicine Biographical files\" (Legacy identifier: MS-36) and the University of Virginia School of Medicine Faculty files (Legacy identifier: \tViU-H-2015-0027).\n","\nLegacy collection description from the MS-36 finding aid: \"This collection contains biographical information about University of Virginia School of Medicine faculty and friends mainly collected from University of Virginia publications, including the \"Bulletin of the University of Virginia Medical School and Hospital\" from 1941 to 1946, \"University of Virginia Medical Alumni News Letter\" from 1948-1973, \"University of Virginia Medical Alumnews\" from 1974-1991, and \"UVa Medical AlumNews\" beginning in 1992 and ongoing. Multiple articles from \"The Daily Progress\" as early as 1942 are also included as are single articles from other publications.\"\n","Former barcode number for item: 3470347210 (Inactive)","Placeholder Sub-Series: No content at this time.","Placeholder Series: No content at this time.","Folder assigned barcode: 3470316978 (relevant MARC record)","Materials found within the RG-17 classifications are frequently inter-related. Researchers of RG-17-1 UVA School of Medicine records may also want to consult: RG-17-2 UVA Medical Center records, RG-17-3 UVA School of Nursing records, RG-17-4 Claude Moore Health Sciences Library records, RG-17-5 Office of the Vice President for Health Affairs records, and RG-17-6 Department of Student Health records. [Some of these materials may not be currently available. All finding aids are works-in-progress.]","More information related to this Report can be found in the University of Virginia Medical Alumni Association records, MS-21.","The UVA School of Medicine records primarily document the history of the School at all levels of the organization during the 20th and 21st centuries.","Administrative records, including annual reports, meeting minutes, planning documents policies, and other materials, document operations, strategic initiatives, and decision making.","Communications records, including newsletters, blogs, websites, pamphlets, publications, and recordings, document events and public relations work.","Medical education and research records, including accreditation files, student records, syllabi, course catalogs, student organization records, commencement records, lectures, and conference reports, document the School's primary missions.","\nThe collection includes a number of records previously described elsewhere (e.g. as part of a former archival collection or as an indiviudal item described in the Library catalog). Among these are a large group of bound items. \n","\nThe UVA School of Medicine continues to transfer analog and digital records to the Claude Moore Health Sciences Library for inclusion in this collection.\n","Prior to the establishment of the records classification scheme outlined in this document, institutional archives were often organized by their office of creation. Rather than dividing these legacy collections, they are being kept intact and filed under this series.","This small legacy collection contains information related to awards given to faculty and students of the School of Medicine. Materials include descriptions of awards and the names of award recipients. The first folder, containing award information by year, concerns current and discontinued awards. Information on current awards given by the School of Medicine can be accessed at https://med.virginia.edu/student-affairs/student-resources/awards-and-honors/","\nThis series consists of annual and biennial reports produced by the School of Medicine and its constituent departments and units. This does not include individual faculty annual reports used for evaluation or review.\n","\nIn addition to annual reports produced by the School of Medicine, this series also contains several annual reports produced by the University of Virginia's Office of the President.\n","Department of Pediatrics Biennial Evaluation for 1984-1986 and Planning Report for 1988-1998","The annual report contains reports from individual departments or divisions: Anatomy, Anesthesiology, Biochemistry, Biomedical Engineering, Clinical Pathology, Dermatology, Internal Medicine, Microbiology, Neurological Surgery, Neurology, Obstetrics and Gynecology, Orthopedics, Otolaryngology, Pathology, Pediatrics, Pharmacology, Physiology, Psychiatry, Radiology, Surgery, and Urology. Internal Medicine was formally organized during the course of the year with the establishment of 12 divisions: Biometrics, Cardiology, Clinical Pharmacology, Endocrinology and Metabolism, Epidemiology and Virology, Gastroenterology, Hematology, Infectious Diseases, Nephrology, Oncology, Pulmonary-Allergy, and Rheumatology. Ten medical students were dropped for academic deficiencies during 1969-1970.","The annual report contains reports from individual departments or divisions: Anatomy, Anesthesiology, Biochemistry, Biomedical Engineering, Dermatology, Internal Medicine, Medical Library, Microbiology, Neurology, Neurological Surgery, Obstetrics and Gynecology, Ophthalmology, Orthopedics, Otolaryngology, Pathology, Pediatrics, Pharmacology, Physiology, Plastic Surgery, Psychiatry, Radiology, Surgery, Urology, and Vivarium. No students were dropped for academic deficiencies. Special recruitment was done by the Admissions Committee and faculty who visited 13 colleges with predominantly black enrollment.","The annual report contains reports from individual departments or divisions: Anatomy, Anesthesiology, Biochemistry, Biomedical Engineering, Dermatology, Internal Medicine, Medical Library, Microbiology, Neurosurgery, Neurology, Obstetrics and Gynecology, Ophthalmology, Orthopedics, Otolaryngology, Pathology, Pediatrics, Pharmacology, Physiology, Plastic Surgery, Psychiatry, Radiology, Student Health, Surgery, Urology, Vivarium, and Equal Opportunity Program. The report from the Equal Opportunity Program includes selection of new faculty and non-academic personnel of those underrepresented in the school. Specifically mentioned are women, black, Chicanos, Orientals, and Chinese.","Part I: The annual report contains reports from individual departments or divisions: Anatomy, Anesthesiology, Biochemistry, Biomedical Engineering, Dentistry, Dermatology, Family Medicine, Internal Medicine, Health Sciences Library, and Microbiology. At the front of the report is the School of Medicine Annual Report, 1973-74 and 1974-75, Part II Academic Affairs , Section III Dean's Summary and Recommendations. It states that due to new pressures and the need for better organization in the School of Medicine, and in response to University–wide programs, several tasks were completed by faculty. Some of these are included in the report including the identification and adoption of institutional goals, a report on plans and projections, a financial report to the President, and a preliminary policy report on promotions and tenure. The dean's summary gives information on a variety of topics, but of note is the formation of the Department of Family Practice on July 1, 1975 and a Division of Dentistry in 1974, the completion of the new Health Sciences Library, an award toward the construction of a Primary Care Building, and an experimental or alternative curriculum for the School of Medicine.","Part II: The annual report continues the reports from individual departments or divisions: Neurosurgery, Neurology, Obstetrics and Gynecology, Ophthalmology, Orthopedics, Otolaryngology, Pathology, Pediatrics, Pharmacology, Physiology, Plastic Surgery, Psychiatry, Radiology, Student Health, Surgery, and Urology.","The departments filled out reports addressing the selection of new faculty, the selection and promotion of non-academic personnel, and special efforts.","Section A, Part I: The annual report contains reports from individual departments or divisions: Anatomy, Anesthesiology, Biochemistry, Biomedical Engineering, Dentistry, Dermatology, Family Practice, Internal Medicine, Health Sciences Library, and Microbiology.","Section A, Part II: The annual report continues the reports from individual departments or divisions: Neurosurgery, Neurology, Obstetrics and Gynecology, Ophthalmology, Orthopedics, Otolaryngology, Pathology, Pediatrics, Pharmacology, Physiology, Plastic Surgery, Psychiatry, Radiology, Student Health, Surgery, and Urology.","Part C: Academic Planning, 1975 September 1 - 1976 September 1\nThe annual report includes a letter of request, summary of requests for faculty and space, and a one year extension of academic plan for the Departments of: Anatomy, Anesthesiology, Biochemistry, Biomedical Engineering, Dentistry, Dermatology, Family Practice, Internal Medicine, Microbiology, Neurology, Neurosurgery, Obstetrics and Gynecology, Ophthalmology, Orthopedics, Otolaryngology, Pathology, Pediatrics, Pharmacology, Physiology, Plastic Surgery, Psychiatry, Radiology, Surgery, Urology, and Western State Hospital.","The Dean's Summary includes Medical School Administration; Improving the Academic Environment for Students; Summary of Major Accomplishments in Instruction, Research, and Public Service; Summary of Major Modifications in Academic Programs, 1978-79; Major space considerations, 1978-79; Memorandum to Departments regarding Annual Report. Norman J. Knorr is the School of Medicine Dean. ","Part III, Book 1:The annual report contains reports from individual departments or divisions: Anatomy, Anesthesiology, Biochemistry, Biomedical Engineering, Dermatology, Dentistry, Family Practice, Internal Medicine, Microbiology, Neurology, and Neurosurgery.","Part III, Book 2: The annual report continues the reports from individual departments or divisions: Obstetrics and Gynecology, Orthopedics, Otolaryngology, Pathology, Pediatrics, Pharmacology, Physiology, Plastic Surgery, Psychiatry, Radiology, Surgery, Urology, and Roanoke.","The annual report includes a \"Summary of Major Accomplishments in Instruction, Research, and Public Service\" which highlights a few of the major accomplishments of the individual departments. Dean Norman Knorr mentions a major revision of the preclinical curriculum by the council on Medical Education and a new Division of Geriatrics under the leadership of Richard Lindsay with the anticipation of a special geriatric unit to be established at the Blue Ridge Sanatorium in the future. Currently there are established programs in epilepsy and outpatient Psychiatry at Blue Ridge. Another new Division is Geographic Medicine under the direction of Richard Guerrant. There is a report from the Office of Student Affairs and a break-down of SOM admissions.","The annual report contains the reports from individual departments or divisions: Anatomy, Anesthesiology, Biochemistry, Biomedical Engineering, Dentistry, Dermatology, Family Practice, Internal Medicine, Microbiology, Neurology, Neurosurgery, Obstetrics and Gynecology, Ophthalmology, Orthopedics, Otolaryngology, Pathology, Pediatrics, Pharmacology, Physiology, Plastic Surgery, Psychiatry, Radiology, Surgery, Urology, Roanoke Program.","A memo inserted in front of the 1978-1979 Annual Report from Dean Norman Knorr, dated September 14, 1981, indicates that the School of Medicine Biennial Report (formerly Annual Report) is waived this year as the plan is to submit the Self-Study Report in its place. The 1978-1979 annual report includes a \"Summary of Major Accomplishments in Teaching Programs, Research Programs, and Public Service Activities\" and a report from the Office of Student Affairs.","The annual report contains the reports from individual departments or divisions: Anatomy, Anesthesiology, Behavioral Medicine and Psychiatry, Biochemistry,  Biomedical Engineering, Dermatology, Dentistry, Family Practice, Internal Medicine, Microbiology, Neurology, Neurosurgery, Obstetrics and Gynecology, Ophthalmology, Orthopedics, Otolaryngology, Pathology, Pharmacology, Physiology, Plastic Surgery, Radiology, Surgery, Urology, Roanoke Program, Pediatrics.","This summary of the biennial report highlights a few of the accomplishments in teaching programs, training programs, clinical service programs, research programs, and public service activities. The School of Medicine did a self-study in preparation for the LCME accreditation site visit held in February 1982. The LCME conferred full accreditation of the program for 10 years. A new graduate program in Cell and Molecular Biology was established in 1982 and a number of new divisions were formed. New units opened at Blue Ridge Hospital and a Travelers Clinic and the Blue Ridge Poison Control Center were established at the University Hospital. UVa Medcial Center was designated a Level I Trauma Center in 1982. James W. Craig submitted a report from the Office of Student Affairs.","The annual report contains the reports from individual departments or divisions: Anatomy, Anesthesiology, Biochemistry,  Biomedical Engineering, Comparative Medicine, Dermatology, Family Medicine, Internal Medicine, Microbiology, Neurology, Neurosurgery, Obstetrics and Gynecology, Ophthalmology, Orthopedics, Otolaryngology, Pathology, Pediatrics, Pharmacology, Physiology, Plastic Surgery, Behavior Medicine and Psychiatry, Radiology, Surgery, Urology.","The annual report contains the reports from individual departments or divisions: Anatomy, Anesthesiology, Behavior Medicine and Psychiatry, Biochemistry,  Biomedical Engineering, Comparative Medicine, Dentistry, Family Medicine, Internal Medicine, Microbiology, Neurology, Neurosurgery, Obstetrics and Gynecology, Ophthalmology, Orthopedics, Otolaryngology, Pathology, Pediatrics, Pharmacology, Physiology, Plastic Surgery, Radiology, Surgery, Urology.","Reports from: Robert M. Epstein, Chair of the Department of Anesthesiology; W.W. Spradlin, Chair of the Department of Behavioral Medicine and Psychiatry; Charles J. Flickinger, Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology; Department of Biochemistry; Department of Biomedical Engineering; Department of Comparative Medicine; Byard S. Deputy, Chair of the Department of Dentistry; Department of Dermatology; John C. Herr, Lymphocyte Culture Center; Edward W. Hook, Chair of the Department of Medicine; Department of Microbiology; John A. Jane, the Department of Neurosurgery; T. J. Johns, Chair of the Department of Neurology; Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology; Brian P. Conway, Chair of the Department of Ophthalmology; Department of Otolaryngology; Thomas W. Tillack, Chair of the Department of Pathology; Robert M. Blizzard, Chair of the Department of Pediatrics; Department of Pharmacology; Department of Physiology; Gaylord S. Williams, the Department of Plastic and Maxillofacial Surgery; T. E. Keats, Chair of the Department of Radiology; Department of Surgery; Department of Urology.","Titled \"The University Report\"; likely a precursor to the University of Virginia President's Report publications.","Correspondence and subject files of selected deans and department heads and other significant leaders in the School of Medicine.","\nContent in this subseries documents the history of the University of Virginia Medical Center from 1972 to 1977. In this period, the University Medical Center was taking steps toward not only the enlargement of its resources - facilities, personnel, and finance - but also its major programs - education, research, and patient care. The beginning of the Family Practice Primary Care Curriculum in 1975 and the projects for the expansion of existing hospital buildings and purchase of the Towers Hospital were remarkable developments in this period. All these projects were planned based on the UVA Medical Center's wide-ranging self-surveys and implemented under the guidance of William R. Drucker, Dean of the School of Medicine and James W. Craig, Associate Dean of the School of Medicine.\n","\nIncluded are reports on the University of Virginia Medical Center from 1972 to 1977 which detail extensive information on the Medical Center in this period, its organization, administration, educational programs, faculty, student, library system, finances, medical center facilities, major activities, graduate program, clinical activities, admission data, etc. Of Particular interest are documents on the Family Practice Primary Care Curriculum that was planned and organized by James W. Craig in 1975. Also present are materials on the Medical Center's expansion project including the purchase of the Towers Hospital.\n","[Final] Report of the President's ad hoc Committee on Faculty Staffing Policy of the University of Virginia, submitted to University President Edgar F. Shannon Jr.","The records in this series document commencement and graduation events for the School of Medicine. They include, but are not limited to programs and schedules of events.","The records in this series document the planning of historically significant administrative changes or projects, major purchases, and significant events which are historically significant at the School of Medicine.","This series documents the formal accreditation of the School of Medicine by educational accreditation organizations. Materials in this series may include, but is not limited to: self study reports, final reports, and questions and responses.","\"University of Virginia School of Medicine Summary of the Findings and Recommendations of the Institutional Self-Study Task Force.\" The Chair of the Steering Committee was Fritz E. Dreifuss. Also included is a Synopsis of Student Opinion.","\"Report of the Survey of the University of Virginia School of Medicine By the Liaison Committee on Medical Education Representing the American Medical Association and the Association of American Medical Colleges.\" The Ad Hoc Survey Team recommended that the School of Medicine continue in full accreditation for a period of ten years and that a report be submitted to the Liaison committee on Medical Education (LCME) in five years to address issues of concern noted in the summary of this report.","\"University of Virginia School of Medicine, Summary of the Findings and Recommendations of the Institutional Self-Study Task Force\"","Report of the University of Virginia School of Medicine, Charlottesville, Virginia, Prepared by an Ad Hoc Survey Team for the Liaison Committee on Medical Education (LCME) representing the Association of American Medical Colleges and the American Medical Association.\nThe report is the final report for 1998, and includes a prior accreditation survey and progress reports.","University of Virginia School of Medicine LCME Institutional Self Study Summary Report","Medical Education Database Sections I-V, and Appendix of Supporting Documents. The sections are: I. Institutional Setting, II. Educational Program for the M.D. Degree, III. Medical Students, IV. Faculty, V. Educational Resources","Required Course and Clerkship Forms (Years One through Four), University of Virginia School of Medicine","Medical Student Analysis and Graduation Questionnaire Results University of Virginia School of Medicine for the Liaison Committee on Medical Education","University of Virginia School of Medicine LCME Self-Study Summary Report","Required Course and Clerkship forms (Years One through Four) University of Virginia School of Medicine","Medical Student Analysis and Graduation Questionnaire Results for the Liaison Committee on Medical Education","Medical Education Database Sections I-V University of Virginia School of Medicine. LCME Data Collection Instrument for Full Accreditation Academic Year 2014-2015; Section I. Institutional Setting, II. Educational Program for the M.D. Degree, III. Medical Students, IV. Faculty, V. Educational Resources.","University of Virginia Self-Study Summary Report, Edited by Elaine M. Hadden, 1974 August 21\nThe report is part of the reaccreditation process that is required every ten years by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools. This report covers the entire university with only a part devoted to the School of Medicine.","University of Virginia Self-Study Report, 1984-1986, the executive summary of Continuing Education, Institutes, and other outreach activities. A letter from Oscar A. Thorup to William H. Muller discusses the summary that is included.","Norman J. Knorr from the School of Medicine is sent the report and asked to review the Draft. This report states that UVa as a \"predominately white, southern institution has been trying for several years to achieve genuine heterogeneity by encouraging the admission of minority students, and particularly black students to every school of the University. Partly under the pressure of a 1978 court order, substantial steps have been taken towards meeting this goal and it is the purpose of this section of our report to evaluate our achievements to date.\" There are two copies of the draft, one with changes written in.","Article titled \"Self-study moves to review phase\"","This series consists of digital and analog images showing the people and activities of the School of Medicine. Image formats in this series include, but are not limited to, photographic prints, film negatives, glass plate negatives, jpeg files, tiff files, and 35mm film slides. The series does not include official identification photographs for faculty, students, and staff.","Left to right: Richard E. Katholi, Edward W. Hook (Department Chair), John F. Kiraly III","Left to right: George B. Craddock, Edward W. Hook (Department Chair), L. Dwight Wooster","Left to right: James E. Sipes, Edward W. Hook (Department Chair), Robert L. Thompson","Left to right: John W. Zirkle, Edward W. Hook (Department Chair), Richard P. Keeling","Left to right: Sandra C. Foote, Edward W. Hook (Department Chair)","Left to right: Robert S. Gibson, Merle A. Sande, Oksanna M. Korzeniowski","Left to right: Edward W. Hook (Department Chair), John T. Bowers, Michael J. Oblinger","Left to right: Richard J. Gualtieri, Gary C. Murray, Edward W. Hook (Department Chair)","Left to right: Carl D. Malchoff, Robert E. Boyd, Edward W. Hook (Department Chair)","Left to right: Michael S. Collins, Edward W. Hook (Department Chair), Michael E. Williams","Left to right: Edward W. Hook (Department Chair), John B. Schorling, Donald R. Lilly, Munsey S. Wheby","Left to right: Christopher D. Lind, Munsey S. Wheby, Edward W. Hook (Department Chair), R.M. Fulchiero","Left to right: Munsey S. Wheby, Shalendra K. Varma, C. Foster Jennings, Edward W. Hook (Department Chair)","Left to right: Ali T. Afrookteh, Edward W. Hook (Department Chair), Munsey S. Wheby, Herbet E. Cushing","Left to right: Edward W. Hook (Department Chair), Raymond P. Smith, Brian E. Robinson, Munsey S. Wheby","Left to right: Munsey S. Wheby, Walter E. Smalley Jr., Nicholas W. Gemma, Edward W. Hook (Department Chair)","Left to right: Munsey S. Wheby, Kevin P. High, Colleen A. McNamara, Edward W. Hook (Department Chair)","Left to right: John C. Marshall (Department Chair), Raymond Brig, Munsey S. Wheby, William V. Burgess","Left to right: John C. Marshall (Department Chair), Matthew T. Goodman, Brian G. Bachhuber, Munsey S. Wheby","Left to right: Paul V. DeMarco, John C. Marshall (Department Chair), Glen L. Portwood","Left to right: April C. Sempien, John C. Marshall (Department Chair), Paul S. Buckley","Left to right: Gregory R. Weidner, John C. Marshall (Department Chair), Anthony Marano","Left to right: Christina W. Prillaman, John C. Marshall (Department Chair), William H. Maynard","Left to right: Scott A. Robinson, Munsey S. Wheby (Department Chair), Margaret R. Reitmeyer","Left to right: Christopher A. Klipstein, Michael O. Thorner (Department Chair), Thomas R. Gehrig","Left to right: J. Murray Estess, Michael O. Thorner (Department Chair), Richard M. Ingram","Left to right: Mitchell H. Rosner, Michael O. Thorner (Department Chair), Maria O. Masedo","Left to right: Christopher S. Reid, Michael O. Thorner (Department Chair), [unidentified]","Left to right: Andrew E. Lazar, Michael O. Thorner (Department Chair), [unidentified]","Left to right: [unidentified], Michael O. Thorner (Department Chair; seated), Aalya H. Crowl","Left to right: [unidentified], Robert M. Strieter (Department Chair), [unidentified], [unidentified]","First row, left to right: Jennifer L. Kirby, [unidentified]; Second row, left to right: Robert M. Strieter (Department Chair), Jason J. Lewis","Left to right: Jonathan Bleeker, Clay A. Cauthen, Robert M. Strieter (Department Chair), Adam Helms, [unidentified]","Left to right: Adam Zivony, Luther Bartelt, Robert M. Strieter (Department Chair), Joshua King, Danielle M. Rottkamp","Left to right: [unidentified], [unidentified], Mitchell H. Rosner (Department Chair), [unidentified], [unidentified]","Left to right: Mitchell H. Rosner (Department Chair), Heather Y. Hughes, Christopher J. Arnold, Amanda Russell-Kleiner","Internal Medicine, Third year residents: First row, left to right: Catherine Staropoli, April Stempien, Joyce Geilker, Shannon Story, Janine Maenza, Cherly Quigley, Carolyn Apple; Second row, left to right: Zach Dameron, Rodney Sepich, Alex Fenton, Charlie Duckworth, David Balaban; Third row, left to right: Andy Lazris, Steve Stephenson, Ralph Buckley, Mo Nadkarni","Left to right: John C. Marshall (1991-1996), William Parson (1949-1966), Edward W. Hook (1969-1990)","First row, left to right: William Parson (1949-1966), Michael O. Thorner (1997-2006), Munsey S. Wheby (1996-1997); Second row, left to right: John C. Marshall (1991-1996), Edward W. Hook (1969-1990)","Internal Medicine group photographs","First row: Daniel Mohler, Julian Beckwith, Thomas Hunter, Andrew Hart, unidentified, Edward Hook, Richard Guerrant, Bryd Leavell, John Guerrant, unidentified, unidentified","Box 81: Folder 38 contains photographs of Susan Gaston, Latha Shivaram, Meg Keeley, Kathy Smith, Mark Mendelsohn, Margaret Mohrman, and one unidentified. Box 92: Folder 18 contains photographs of 15 identified persons.","Most individuals identified. Photograph includes faculty members, assistant residents, and interns. Surgery faculty pictured: William Roberts Sandusky, Elton Meredith Alrich, Charles Bruce Morton II, George Ridgeway Minor, and Duncan Parham. (Not pictured: Everett Cato Drash.)","Photograph of a portrait of Barringer, includes several negatives.","Students with Harvey E. Jordan (first row, eighth from left)","Possibly members of the Class of 1925. Theodore Hough: first row, fifth from left. Harvey E. Jordan: first row, sixth from left.","Possibly members of the Class of 1926. Harvey E. Jordan is in the first row, fifth from left. Photograph by Holsinger.","These items consist of two (2) 16mm silent black and white film reels with a total amount of around 15 minutes of footage. The films seem to depict people exiting a building on the University of Virginia grounds after the 1946 School of Medicine commencement ceremonies.","Documents information that the School of Medicine provides to the public and business or government communities. Includes statements, visual aids, press releases and news clippings regarding historically significant events.","This series consists of publications produced by the School of Medicine for public distribution or general internal distribution. Publications include, but are not limited to, magazines, journals, monographs, newsletters, weblogs, weekly announcements, online publications, marketing materials, and patient education resources. This series contains both print and digital publications. This series does not include student publications or admissions materials.","This subseries consists of both digital and print magazines and journals published by the School of Medicine.","Publication subtitle: \"A journal of reflective practice in word and image\". Published by the University of Virginia School of Medicine. Features art, photography, fiction, and poetry by medical student authors. Some issues of the publication were also published online: http://hospitaldrive.org/","A journal published by the Center for the Study of Mind and Human Interaction at the University of Virginia. The Center was founded by psychiatrist Dr. Vamik Volkan. Subjects covered in the journal include psychiatry and psychoanalysis. Intended as a quarterly publication; some issues may be missing from the Library's collections. Publication discontinued September 2005. Description of the journal from Volume 4, No. 3: Mind \u0026 Human Interaction \"explores the unconscious and conscious interplay between the internal and external worlds of human beings. It analyzes current events by drawing on the expertise of an international and interdisciplinary pool of scholars and statesmen, primarily from a psychoanalytic frame of reference\".","Published by the University of Virginia School of Medicine. Periodical highlights research and news pertaining to medical education and clinical care.","Biannual journal published by the University of Virginia Health System. Content includes \"clinical vignettes,\" medical grand rounds, clinical reviews and commentaries, and editorial pieces. Discontinued in October 2011. Some issues were also published online: https://med.virginia.edu/dom/education/professional-education/journal-of-medicine-archive/","Publication includes a collection of creative works by medical students; publication organized by the Program of Humanities in Medicine and the Center for Biomedical Ethics and Humanities at the School of Medicine. Co-directors include Marcia Day Childress and Julia E. Connelly. \"Veritas is the University of Virginia School of Medicine's literary arts magazine. Published annually since 1994 and student-edited since 2000. Veritas showcases original writing, art, and photography by UVA medical students.\" (Description from Veritas Volume 33)","Volumes 28-31, and 33.","This subseries consists of digital and print newsletters that provide information about the activities of the School of Medicine and its units and departments.","Newsletter of the University of Virginia Department of Biomedical Engineering. \"[The Newsletter] will provide a vehicle for informing the UVA community of activities within the Department of Biomedical Engineering and... establish a continuous link with... BME alumni who have graduated over the last twenty-five years.\" (From the Spring 1990 issue)","Published by the University of Virginia Hospital for the staff of the departments of ophthalmology and otolaryngology.","Periodical published by the University of Virginia School of Medicine, Office of the Dean. Includes topics pertaining to the history of the Department of Medicine and University Hospital. Available issues: Vol. 1, No. 1 - Vol. 3, No. 2 (Fall 1941-Spring 1947).","Produced by the Beirne B. Carter Center for Immunology Research at the University of Virginia. Alternate title: \"BCC News\". Print newletter transitioned to a publication in electronic form (no longer available). Publication discontinued.","Published by the University of Virginia School of Medicine, Office of the Dean. Authored by Dr. William R. Drucker. Issues published irregularly during 1974-1977;  topics covered relate to medical education news, medical faculty, and internship assignments.","Subtitle: \"A Newsletter from the Heart Center\". May 2002, Issue 76 is the only issue present in the collection. Issue 76 is a National Hospital Week 80th anniversary edition, featuring \"then and now\" sections comparing cardiovascular care in the 1980s and early 2000s.","Newsletter of the University of Virginia Department of Biomedical Engineering. Includes departmental news, remarks from the Chair, and student and faculty highlights.","Published by the University of Virginia Medical Center. Alternate title \"House Staff Newsletter\".","Publication produced by University Communications. The 2017 issue (Volume 5) is the Bicentennial edition of the publication. Also published online at https://illimitable.virginia.edu/ Appears to have been discontinued in 2019.","Institute for Substance Abuse Studies (I.S.A.S.) Update, a University of Virginia Health Sciences Center newsletter from the Institute for Substance Abuse Studies. 2 issues present in the collection: April 1992, Number 1 and August 1992, Number 2.","Published by the University of Virginia Medical School, Pediatrics Department.","Published by the University of Virginia School of Medicine, Division of Clinical Pharmacology. Variant title: \"Pharmacy and the physician\".","A newsletter from the School of Medicine, published as an online blog on http://www.healthsystem.virginia.edu and later on http://www.medicine.virginia.edu. Issues in the collection are print-outs from these websites. Topics include School of Medicine news and events, faculty spotlights, information on grants and accreditation processes, and written remarks from the Dean.","Published by the University of Virginia Department of Radiology as a quarterly departmental newsletter. Publication discontinued.","Published by the University of Virginia Medical Center, Department of Psychiatry. Some volumes are missing from the series.","Produced by the University of Virginia School of Medicine; includes lists of administrators and departmental leaders; faculty, housestaff, and student statistics; highlights of faculty achievements; description of academic programs; description of teaching hospital and patient care facilities; selected research highlights; brief overview of financial affairs and School of Medicine budget. Contents may vary by year.","Brochure featuring seven women chosen for a photographic portrait project on women faculty in the School of Medicine. Brochure includes small reproductions of the seven portraits. Project participants: Tracy Hoke, MD; Victoria Norwood, MD; Elayne Phillips, RN, MPH, PhD, FAAN; Myla Goldman, MD, MSc; Veronica Michaelsen, MD, MSc; Mary Ropka, PhD; and Lori Cronkin, MD.","Pediatric research promotional brochure","Final reports for research projects conducted by students, faculty, and staff of the School of Medicine where the results are not published. Does not include research data.","This series consists of the records of student organizations sponsored by the School of Medicine. These records include, but are not limited to charters, bylaws, membership lists, leadership information, significant photographs, web pages, meeting minutes, and audiovisual recordings. This series also includes student publications including, but not limited to, student-produced newsletters, weblogs, and yearbooks.","The book includes minutes of meetings, lists of new members, and peakers and topics of the talks given at the meetings for inducted members. Also included are news clippings of an event in November 1947 in which Dr. Philip S. Hench gave a presentation about Walter Reed and yellow fever, one clipping about the March 1950 AOA elections at UVA, and one about the 1945 elections.","The book includes minutes of meetings, lists of new members, and speakers and topics of the talks given at the meetings for inducted members.","The book includes expenses and income from dues, banquets, printing, lecture costs, etc.","Newsletter of the Mulholland Society, a UVA medical student organization. Published by the University of Virginia School of Medicine. Variant title: \"M.D.\" Collection contains an incomplete run of the publication.","UVA Chapter of  Phi Beta Pi, a professional fraternity for medical students that dates back to the 1890s. This fraternal organization is no longer active.","\n\"Founded in 1964 at Meharry Medical College and Howard University College of Medicine, the Student National Medical Association is the oldest and largest independent, student-run organization focused on the needs and concerns of medical students of color. SNMA has grown to over 5000 members throughout the United States and the Caribbean. Our mission is to address community health issues impacting underserved Americans and to increase minority representation in health professional fields. Through our signature MAPS, HPREP, and YSEP programs, SNMA members work with students from elementary school through college to introduce them to science and serve as mentors. In this way, SNMA strengths the educational pipeline that leads from elementary school to medical school.\"\n","\nDescription from the SNMA website: https://med.virginia.edu/snma/about/ (2022 January)\n","Newsletter of the University of Virginia Chapter of the Student National Medical Association. Collection contains: Vol. 1, No. 1 April 1994. Variant title: University of Virginia SNMA medical newsletter. Publication discontinued (date of discontinuation unknown).","\nAnnual programs produced by the University of Virginia School of Medicine fourth year class. Video recordings of the program are available for most years listed below (original video format varies). Printed programs and scripts are available for some years only. Variant titles include: Medical show, School of Medicine student class play, Medical school class play, 4th year class play, Fourth year class play, 4th year class movie, Fourth year class movie, University of Virginia School of Medicine class video.\n","\nProgram titles:","Amoritis (love bug fever) (The medical show - 1937) \"Holza-poppin\" (The medical show - 1940) \"Men in tattle-tale gray\" (The medical school show - 1947) Post mortem class of 1950 (Medical school class film 1950) Last class play (Medical school class play - 1972) Guiding light (Medical school class play - 1974) Doctor in the house (Medical school class play - 1976) Tonight show, with Johny Carcinoma (Medical school class play - 1980) Hospital box office journal of medicine (Medical school class play - 1981) Ileus and the oddity of gomer (Medical school class play - 1983) MDTV guide: the new wave (Medical school class play - 1984) Trivial pursuit: tales of the scutbusters (Medical school cass play - 1985) Real to reel (Medical school class play - 1986) 60 beats: ectopic focus on the medical world (Medical school class play - 1987) From the far side: late night with Dr. Letterman (Medical school class play - 1988) On the road to wizdom (Medical school class play - 1989) Lost in the link (Medical school class play - 1990) MDTV guide: [skits, songs, etc.] (Medical school class play - 1991) Wonder years (Medical school class play - 1992) Quantum beep (Medical school class play - 1993) Health care reform school (Medical school class play - 1994) Class play skits program (Medical school class play - 1999) Must see M.D. (Medical school class play - 2000) Rolling stone (Carey's Angels, Matchless and the Crocodile Hunter) Saturday night live (Medical school class play - 2001) Surgical snack mask and survivor intro (Medical school class movie? - 2001) Carey's angels footage (Medical school class movie? - 2001) DirectMD: a multimedia experience in two acts (Medical school class play - 2002) A day in the life of a med student (Medical school class play - 2003) The greatest show on earth (Medical school class play - 2004) \"True confessions\" (Medical school class play - 2007) Med school movie 2008 (Medical school class play - 2008) University of Virginia School of Medicine class of 2009 video (Medical school class play - 2009) 4th year movie, SMD 2010 (Medical school class movie - 2010)","This item is a program from the May 7-9, 1981 play entitled \"The Hospital Box Office Journal of Medicine.\"","This item is a program for the play \"Candida Camera,\" a Class of 1982 production running May 6-8, 1982.","Yearbooks for the School of Medicine have been produced inconsistently over the years. For some early years, medical students can be found in the University-wide Corks \u0026 Curls publications (not available in this collection except for 1941-1942; see the Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections Library for additional items). For a short time between 1947-1970, a yearbook for the medical school titled \"Biopsy\" was produced. During the 1980s, a medical school edition of Corks \u0026 Curls was produced. From 1989-2017, a School of Medicine-specific yearbook was produced by the medical students. The medical school yearbook was discontinued after 2017.","Only four volumes of the University of Virginia School of Medicine yearbook titled \"Biopsy\" were published, for the years: 1947, 1948, 1949, and 1970. The yearbook also incorporated content featuring students from the University of Virginia School of Nursing. Variant title: Medical School student yearbook.","Corks \u0026 Curls Medical School Edition. Volumes from 1982-1988 include a special section pertaining to the activities and students of the University of Virginia School of Medicine. Corks \u0026 Curls is the student yearbook of the University of Virginia, started in 1888 and produced by students until 2008. Student yearbooks have been produced inconsistently since 2008. See the Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections Library for all available volumes.","Student yearbooks produced annually by the students of the School of Medicine from 1989-2017. Design and content varies by year; some years have individual titles. Variant titles: Vitruvius, Just In Time, At Last, Medical School Yearbook.","\"Prepared and funded under the auspices for the Student Council of the University of Virginia.\" Section on legal aspects (p. 13-22) includes information on drug control laws of Virginia, U.S., Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and New York.","Produced by the University of Virginia School of Medicine Class of 1899 as a biographical and historical record of the Class.","Produced by the University of Virginia School of Medicine Class of 1899. Includes faculty listing, class resolution and history, a poem titled \"Reveries of a young practitioner\" by Charles Bickly Fox, and a list of graduates. 16 pages. Variant titles: Ninety nine, Medical class of 1899 of the University of Virginia.","Contains biographical letters written in 1910 by members of the University of Virginia School of Medicine Class of 1899 to the Class Secretary, David Russell Lyman. 47 pages.","Published by the University of Virginia Medical Center. Caption reads: \"A student journal of opinion and debate, U.VA. School of Medicine.\" Vol. 1, No. 1 dated January 1969. Incomplete run of publication in collection.","News of the Students and Faculty of the Univeristy of Virginia School of Medicine. Newsletter produced by a UVA medical student editorial board. Journal issued bimonthly during the academic year. Incomplete run of publication in collection.","The records in this series document the organizational structure of the School of Medicine. It also contains records that document administrative reorganizations of the School of Medicine. These materials include, but are not limited to, organizational charts and reports.","Copyright restrictions may apply.","This series contains policies, procedures, and handbooks produced by the School of Medicine to direct and guide the conduct of its faculty, staff, and students. These records may also formally describe and define the relationship between the School of Medicine and its faculty, staff, and students.","Published by the University of Virginia. \"The purpose of the handbook is ... to provide a guide to the organization, governance, and administration of the School of Medicine ... to bring together the major policies of the School of Medicine ... [and] to alert the faculty to other sources of information and services.\" Description from 1997 Handbook, page iii. Variant title: School of Medicine faculty handbook.","A resource guide for graduate and professional students at the University of Virginia produced by the Office of the Dean of Students. Includes content on the history of UVA, information on student services and student government, guide to local activities and entertainment, and short essays by faculty on the subject of \"Perspectives on the Educational Experience\".","Student handbook or manual produced for matriculating students at the University of Virginia School of Medicine. Title and contents vary by year. Variant titles: Information for Entering Students, Student Handbook. Later available in electronic form titled \"The Student Source\".","\"Prepared by Virginia Delta Chapter, Alpha Epsilon Delta and Thomas L. Pearce, Assistant Dean, College of Arts and Sciences, Preprofessional Advisor, Office of Career Planning and Placement.\" Published by the Office of Career Planning \u0026 Placement. Variant title: University of Virginia Premedical handbook","Produced by ClubMed of the University of Virginia. ClubMed is \"a student run organization whose purpose is to foster interest in Internal Medicine.\" Guide is intended \"to provide orientation for 3rd year medical students embarking on their Internal Medicine clerkships\" and \"to answer most of the questions which arise at the beginning of third year, while providing advice, suggestions, and practical approaches for the medicine wards.\" (Description from Preface.) Item cover reads \"Fifth Edition\". Fifth Edition Editor: Neil Zakai.","The series contains historically significant syllabi and other educational materials (e.g. laboratory notebooks, course notes) used in courses offerred by the School of Medicine. The majority of the items in this series are single instances of syllabi from a particular course or professor.","Materia Medica Notes: Published for the Use of the Class in the University of Virginia, by Anderson Bros., Publishers and Bookseller, Copyrighted by Anderson Bros., University of Virginia. 1892.\nCopy 1: Owned by Dr. William Levi Old, Class of 1894, and donated to the Health Sciences Library by his grandson, Dr. William Levi Old, III, Class of 1976. Copy is signed: \"W. Levi Old, Univ. of Va., 1893-4, 2nd year Med.\"; with extensive handwritten notes throughout.\nCopy 2: Signed \"Paul B. Barringer, Univ. of Va.\"; some handwritten notes; \"P.B.B.\" and \"B\" printed in pen on edge of pages; damaged binding and spine.","Materia Medica: Drug Lists and Laboratory Exercises, Foreward by James Alexander Waddell.\nSigned and donated by Fred E. Cleveland, School of Medicine Class of 1941; handwritten notes throughout.","Syllabus of the Lectures on Medical Jurisprudence and on the Treatment of Poisoning \u0026 Suspended Animation,\ndelivered in the University of Virginia, by Professor [Robley] Dunglison. Printed for the use of the students. [Charlottesville] University of Virginia, Printed by C. P. M'Kennie, 1827.","Postgraduate course in Obstetrics and Gynecology conducted by The Department of Clinical and Medical Education of the Medical Society of Virginia, in cooperation with the University of Virginia Medical School, the Medical College of Virginia, the Virginia State Department of Health, the Children's Bureau, United States Department of Labor. Issued by the University of Virginia Extension Division.","Postgraduate course in Obstetrics and Gynecology conducted by The Department of Clinical and Medical Education of the Medical Society of Virginia, in cooperation with the University of Virginia Medical School, the Medical College of Virginia, the Virginia State Department of Health, the Children's Bureau, United States Department of Labor. Issued by the University of Virginia Extension Division.","Laboratory Manual for Experimental Pharmacology, published by Department of Pharmacology, Univeristy of Virginia School of Medicine, [1965], for use in an introductory laboratory course in pharmacology; exercises designed for 3 hour laboratory periods.","This series consists of the records of the development and creation of fundraising campaigns and reporting of campaign status. Includes financial information, theme and branding information, and master plans.","University of Virginia Advancement publication; Contains an article on Randolph Pillow, an alumnus who donated artifacts to the School of Medicine that now reside at the Claude Moore Health Sciences Library.","This series consists of records of trusts or endowments to the School of Medicine, including history of trustees and investments. Includes agreements, stipulations, stock accounts, and end of year reports.","This series documents the classes offered in the School of Medicine each semester. This series may include, but is not limited to: course descriptions and faculty course assignments.","The University of Virginia record, published by the University of Virginia. Includes a catalogue of the officers (faculty, instructors, administrators, and other staff) and students of the University of Virginia, descriptions of individual schools and departments, rules and regulations related to admissions and graduation, and information on curricula and textbooks used. Contents may vary by year.","Issues of the University of Virginia record pertaining to the School of Medicine, published by the University of Virginia; in some places referred to as the \"School of Medicine Announcements\" or \"Catalogs\". Includes listings of faculty, instructors, administrators, other personnel, and students of the University of Virginia School of Medicine, rules and regulations related to admissions and graduation, description of medical education and clinical facilities, and information on the medical curriculum. Each issue also includes a list of graduates with an M.D. from the previous year. Contents may vary by year.","Alternate title: \"Electives at the University of Virginia\". Includes material related to the medical curriculm. Transferred to the archives from the School of Medicine Office of Student Affairs.","Issues of the University of Virginia record (graduate edition), also known as the course catalog, published by the University of Virginia.","Issues of the University of Virginia record (undergraduate edition), also known as the course catalog, published by the University of Virginia.","Item published in 1979 by the Claude Moore Health Sciences Library. Lists the University of Virginia medical faculty from 1825-1826 to 1944-1945 and the position(s) they held. 50 pages.","This series documents the addition of donated items, including artwork, into the collections of the School of Medicine. This series may include receipts, agreements, logs, and any other records documenting custody or ownership.","This series consists of publications that were produced in order to recruit students to apply and attend educational programs at the School of Medicine. May include information on programs, majors, schools, and other academic and community activities.","The Biomedical Sciences Graduate Program (BIMS) is an interdisciplinary graduate program at the University of Virginia. It provides training and research opportunities for PhD candidates in partnership with the School of Medicine, Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, and School of Engineering and Applied Sciences.","PUblished by the Office of University Publications at the University of Virginia. Contains entrance requirements and admissions information for admitted students to the University of Virginia Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. Variant title: Admissions catalog","Informational publication for students in Biochemistry and Molecular Genetics. Also includes admission policies and procedures and faculty profiles. Variant title: The Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Genetics graduate program information","Promotional brochure prepared for students entering the University of Virginia School of Medicine. 20 pages.","This series consists of programs and reports that document the history of conferences and symposia hosted by the [major administrative unit]. Programs and reports often contain the following information: lists of speakers, presentation titles, schedules of events, and lecture abstracts. The following coneference records are not included in this series:","registration records\nfinancial records\norganization records\nattendance lists","Materials include programs and flyers for the University of Virginia Department of Medicine's annual research day. Variant titles: Annual Research Day in Internal Medicine, Internal Medicine Research Day","This series consists of significant material that conveys the history of the School of Medicine, its administration, its accomplishments, its officials or employees. Includes, but is not limited to, scrapbooks, photographs, articles, program notes and documentation of events sponsored or funded by the agency. Also included are narratives; printed, audio, or audiovisual histories; or matters of significant historical importance.","This subseries consists of biographies and files that contain biographical information for significant faculty, staff, and students associated with the School of Medicine. Materials in the biographical files include, but are not limited to, resumes, currciculum vitaes, clippings, obituaries, articles, and photographs. Some of the biographical files have been assembled by archivists others by various departments in the School of Medicine.","\"A Celebration of Lifetime Achievements in Honor of Robert M. Carey, MD, MACP, FAHA, FRCPI\", by University of Virginia School of Medicine, Division of Endocrinology and Metabolism, 2015 [?].\nContains numerous photographs and remembrances of Dr. Carey written by colleagues and friends, including Zhenqi Liu, Nancy Dunlap, Mitchell Rosner, Carlos Ayers, Gene Barrett, Paula Barrett, George A. Beller, Sarah Creef Baugher, Eric Davis, Don D. Detmer...","Reprinted from the Bulletin of the New York Academy of Medicine, Second Series, Vol. 48, No. 5, pp. 791-798, June 1972.","Manuscript of a history of Robley Dunglison written by Jack Owen Tannett, the great-great-grandson of Dunglison, in honor of the 200th anniversary of Dunglison's birth. Also contains correspondence from Tannett regarding his research.","\"Edwin Partridge Lehman, Professor of Surgery: An Appreciation of Twenty Years as a Teacher of Surgery at the University of Virginia, School of Medicine\".\nProceedings of a dinner held November 19, 1948, at Farmington in honor of Dr. Edwin P. Lehman. Speakers included Colgate Darden, Harvey E. Jordan, I.A. Bigger, Daniel Elkin, Edwin Shearburn. Program includes a list of Dr. Lehman's publications, 1914-1948.","Contained within the Alumni Bulletin of the University of Virginia, Third Series, Vol. I, No. 1. January 1908.\n\"John J. Moran,\" 3 excerpts, p. 67-69.\nTable of Contents for this issue also lists: \"The growth of public education in America\", \"The University of Virginia in 1829\", \"History of the Ph.D. degree of the University of Virginia\", \"The University and Virginia\", \"Class organization\", \"Training in public speaking\", \"The colonnade club\", \"Jefferson bust\", \"Professor Francis H. Smith honored\", \"Professor Noah K. Davis honored\", \"New members of the teaching staff\", \"Goings and doings of the faculty\", \"Items of interest\" and \"Literary notices\".","\"Lawrence Thomas Royster, MD\"Article by Armistead Page Booker. In \"Pediatric Newsletter\", Vol. 9, No. 2, Spring 1985. Publication of the Department of Pediatrics, Children's Medical Center of the University of Virginia. p. 2-4","Contained within the Alumni Bulletin of the University of Virginia, Third Series, Vol. IX, No. 3. July 1916.\n3 pieces on Richard Henry Whitehead, and 1 piece written by Richard Henry Whitehead.\n\"Richard Henry Whitehead--An Appreciation\", by Edwin A. Alderman, p. 379-380. Reprinted from Corks and Curls, 1916.\n\"Richard Henry Whitehead--Early Years and Life at the University of North Carolina\", by William de B. MacNider, p. 380-384.\n\"Richard Henry Whitehead and the University of Virginia\", by Theodore Hough, p. 385-399.\n\"University Atmosphere\", by R.H. (Richard Henry) Whitehead, p. 400-405. Presidential address delivered before the Philosophical Society of the University of Virginia, May 6, 1915. Reprinted from the Proceedings of the Philosophical Society, 1912-1915.\nTable of Contents for this issue also lists: \"Finals\", \"President Alderman's last word\", \"The graduates\", \"Apppointments by the Board of Visitors\", \"Rector Gordon's welcome to the alumni\", \"Alumni present at finals\", \"Business meeting of the general alumni association\", \"The old University in the new\", \"Democracy and education\", \"A great night\", \"Resolutions of the general faculty\", \"Theodore Sandford Garnett, Jr., 1844-1915\", \"The department of education\", \"News of the University and faculty\".","This subseries consists of narrative essays, articles, and monographs that tell the story of discrete units and departments in the School of Medicine. Note that some histories may be the product of informal projects or research and may contain inconsistencies or inaccuracies.","\n\"A History of the Department of Dermatology, University of Virginia\", by Edward P. Cawley and William H. Kaufman. Published in 1987. Foreword by Peyton E. Weary, graduate of the University of Virginia School of Medicine Class of 1955, and former Chair of the Department of Dermatology. The book covers the period from 1902 to 1985. The first section largely focuses on the formation of the Department of Dermatology (originally known as the Department of Syphilology and Dermatology) and the department's growth under its first Chair: Dudley C. Smith, M.D., whose tenure lasted from 1924-1950. The second half of the book follows the redirection of the department under two Chairs: Edward Phillip Cawley, M.D., whose tenure lasted from 1950-1976, and Peyton E. Weary, M.D., whose tenure lasted from 1976-1993. Much of the book's contents relate to faculty biographies. Also included are lists of Dermatology Residents.\n","Division of Infectious Diseases 50th Anniversary Celebration: Early Infectious Disease Activities associated with the University of Virginia: A Personal History by Jack Gwaltney; The Start of Hospital Epidemiology at UVA by Richard Wenzel; Reflections on Emerging Infectious Diseases by James Hughes; Reminiscences of the First Fellow by Michael Rein; Discovery with Microbes \u0026 Infectious Diseases Society of American Strategic Priorities; From Mouse to Man: Lessons about Infectious Diseases in Transplant Patients by Michael Ison; Chasing a Gene: Lessons Learned on Antimicrobial Resistance Dissemination; and Brief Reflections on UVA Division of Infectious Diseases by Gerald Mandell, Richard Guerrant, Richard Pearson, Gerlad Donowitz, William Petri, Brian Wispelwey, Carlene Muto, Rebecca Dillingham and Eric Houpt. Includes program and written talk, Reminiscences of the First Fellow, by Michael Rein.","\n\"Early History of the Department of Neurology at the University of Virginia School of Medicine\" by James Q. Miller, Professor of Neurology, Charlottesville VA, July 1998. Includes chronological lists of faculty, fellows, and residents.\n","\n\"Obstetrics and Gynecology at the University of Virginia, 1825-1999, A Chronical [sic],\" by Guy M. Harbert.\nIncludes chronology of the department, listings of department chairmen and residents, publication lists, biographies, and photographs (in a separate folder).\n","\nContents: \"Obstetrics and Gynecology: The Early Years, 1825-1924\", \n\"Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology: The First 75 Years, 1925-1999\", \n\"Chronology\", \n\"Chairmen\", \n\"Faculty\", \n\"Chief Residents\", \n\"Fellowship Trainees\", \n\"Publications from the Department\", \n\"Statics [sic]\", \n\"John M. Nokes Lectureship\", \n\"W. Norman Thornton Symposia\", \n\"Ellen Newman-Half Century of Service\", \n\"Tiffany J Williams, 1897-1947\", \n\"John M. Nokes, 1903-1990\", \n\"William Norman Thornton, Jr., 1912-1999\".\n","\"Department of Otolaryngology and Maxillofacial Surgery, University of Virginia: History and Notes, 1896-1977\", bound manuscript by G. Slaughter Fitz-Hugh. Dr. Fitz-Hugh chronicles the development of the specialty of otolaryngology in the UVa School of Medicine and Hospital from 1896-1977 with special emphasis on personnel. Photographic portraits of some faculty members in the department from 1896-1951 are inserted. Includes some references and footnotes.","\n\"Pharmacology at the University of Virginia School of Medicine,\" by Chalmers L. Gemmill and Mary Jeanne Jones. Published by University of Virginia Printing Office, 1966. The book primarily consists of a series of biographical sketches of the professors in the Department of Pharmacology (early professors of Materia Medica and Pharmacy are included).\n","\nContents:\nRobley Dunglison, M.D., L.L.D., 1825-1827, \nJohn Patten Emmet, M.D., 1827-1842, \nRobert Empie Rogers, M.D., L.L.D., 1842-1852, \nJohn Lawrence Smith, M.D., 1852-1853, \nJohn Staige Davis, M.A., M.D., 1853-1885, \nWilliam Beverley Towles, M.D., 1885-1893, \nPaul Brandon Barringer, M.D., L.L.D., 1893-1907, \nWilliam Alexander Lambeth, M.D., Ph.D., 1902-1907, \nJohn Augustine English Eyster, M.D., 1908-1910, \nJames Alexander Waddell, M.D., 1911-1945, \nChalmers Laughlin Gemmill, M.D., 1945- . \nSome copies inscribed and signed by the author.\n","\"Department of Radiology, University of Virginia Health Sciences Center: Genesis and Growth,\" November 1994. By John F. Harlan, Jr. and C. David Teates. One version is reprinted from the American Journal of Roentgenology, the other is a manuscript copy.","\n\"History of the Department of Surgery, School of Medicine, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia, 1824-1971\", by Charles Bruce Morton II.\nPublished by the Division of Medical Art and Photography, University of Virginia Medical Center.\n","\nContents: \n\"Procuring a Faculty\", \n\"The Piedmont Hospital\", \n\"The University of Virginia Hospital\", \n\"The Department of Surgery and Gynecology\", \n\"Geographic Full-time Faculty\", \n\"Departmental Expansion and Development\", \n\"Todays Department of Surgery (1970-71)\".\n","Department of Urology historical overview: a chronological list of Chairmen of the Department from 1928 to 2016. Compiled by M.C. Wilhelm, M.D., in 2016.","This subseries consists of files containing materials that document significant events, moments, and turning points in the history of the School of Medicine.","This file contains articles, reports, and other collected writings focused on the proposed relocation of the University of Virginia School of Medicine to Richmond, VA. In 1921, a state-appointed commission recommended that the UVA School of Medicine be moved to Richmond. This recommendation was prompted by a debate over the best setting for a medical school--a small town like Charlottesville, or a larger city like Richmond. Before the Virginia General Assembly met to vote on the recommendation, UVA waged a fierce campaign to preserve the medical program as it was. The University mobilized alumni, recruited powerful political allies, and printed persuasive literature, such as that found in this file. The campaign ultimately succeeded, and the General Assembly decided in favor of leaving the School of Medicine at UVA.","The Response of the Board of Visitors of the Medical College of Virginia to the Invitation of the Commission on Medical Education in Virginia \"To make any contribution of facts or considerations pertinent to the subject of investigation by the Commission: Namely, the best organization of medical education in Virginia.\"\nFrom the Bulletin of the Medical College of Virginia, Vol. XVII, No. 3, September 1920. Caption title: \"Richmond as the location of the state supported medical school,\" A brief prepared by William R. Miller, on behalf of the Board of Vistiors of the Medical College of Virginia; and \"Addresses delivered at a meeting of the Commission on Medical Education in Virginia\". Of note, a section titled: \"Some objections which have been suggested by anxious friends of the University of Virginia\", p. 34-36.","Contained within the Alumni Bulletin of the University of Virginia, Third Series, Vol. XIV, No. 1, January 1921. Cover notes: \"Centennial Celebration May 31-June 3, 1921\".\nContents include: \"The Proper Location of the State-Supported Medical School in Virginia\", By Theodore Hough, p. 1-70. \"A Summary of the Argument for University Location of the Single State-Supported Medical School\", p. 71-80.","Supplement to Bulletin of the Medical College of Virginia, Vol. XVIII, No. 1, March 1921. Published by Medical College of Virginia, Richmond VA.","Written by Abraham Flexner. Reprinted from the report of the Commission on Medical Education in Virginia.","\"Report of the Commission on Medical Education in Virginia: To His Excellency, the Governor of Virginia, the Rector and Board of Visitors of the University of Virginia, the Chairman and Board of Visitors of the Medical College of Virginia\". Commission on Medical Education in Virginia personnel: Wilbur C. Hall, Chairman; Theodore Hough, Secretary.","\"Minority Report of the Commission on Medical Education in Virginia: Submitted to His Excellency, the Governor of Virginia, the Rector and Board of Visitors of the University of Virginia, the Chairman and Board of Visitors of the Medical College of Virginia\".\nCommission on Medical Education in Virginia. Wilbur C. Hall, Theodore Hough, William D. Prince, J. Belmont Woodson, members of the commission. \nText issued also as Virginia General Assembly, 1922. Senate. Doc. 9.","Supplement to University of Virginia Alumni News, Vol. 9, No. 10, May 1921.\nVarious authors. \nContents:\n\"The Virginia commission on medical education\",\n\"The minority report by Dr. Theodore Hough\",\n\"A statement by President Alderman\",\n\"Authorities who aided the commission with advice\",\n\"Opinions of the national leaders in medical education\",\n\"Opinion of the medical faculty\",\n\"A criticism of the majority report\".","Supplement to the Bulletin of the Medical College of Virginia, Vol. XVIII, No. 2, June 1921.\nPublished by the Medical College of Virginia, Richmond, VA.\nAuthors include Dr. Henry S. Pritchett, Dr. Arthur D. Bevan, Dr. A.L. Gray, Dr. Ennion G. Williams, Rev. Edward N. Galisch, J. Hoge Tyler, William Hodges Mann, H.C. Stuart.","Prepared for the General Alumni Association of the University of Virginia by M.C. Elliot, Chairman Executive Committee.\nDistributed by the Association for Retention of the Medical School and Hospital at the University of Virginia.\nDr. Hugh Young and G.M. McNutt, Joint Chairmen. McLane Tilton, Secretary-Treasurer.","Published by the Association to Retain the Medical School and Hospital at the University of Virginia.","Issue of the University of Virginia Alumni News, Vol. 10, No. 1, July 1921.\nCover reads \"Keep the Medical School at the University of Virginia\".\nContents: \n\"The Future of the Endowment Fund\",\n\"Richmond Paper favors University as Place for Medical School\",\n\"Departmental Meetings Great Success. Lawyers and Engineers Form Their Own Associations\",\n\"Removal of Medical School Would be a Breach of Faith Declares Virginia Historian\" [with excerpts from Philip Alexander Bruce],\n\"The New York Sun Comments on the Proposed Removal of the Medical School\",\n\"Rending Jefferson's University\",\n\"Roanoke, Norfolk and Lynchburg Alumni Protest Against Removal\".","Published by the Association to Retain the Medical School and Hospital at the University of Virginia [?].\nIncludes statistics of patients admitted to the University Hospital for two years, July 1, 1919 to July 1, 1921.","A Bulletin from the Virginia State Dental Association to the Taxpayers of Virginia, Vol 1. No. 1.","Appears in the Bulletin of the Medical College of Virginia, Vol. 18, No. 3. September 1921.\nPublished by the Medical College of Virginia, Richmond, VA.","By Theodore Hough, with a Foreword by Edwin A. Alderman.\nReprinted from the Alumni Bulletin of the University of Virginia, Vol. XIV, No. 4, October 1921.","Published by Committee of the Alumni Association for the Expansion of the University of Virginia [?].\nWritten by Milton C. Elliott, Julien H. Hill, Branch Johnson, Fred E. Nolting, Allan J. Saville.","In University of Virginia Alumni News, Vol. 10, No. 6, December 1921 - January 1922, pp. 387-406.\nContents:\n\"The Crisis at Richmond: Life of the Medical School at Stake\",\n\"Dean W.M. Thornton Writes Letter on the Medical School Issue, Gets Down to Brass Tacks\" by William M. Thornton,\n\"Letter to the Alumni of the University of Virginia\" by Hugh H. Young,\n\"Shall the University Hospital Be Destroyed?\",\n\"Eminent American Jurist Opposes Removal of the University Medical School\",\n\"Executive Committee's Christmas Letter to Alumni Chapters\" [includes section on \"Attempt to Remove Medical School to Richmond\"].\nAlso:\nComment by University President Edwin A. Alderman on front cover,\nLetter by McLane Tilton, Alumni Secretary, General Alumni Association of the University of Virginia, on the back cover.","Contained within the Alumni Bulletin of the University of Virginia, Third series, Vol. 15, No. 1. January 1922.\n\"The Medical Department of the University of Virginia--Its Proposed Removal--A Bit of History\" by John Staige Davis. Address delivered before the Norfolk Chapter of the Alumni, 29 December 1921. p. 29-45.\nTable of Contents for this issue also lists: \"President Alderman's Budget Statement\", \"The George Rogers Clark Statue, Presentation Address and Address of Acceptance\", \"George Rogers Clark and the Conquest of the Northeast\", \"The University of Virginia in the World War\".","In University of Virginia Alumni News, Vol. 10, No. 8, March 1922.\nContents:\n\"University Wins Victory as Senate Votes Down Medical Merger Bill: Final Count is 24-16\",\n\"St. Louis Alumni Send Congratulatory Telegram\",\n\"Students Welcome President Alderman and Dean Hough\",\n\"The President's Page\" by Edwin A. Alderman,\n[Letter by McLane Tilton, Alumni Secretary],\n\"Washington and Lee Has School of Journalism Again\",\n\"New Medical Fraternity\",\n\"Endowment Fund Given Added Stimulus by Victory at Richmond and Retention of Medical School\",\n\"The Honor Men\" by James Hay, Jr.,\n\"In the Service of the University: Letter from the Executive Committee of the General Alumni Association\",\n\"Woodrow Wilson Gratified\",\n\"'Dismemberment' up to Date\" [Passage related to medical schools' use of African American bodies in Anatomy classes],\n\"Athletics\",\n\"With the Alumni\".","Contained within the Alumni Bulletin of the University of Virginia, Third Series, Vol. 15, No. 3. April 1922.\nThis article addresses Senate Bill No. 1, presented by Senator Marshall B. Booker, January 11, 1922 to the General Assembly of Virginia. The same bill was later introduced to the House of Delegates by Hon. J. M. Hurt and became known as the Booker-Hurt bill. See also pages 237-242 for \"Miscellanies Relating to the Medical School Question\" for three statements given by opponents of the Booker-Hurt bill and its proposed amendments.\nTable of Contents for this issue also lists: \"Statement of the Recotor of the Board of Visitors\", \"Address of the Presdient of the University\", \"Financial Aspects of the Location of a Single State-Supported Medical School\", \"Clinical Aspects of the Location of a Single State-Supported Medical School\", \"The Attitude of the Medical Profession in Virginia\", \"The Attitude of the Alumni to the Removal of the Medical School\", \"Address Prepared for Delivery before the Senate of Virginia\", \"Miscellanies Relating to the Medical School Question\", \"The University the Natural Home of the Medical School\".","Includes papers which appeared during the discussion of the loaction of the Medical Department of the University of Virginia, collected for historic value and for their contributions to the literature of medical education. 18 excerpts from 8 publications; By various authors.","Compiled responses to a letter sent by Theodore Hough containing a statement of the postion of the medical faculty of the Univeristy of Virginia on the proper location of a single state-supported medical school. Replies from Harvard University: David L. Edsall, Dean of the Medical School at Harvard; W.B. Cannon; Harvey Cushing; M.J. Roseman; Henry A. Christian. Replies from Johns Hopkins: President Goodnow; Lewis H. Weed; J.M.T. Finney; Joseph C. Bloodgood. Replies from Washington University at St. Louis: P.A. Shaffer; George Dock; Joseph Erlanger. Replies from California: Frederick P. Gay; H.M. Evans; W.R. Bloor. Replies from Stanford: President Wilbur; A.W. Hewlett; E.G. Martin. Replies from the University of Chicago: President Judson; Frank Billings; Edwin O. Jordon; Chas. J. Herrick; H. Gideon Wells. Replies from Western Reserve (Ohio): C.F. Hoover; T. Wingate Todd; Torold Sollmann; Paul J. Hanzlik. Replies from the University of Pennsylvania: William Pepper, Dean; Edward Martin. Replies from Cornell University: Charles R. Stockard; John A. Hartwell; Howard Lilienthal. Replies from the University of Minnesota: E.P. Lyon, Dean; Jennings C. Litzenberg; H.E. Robertson. Replies from the University of Missouri: Guy L. Noyes, Dean; Mazyck P. Ravenel. Replies from the University of Nebraska: Irving S. Cutter, Dean; Harold E. Eggers. Replies from the University and Bellevue Hospital Medical College: Warren Coleman; Harlow Brooks. Replies from Yale University: Yandell Henderson; Oliver T. Osborne. Reply from Georgetown University: George T. Vaughan. Reply from Kansas: George E. Coghill. Reply from Colorado: Henry Sewall. Replies from Michigan: V.C. Vaughan; Hugh Cabot; Udo J. Wile; L.H. Newburgh; Marcus L. Ward. Replies from Iowa: President Jessup; Elbert W. Rockwood; Albert H. Byfield; Henry Albert. Replies from Wisconsin: C.R. Bardeen; P.M. Dawson. Reply from Albany: Thomas Ordway. Reply from Cincinnati: Henry Mc.E. Knower. Reply from Oregon: Richard B. Dillehunt. Reply from Texas: William C. Rose.","Produced by the University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA. Includes \"History of Medical School\" by Harvey E. Jordan, \"Address of Presentation\" by Edwin A. Alderman, \"A Statement\" by James C. Flippin, and other addresses by Ray Lyman Wilbur, William Holland Wilmer, John Shelton Horsley, David Russell Lyman, J. Bolling Jones, Hugh S. Cumming, and Chas. A. Stockard.","\nThis subseries consists of essays, articles, monographs that convey narratives about discrete aspects of the history of the School of Medicine. The subjects of these works include, but are not limited to, the history of the following: the medical curriculum, Thomas Jefferson and medical education, the anatomical theatre, medical facilities, the foundation and early history of the School of Medicine, accomplishments of the School of Medicine.\n","\nBiographies and histories of the various departments and units of the School of Medicine are not included in this subseries.\n","By Paul B. Barringer. \n\"An address delivered before the students and alumni of the Medical department of the University of Virginia, October 25th, 1887.\"\nReprint from the Virginia medical monthly, January, 1888.\n\"A History of the Medical Department of the University of Virginia: Its System of Education, and Its Results\"","Contained within The Alumni Bulletin of the University of Virginia, Vol. II, No. 4. February 1896.\n\"The three years' medical course\", uncredited, p. 141.\nTable of Contents for this issue also lists: \"John B. Minor\", \"James A. Harrison, LL.D.\", \"The work of restoration\", \"Report of the architects to the building committee\", Book review, and editorials.","Contained within the Alumni Bulletin of the University of Virginia, New Series, Vol. 3, No. 2. April 1903.\n\"How the Army Yellow Fever Board Conducted Its Experiments Upon Human Beings\" by A.N. Stark, p. 23-29.\nTable of Contents for this issue also lists: \"The proposed athletic club house\", \"The academic department\", \"The beginnings of our museum of culture history\", \"The relation of consolidation of public schools to higher institutions\", \"Bible study at the University\", \"Gymnastic tourney\", \"Fraternity houses at the University\", \"The new calculus of Professor Echols\", \"James B. Baker\", \"Invitaiton to the President\", \"University of Virginia alumni in the Medical Corps of the Army\", \"University of Virginia alumni in the Medical Corps of the Navy\", \"The Maryland assocation of the alumni of the University\", \"The Jefferson Memorial Road\", \"Act incorporating the general alumni association\", \"Constitution of the general alumni association\", \"Items of interest\".","Contained within The Alumni Bulletin of the University of Virginia, New Series, Vol. 3, No. 4. October 1903.\n\"Clinical Teaching of the University of Virginia Hospital\", W.G. (William Gray) Christian, p. 175-176.\nTable of Contents for this issue also lists: \"Requiem--Thomas Randolph Price\", \"The higher education as a factor in political life\", \"Harvard University and the University of Virginia\", \"The founder of the University\", \"The atmosphere of the University\", \"Lewis Littlepage Holladay, B.S.\", \"W.H. Faulkner, M.A., PhD.\", \"On double reversal\", \"The serum precipation test for the identification of blood stains\", \"An unappreciated source of typhoid infection\", \"Neuritis\", \"Use of pig skin graphs on extensive granulating surface in case of superficial gangrene\", \"Religious work of the session\", \"The John B. Cary bible lectureship\", \"Football\", \"The school of methods\", \"The student riot of 1836\", \"University of Virginia alumni in the U.S. Public Health and Marine Hospital Serivce\", \"University of Virginia alumni who have pursued the medical profession in civil life\", \"Thomas Randolph Pierce\", \"Vivit Post Funera Virtus\", \"Memorial of Professors J.A.G. and J.S. Davis\", \"Col. Thos. Lewis Preston\", \"Presentation of a portrait of Wm. Gordon McCabe\", \"The head master\", \"Presentation of a portrait of Matthew Fontaine Maury\", \"Items of interest.\"","By Dr. John Staige Davis. \nReprinted from the Alumni bulletin for July, 1914.\n\"History of the Medical Department of the University of Virginia, 1825-1914\"","Contained within Alumni Bulletin of the University of Virginia, Third Series, Vol. X, No. 1. January 1917.\n\"Medical education at the University\", by Theodore Hough, p. 56-59.\nTable of Contents for this issue also lists: \"The causes of the European war\", \"The school of athens\", \"The letters of George Long\", \"What students owe to the University\", \"A Virginian schoolmaster\", \"The history of the Williams Building Act\", \"Abstract of the report of the bursar\", \"Digest of academic legislation\", notes of the University and Faculty.","\"The University of Virginia in Medicine\", By John Staige Davis, MA, MD, Professor of Practice of Medicine, and Theodore Hough, BA, PhD, Dean of the Department of Medicine. \nProduced by the Executive Committee of the University of Virginia Centennial Endowment Fund, as one of five brief historical sketches on the five departments of the University.","Contained within The Alumni Bulletin of the University of Virginia, Third Series, Vol. XV, No. 3. July-August, 1922.\n\"Research at the University of Virginia\", Compiled by the Faculty Committee on Research, p. 275-320.","\"Research at the Univeristy of Virginia\" includes sections on:\nMcIntire School of Fine Arts, \nAstronomy,\nMiller School of Biology,\nSchool of Chemistry,\nSchool of Economics,\nDepartment of Education,\nSchools of English Literature and Literature,\nSchool of Forestry,\nThe Corcoran and Rogers Schools of Geology,\nSchool of Latin,\nSchool of Mathematics,\nDepartment of Medicine,\nCorcoran School of Philosophy,\nSchool of Physics,\nSchool of Romance Languages.","Table of Contents for this issue also lists: \"Address to graduating class\", \"Founder's Day address\", \"The breadth of an education\", \"Recent resolutions of the faculty\".","By. W.S. (Waller Smith) Leathers, M.D., University of Mississippi. \nReprinted from the July 1923 University of Virginia Alumni Bulletin","Bound photocopy from The University of Virginia Alumni Bulletin, Third Series, Vol. XVI, No. 3, July 1923. Section II, [Department of Medicine Bibliography], p. 276-334. A summary of faculty members of the School of Medicine between 1824 and 1921, with brief biographical statements for each individual and a list of their published works. Alumni Bulletin Editorial Committee: James Southall Wilson, Albert G.A. Balz, Herman Patrick Johnson, James Cook Bardin, John Shelton Patton.","Contained within the Alumni bulletin of the University of Virginia, Third Series, Vol. 17, No. 4, October 1924.\nBy Lawrence T. Royster. p. 471-486. Third annual address before the Alpha Omega Alpha Society of the University of Virginia, April 11, 1914.\nTable of Contents for this issue also lists: \"Liberty and slavery in universities\", \"Convocation address, 1924\", \"Culture at the cross-roads\", \"Virginia men (class poem)\", \"The task of the American scholar\", \"Commencement address, 1924\", \"Founder's day address, 1924\", \"George Long in his old age\", \"Address accepting Shrady's statue of Lee\", \"Research in the University\", \"A new history of Virginia\", \"Wayland's ethics and citizenship\", \"Bibliography\", \"Editor's Note on discontinuing the bulletin\".","\"The Foundation and Early History of the Medical School of the University of Virginia (to 1840)\". \nBy Elise Anderson Rodgers, A Thesis presented to the academic faculty of the University of Virginia in candidacy for the degree of Master of Science, 1930.\"","By Andrew DeJarnette Hart, Jr. \nReprinted from Annals of Medical History, New Series, Vol. 10, No. 1, January 1938. p. 47-60.\nOne copy is addressed to \"Doctor Nuzhet Atuk\" and signed with the author's initials: \"A.D.H.\"","By. H.E. (Harvey Ernest) Jordan. \nManuscript; Typewritten copy.","By Wilhelm Moll.\nReprinted from Virginia Medical Monthly, Vol. 95, March 1968, p. 158-161.","By Clifton Waller Barrett, Chairman of the Education Policy Committee of the Board of Visitors of the University of Virginia. \nAddress of the American Surgical Association, 18 January 1975. William H. Muller, Jr., President.\nOne copy signed by the author; also includes (brief) marginalia.","By G. Slaughter Fitz-Hugh. \nManuscript; Typewritten document.\nIncludes photographs of the Anatomical Laboratory and a student dissecting club.","By Grover C. Pitts. \nReprinted from \"The Physiologist\", Historical Section, Vol. 28, No. 5, 1985. p. 402-406.","Published by University of Virginia School of Medicine. \nPhotographs by Robert Llewellyn, Introduction by Robert M. Carey.\nSigned by Robert M. Carey.","By Charles D. Cheek and Dana B. Heck. \nPrepared for Hartman-Cox Architects and Office of the Curator and Architect for the Academical Village [University of Virginia].\nBound with Appendix II: \"Analysis of Human Remains from the Former Anatomical Theatre Charnel at the University of Virginia Campus, Charlottesville, Virginia. By Thomas A. J. Crist.\"","By Thomas A. J. Crist. 3 p.\nBound as Appendix II of \"Archeological Investigations at the Site of the Anatomical Theatre (44AB443) University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia\"","Brochure prepared by Garth Anderson, (Office of UVA Architect); photocopies by Mark Wenger, (Contractor for UVA, Report \u0026 Survey of Post T.J. Building).\nIncludes floor plans for the West Complex Second Floor variations for 1901-1936. Representations done in 1997.","This series consists of scrapbooks of historical significance that portray the School of Medicine, its students, administration, officials, or employees, and related accomplishments or events.","This series contains historically significant reports documenting the internal control or management of a specific function of the School of Medicine. These reports include, but are not limited to operating reports and financial reports.","This series consists of reports, of a historically significant nature, that do not belong to any other series of the School of Medicine records.","Reprinted in part from \"The University of Virginia in the life of the nation,\" 1905. Published by The University of Virginia, Chalottesville, VA. Contents: I. Accomplishment, II. A Statement of recent growth, [III.] Officers of Instruction and Administration.","Written by J.A. Waddell, Advisor to pre-medical students at the University of Virginia. Published by University of Virginia Press in the Alumni Bulletin of the University of Virginia, Third Series, October 1921, Vol. XIV No. 4.","Written by Theodore Hough, Dean of the Department of Medicine, University of Virginia; with a Foreword by UVA President Alderman. Published by University of Virginia Press in the Alumni Bulletin of the University of Virginia, Third Series, October 1921, Vol. XIV No. 4. Contents: I. Introductory - Historical, II. The Transition from Proprietary and Avocational to University and Vocational Control, III. Can an Adequate Teaching Clinic Be Secured at the University of Virginia, IV. The Cost of Dental Education at the University is No Greater Than in Richmond, V. The Burden of Proof: The Advantages of University Location Overwhelming in the Case of Professional Schools Giving Instruction on a University Basis.","Authored by Fiske Kimball; published in the Alumni Bulletin of the University of Virginia. Includes four black and white drawings of buildings.","Report authored by the Committee of Medical Alumni, Beverly C. Smith (School of Medicine Class of 1915), Chairman.","Authored by Kenneth R. Crispell and Thomas H. Hunter.","The report is primarily concerned with the growth of student enrollment and the development of University facilities to meet student population needs. The report includes recommendations of the committee, historical background, rationale for the recommendations, and appendicies with supporting data and related reports. It is a University-wide report (not limited to the School of Medicine). Membership of the Committee on the Future of the University: David A. Shannon (Chairman), Ralph Eisenberg, Jay L. Chronister, David B. Harned, Eugene C. Paige Jr., Robert M. Berne, Theodore Caplow, Edwin M. Crawford, Brian H. Siegel, Neil H. Borden Jr., Earl M. Gerguson, Norman A. Graebner, Kenneth C. Jacobs, James J. Kauzlarich, Phil Kimball, Larry J. Sabato, Joseph R. Washington, James L. Camp, Irby B. Cauthen Jr., Robert V. Coleman, Robert J. Harris, Thomas H. Hunter, Josephine Ludewig, Jacquelin I. Mason, Frederick D. Nichols, Ken E. Ross, Donald E. Wilson.","\"Selected activities 1974-1975, The University of Virginia School of Medicine,\" by University of Virginia, School of Medicine. \nContents: Pt. I: Administration and finances School of Medicine University of Virginia -- Pt. II: Health care programs in Virginia School of Medicine University of Virginia -- Pt. III: Admissions data: 1959-1974 School of Medicine University of Virginia.","\"Alumni of the University of Virginia School of Medicine: what are they doing where, and with whom,\" by Jules I. Levine and David W. Sheatsley. Published by Division of Health Services Research, University of Virginia. An analysis of 2,802 \"active alumni\" during a study undertaken to determine the status of graduates of the School of Medicine with respect to current location of practice, type of practice, type of employment, and specialty area.","\"Staffing plan 1975 to 1980. Department of Medicine, University of Virginia, School of Medicine. Edward W. Hook, MD, Chairman.\"\nContents: Staffing plan of divisions (Allergy and Respiratory Diseases, Ambulatory Medicine, Biometrics, Cardiology, Clinical Pharmacology, Endocrinology and Metabolism, Epidemiology and Virology, Gastroenterology, Hematology, Infectious Diseases, Oncology, Renal Diseases, Rheumatology) -- Sources of funds supporting present faculty -- New programs needed by 1980 -- Summary of personnel and space needs to 1980.","The previous report was prepared by Jules I. Levine, the director of the division of Health Services Research at the Medical Center. It proposed that a portion of the Pratt funds be used to improve capabilities in the fields of biostatistics and epidemiology.","Produced by the UVA Department of Internal Medicine. Contents include: Self-study [statistics and faculty listing]; Scholarly accomplishments of the faculty of the Department of Medicine, 1975-1980; Publications of the Department of Medicine, 1 September 1979 to 31 August 1980; Publications of the Department of Medicine, 1 September 1976 to 31 August 1977; Publications of the Department of Medicine, 1 September 1977 to 31 August 1978; Publications of the Department of Medicine, 1 September 1978 to 31 August 1979; List of sections of the department; Self-study report part II : evaluation of resources and programs of the Department of Internal Medicine.","The Residency Review Committee for Family Practice approved the program with John H. Danby serving as the Program Director with Virginia Baptist Hospital being the parent hospital. The program had an affiliation agreement wiht the University of Virginia School of Medicine.","The documents mainly focus on increasing the number of minorities in medical school. One of the reports is university wide in its coverage. This file of reports was originally processed as part of the School of Medicine Reports collection, MS-66.","The Final Report was prepared by Wei Li Fang and Maurice Apprey. The course is a six-week program designed to provide minority students with the opportunity to experience the content, volume, and pace of the medical school curriculum.","The Final Report was prepared by Wei Li Fang. The course is a program designed to provide minority and disadvantaged students with the opportunity to experience the content, volume, and pace of the medical school curriculum.","Maurey Apprey from the School of Medicine served on the task force which considered black students, faculty and staff at the University. A letter dated September 28, 1987, from President Robert M. O'Neil is included.","Program Director: Moses K. Woode, Program Evaluator: Kathleen B. Lynch, Assistant Dean of Student Affairs: Maurice Apprey.","Assistant Dean for Student Academic Support and Program Director: Moses K. Woode, Program Evaluator: Kathleen B. Lynch, Assistant Dean of Student Affairs: Maurice Apprey.","Strategies for Increasing Minority Representation in Medicine by Moses K. Woode and Kathleen Bodisch Lynch, Assisting Students Achieve Medical Degrees (ASAMD) Project. \nThis paper was presented at the 16th Annual Meeting of the Sixteen Institutions Health Sciences Consortium in Norfolk, Virginia, February 25-27, 1988.","University of Virginia School of Medicine Assisting Minorities Pursue Medical Education (AMPMED) Program, Supplemental Information for Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Site Visit","Prepared by David S. Fedson, M.D., Associate Professor in the UVA Department of Medicine. Submitted to the Health Resources and Services Administration, Department of Health and Human Services. The proposal is for a new Primary Care Internal Medicine Training program to supplement the existing UVA Internal Medicine Residency Training Program, raising the number of primary care residents at UVA by 33%. Supplemental materials include biographical sketches of faculty members, Internal Medicine Residencey Training brochure, University Medical Associates 1982-1983 Housestaff Manual, and a list of basic readings in the primary care training program curriculum.","Compiled by Edward W. Hook and Richard W. Lindsay. Contributions by the Jefferson Area Board for Aging and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. Table of Contents: Annual meeting 1985; Key project personnel; Housing; Subcontracts; Client consent form; Progress report; University of Virginina Center for the Health of the Elderly (UVACHE) committee.","Created by the University of Virginia Task Force on the Status of Women, a cross-university effort chaired by Prudence M. Thorner, Director of UVA Hospital Supply. The report offers a set of recommendations related to representation, compensation, benefits, professional development, support programs for women, and sexism, sexual harassment, and sexual assault. Tables, surveys, anecdotal evidence, and supporting documentation are included in several appendices.","A report from the UVA School of Medicine Council on Medical Education. Contains sub-committee reports on: the student perspective, internal medicine, neurology, obstetrics and gynecology, pediatrics, psychiatry and behavioral medicine, and surgey. Includes tabulated results of a survey of medical students and residents. Executive Committee members consist of: Robert S. Gibson (Task Force Chairman), Dearing Johns, Charles G. Durbin, Jerry G. Short, Donald L. Kaiser, John H. Armstrong, and John Martin.","Report by the School of Medicine Committee on Women, prepared for Robert M. Carey, Dean of the School of Medicine. The report is the result of the Committee's first year of activities. Contents provide recommendations from the Committee on: Representation; Professional Development; Sexism, Sexual Harassment and Safety; Salary Equity; Support; and Culture. Appendices offer survey and questionnaire results, including data gathered from peer institutions. Committee on Women membership: Sharon L. Hostler (Chair), Carolyn M. Brunner, Randolph J. Canterbury, Claudette E. Dalton, Sharon Davie, Wei Li Fang, Howard Kutchai, Carol Lake, Sally A. Moody, Barbara Oettgen, and Christina L. Wells.","The letter from Dr. Robert Carey to Dr. Sharon Hostler acknowledges receipt of First report by the UVA School of Medicine Committee on Women and provides Carey's preliminary responses to the report's recommendations.","George T. Gillies, Associate professor of engineering physics and biomedical engineering at the University of Virginia co-authored and donated this report. Additional co-authors include Elizabeth Gwinn Quate. Variant title: Torsion Spring Counterbalance for Suspending Large Goniometer-mounted Superconducting Coils. The report covers: Video Tumor Fighter Project; Induced Hyperthermia (instrumentation); Brain Neoplasms (therapy); Stereotaxic Techniques.","A second report from the UVA School of Medicine Committee on Women which summarizes the progress in the implementation of the 37 recommendations initially set forth in the First Report on the Status of Women (November 1990). The updated report includes bibliographical references and some supporting documentation. School of Medicine Committee on Women was chaired by Sharon L. Hostler.","Reports authored by the Research \u0026 Evaluation Division of the Institute for Substance Abuse Studies","Prepared by Linda Watson on behalf of the Information Sciences Council. The Health Informatice Enhancement Program/Project (HIEP) was initiated by the Information Sciences Council in 1992 to encourage innovative informatics projects and provide grants to faculty seeking to learn and apply new technology skills to benefit their work. An appendix includes a list of projects that received HIEP Awards between 1992 and 1996.","Document includes humanities in medicine program purposes, history and highlights, program elements (such as School of Medicine electives, presence in the curriculum, special projects, lectures, awards, and other programs), future directions, challenges, and an attached chart of activities and affiliations.","Mulholland Society Clinical Clerkship Report for June 2002-June 2003. Compiled and edited by the School of Medicine, Class of 2004; Sarah Bass, Editor-in-chief. \"This curriculum review is intended to represent student evaluations of all third year clerkship curriculum.\"","Mulholland Society Clinical Clerkship Report for June 2003-June 2004. Compiled and edited by the School of Medicine, Class of 2005; Joshua Hilton, Editor-in-chief. \"The Clinical Clerkship Report is a written review of the third year medical school curriculum at the University of Virginia.\"","Report by Melanie A. McCollum and A. Bobby Chhabra. Contents: Conceptual model of medical education -- Introduction -- Charge and deliberations of the Education Task Force -- New learning spaces \u0026 opportunities -- Goal statement -- Notes and references -- Executive summary of recommendations. Appendices: ETF subcommittee membership \u0026 timeline of ETF activities -- Innovative uses of the new learning spaces -- SOM organizational charts -- Detailed reccomendations and timeline for implementation -- Report of the medical anatomy curriculum work group -- Key resources. Supporting materials: Curriculum 2020 Project plan -- ETF subcommittee reports -- Simulation center business plan -- Report of the Ad Hoc Committee on Resident/Faculty teaching space for \"skill station\" education of operative skills -- ETF site visit reports (John Hopkins University, UNC, Duke, WakeMed, and Stanford University) -- ETF \u0026 special session minutes.","This series consists of the student records for the School of Medicine. This series may include, but is not limited to: applications, photographs, transcripts, and reviews of clinical performance.","1 certificate for Robert K. Carter, dated 29 June 1859 and signed by J.D. Davis, M.D.","1 certificate, mounted on cardstock, for John W. Field; dated 29 June 1859 and signed by J.S. Davis, M.D.","1 certificate, mounted on cardstock, for B.R. Kennon; dated 29 June 1892 and signed by A.H. Tuttle (Professor of Biology).","1 report of Mr. Beverly R. Kennon for the session of 1891-1892, dated 1 July 1892. Includes list of schools (subjects) with associated professors and provides \"results of examination\" for Kennon's medical coursework.","This series is comprised of directories that contain lists of the School of Medicine's faculty, staff, and students. The directories were created for public use and often include the following information: names, telephone numbers, and job titles.","\"University of Virginia Hospitals, Charlottesville, Virginia 22908. July 1, 1993 - June 30, 1994. Housestaff List.\"\nListing of interns and residents.","\"University of Virginia Hospitals, Charlottesville, Virginia 22908. July 1, 1994 - June 30, 1995. Housestaff List.\"\nListing of interns and residents.","\"University of Virginia Hospitals, Charlottesville, Virginia 22908. July 1, 1997 - June 30, 1998. Housestaff List.\"\nListing of interns and residents.","\nListings of faculty and resident physicians, organized by department.\n","\nOriginal Scope and Contents Note: \"This [file] is composed of lists of physicians who have been appointed by the University of Virginia Hospital from 1951 to 1990. The list of 1953 is not extant. The [file] contains 39 files in two boxes. [Folders] are arranged by chronological order and names of the physicians are listed by department. Some years have more than one version of the list with handwritten corrections and adding explanation on the materials.\"\n","\nThese materials were originally processed as a separate collection known as MS-25, UVA Hospital Professional Staff Files, 1951-1990\"\n","Collection of medical student names with short biographies of each student. No student contact information included.","This series contains correspondence, subject files, online resources, and meeting minutes of committees working within the School of Medicine.","Meeting minutes and reports from the UVA School of Medicine General Faculty meetings.","This series consists of records that document awards, honors, and commemorations presented by the School of Medicine. These records may include, but are not limited to, event programs, lists of recipients, and recipient biographies.","This series consists of records that document lectures and presentations sponsored by the School of Medicine. These records include, but are not limited to, audiovisual recordings, transcripts, announcements, handouts, and correspondence between presenters and event organizers.","The Medical Center Hour is a public forum on medical and society at the UVA School of Medicine. The lecture series is run by the Center for Health Humanities and Ethics at the UVA School of Medicine, previously known as the Center for Biomedical Ethics and Humanities, and originally founded as the Program of Humanities in Medicine by Dr. Edward W. Hook, former Professor and Chair of the UVA Department of Medicine. Materials in this sub-series include lecture recordings, handouts, transcripts, program schedules, and posters. Available materials vary by year and lecture. Many of the Medical Center Hour programs were recorded and are available for viewing. Presently the best way to search Medical Center Hour recordings is through Virgo, the UVA Library Catalog:   search.lib.virginia.edu","\nThis file consists of recordings of Medical Center Hour lectures during the 1970s. The following is a list of the titles, speakers, dates, and call numbers for each recording:\n","Rape: what should we do about it? Miriam Birdwhistell, Ida Hiller, P. Browning Hoffman, and Thomas H. Hunter. 9/10/73. HV 6561 R35 1973 Cosmetic surgery: is it ethical? Milton T. Edgerton, Joseph Fletcher, and Norman J. Knorr. 11/5/73. WO 600 C695 1973 What rights do patients have? Joseph Fletcher, Samuel E. Miller, David D. Stone, and Jane B. Zambuto.12/3/73. W 62 W55 1973 The health of public figures: what should be disclosed? James F. Childress, Richard S. Crampton, Thomas H. Hunter, and Henry J. Abraham.. 1/7/74. W 700 H45 1974 Cruel and usual punishment: solitary confinement. Robert Showalter, Wilfred Abse, Richard J. Bonnie and Browning Hoffman. 3/4/74. HV 8728 C75 1974 Research using live human fetuses: when is it justifiable? Robert M. Blizzard, Joseph Fletcher, Andre E. Hellegers, and Thomas H. Hunter. 4/1/74. W 20.5 R45 1974 Man without kidneys: past, present, and future. Leslie E. Rudolf, W. Kline Bolton, Peter Lobo, and Fred Westervelt. 1/21/76. WJ 368 M35 1976 Medical therapeutics: drug developments. Charles E. Hamner, William Darro, William M. O'Brien and John A. Owen, Jr. 1/28/76. QV 771 M45 1976 Fetal research. Thomas H. Hunter, Douglas Clarke, Joseph Fletcher, and Davis W. Louisell. 2/4/76. W 20.5 F44 1976 Progress and trends in craniofacial surgery. Milton Edgerton and John Jane. 2/18/76. WE 705 P75 1976 Indications for antibiotic prophylaxis. Merle Sande, J. Owen Hendley, Robert Thompson, and William R. Sandusky. 2/25/76. WB 330 I56 1976 Problems of black students in medicine. Thomas H. Hunter, Eric Baugh, William R. Drucker, Eugene Foster, and Vivian Pinn. 3/3/76. W 18 P73 1976 The Cancer cell membrane. Thomas E. Thompson, Robert G. Langdon, Jay C. Brown, and J.T. Parsons. 3/24/76. QH 601 C215 1976 Comprehensive epilepsy program. Fritz E. Dreifuss, Richard H. Gibbs, Linda Harris, and James E. Redenbaugh. 3/31/76. WL 385 C66 1976 Marital breakdown in the medical center. Eric Baugh, Juanita Baugh, Barney Hecker, and Walter Wadlington. 4/7/76. HQ 814 M35 1976 Disciplinary procedures in the medical profession: can we police ourselves? P. Browning Hoffman, Richard J. Bonnie, Kenneth Redden, and Robert C. Green. 4/14/76. W 44 D55 1976 New radiologic approaches to the diagnosis and treatment for old diseases. Theodore E. Keats, William C. Constable, Richard A. Flom, Charles D. Teates and Charles J. Tegtmeyer. 4/21/76. WN 200 R455 1976 Clinical use of prostaglandins. Randall T. Curnow, Robert M. Carey, and Peter Ramwell. 4/28/76. QU 90 C65 1976 Between doctor and patient: \"how informed must consent be?\" P. Browning Hoffman, Richard J. Bonnie, Walter Wadlington. 5/5/76. W 62 B46 1976 Generic prescribing: why, when, and how. John A. Owen, Diane L. Ansley, Sam Crickenberger, and Jackie Young. 5/12/76. QV 748 G45 1976 The challenge to widen the therapeutic index of hazardous drugs: the precise quantitative therapeutic decision. Kenneth L. Melmon. 5/19/76. QV 771 C56 1976 Oral contraceptives. Ferid Murad, Thomas Bithell, Robert C. Haynes, and Siva Thiagarajah. 9/22/76. QV 177 O75 1976 Residencies and manpower needs. Daniel Mohler and William Drucker. 9/26/76. W 20 R45 1976 Drug use during pregnancy. John Owen, Guy M. Harbert, and Thaddeus E. Kelly. 10/6/76. WQ 240 D78 1976 Is behavioral genetics taboo?: the neolysenkoism. Bernard Davis and Joseph Fletcher. 10/13/76. QH 457 I85 1976 Computers in health care: success and failure. Ernst Attinger, Barbara Howard, and William O'Brien. 10/20/76. W 26.5 C65 1976 Why do more newborn infants die in Virginia than in 41 other states? John Kattwinkel, Lynn J. Cook, C. Arnold Renschler, and Robert F. Scorgie. 10/27/76. HB 1323.I4 W55 1976 Ethics of physician advertising. Joseph Fletcher and John C. Jeffries. 11/3/76. W 58 E85 1976 From students to physicians: a sociological study of medical education at the University of Virginia. Jeffrey Hadden, Theodore Long, Tod Hansen, and Marshall Shumsky. 11/10/76. W 18 F77 1976 Kepone: what are the lessons? Robert Jackson, Phillip Allen, Joseph Fletcher, and Gerald Baliles. 11/17/76. WA 240 K45 1976 Swine influenza. P. Browning Hoffman and Jack M. Gwaltney, Jr. 11/24/76. WC 515 S95 1976 How does one determine acceptable risks? Richard Wenzel and Joseph Fletcher. 12/1/76. WB 141 H65 1976 Is there a crisis in medical education?: facts and myths. Kenneth Crispell, Cheves Smythe, Oscar Thorup, and Christian Cimmino. 12/8/76. W 18 I85 1976 The physician as double agent. Thomas Hunter, Richard Bonnie, P. Browning Hoffman and David Little. 1/5/77. W 62 P58 1977 Emergency medicine: T. J. planning district. Richard Crampton, Richard Edlich, Robert Jaskiewicz, and Leslie Rudolf. 1/26/77. WX 215 E45 1977 Health and the developing world. Richard Guerrant, Kenneth Warren, and Thomas Hunter. 2/2/77. WA 395 H45 1977 The Cost of medical education: who should pay? Thomas Hunter, Henry Abraham, John A.D. Cooper. 2/9/77. W 18 C63 1977 Over the counter drugs. Ferid Murad, John A. Owen, Jr., Melvin Parker, and Daniel Spyker 2/16/77. QV 772 O95 1977 Violence on television: a health problem? John deK. Bowen, Ake E. Mattsson, John Mesinger, Thomas Hunter. 2/23/77. WS 105.5.E9 V55 1977 Human needs of the disabled: vocational, social, and sexual. James Q. Miller, Thomas Hunter, Marguerite David. 3/2/77. HV 1553 H84 1977 Stresses in the Medical Center and who helps us cope. Helen Ripple, Norman Knorr, Judy Wilcox and Lee Crigler. 3/9/77. WM 172 S75 1977 Malnutrition in the hospital patient. Munsey S. Wheby, Charles E. Butterworth, and Thomas H. Hunter. 3/23/77. WD 100 M35 1977 Science, pseudoscience, and art in the practice of medicine. Eugene Snead. 3/30/77. WB 100 S35 1977 Women in medicine. Elsa Paulsen, Judith Braslow, Charles Hess, and Robert Van de Castle. 4/6/77. W 21 W65 1977 Unnecessary surgery. Leslie E. Rudolf. 4/13/77. WO 34 U55 1977 Doctors as patients. Richard Keeling, John Zirkle and James Thomson. 4/20/77. W 62 D65 1977 Drug abuse. Randall T. Curnow, George Bright, John Buckman, and Joseph Fletcher. 4/27/77. WM 270 D72 1977 Transsexualism: an insight into the power of psychologic gender. Oscar Thorup, Milton Edgerton, William M. Sheppe, Jr., and U. G. Turner. 9/7/77. WM 610 T75 1977 Genetically transmitted disease. Oscar A. Thorup, Thomas H. Hunter, Joseph Fletcher, and Thaddeus Kelly. 9/21/77. QZ 50 G47 1977 Laetrile: the right to choose. Oscar Thorup, Gerald Goldstein, John Owen, and Charles H. Whitebread. 9/28/77. QV 269 L35 1977 Expanded roles in nursing. Barbara Brodie. 10/5/77. WY 16 E95 1977 Explosive change in the medical center: impact. Edward Hook, Helen Ripple, Darracott Vaughan, and Oscar Thorup. 10/19/77. WX 28 AV8 E95 1977 New drug development: an overdose of FDA. Oscar Thorup, Charles Hamner, Richard Merrill, and Ferid Murad. 10/26/77. WA 697 N45 1977 The family: dynamic dimension in medicine. Oscar A. Thorup, B. Lewis Barnett, David B. Waters, and Henry Willner. 11/2/77. WS 105.5.F2 F37 1977 Family stress and collapse. Oscar A. Thorup, Donna Cowan, Joseph Fletcher, and Ruth B. Weeks.. 11/16/77. WS 105.5.F2 F39 1977 The diabetes center: an exercise in democracy. Oscar A. Thorup, George T. Brooks, Leatrice Ducat, and Joseph Larner. 12/7/77. WK 810 D54 1977 Integration of the medical center with the university: more or less?. Kenneth Crispell, Carleton B. Chapman, Edgar F. Shannon, and Walter J. Wadlington. 1/18/78. W 18 I53 1978 Psychological aspects of persons with difficulties in sexual identity. Oscar A. Thorup, Stanley Berent, James A. Thomson, and Vamik D. Volkan. 1/25/78. WJ 712 P75 1978 A mother's response to her wanted child: lifestyles and home delivery. Guy M. Harbert, Walter J. Wadlington, Marion McCartney, and Anthony Shaw. 2/1/78. WS 105.5.F2 M67 1978 Privacy and the computer: everything you know about yourself, but hoped they'd never find out. Oscar A. Thorup, Brant R. Allen, Richard J. Bonnie, and Browning Hoffman. 2/15/78. W 700 P75 1978 Violence in the family: protecting the abused spouse. Walter J. Wadlington, David Fudella, Elizabeth S. Scott, and Andrew Wright. 2/22/78. BF 575.A3 V55 1978 PSRO: quality of practice - federal responsibility or officious meddling? Oscar A. Thorup, Wyndham B. Blanton, Brian J. Donato, and James C. Respess. 3/15/78. W 84.1 P73 1978 Federal trade commission: nonmedical accreditation of medical training. Oscar A. Thorup, Howard A. Brody, Jonathan Gaines, and Warren H. Pearse. 3/22/78. W 40.1 F45 1978 H.S.A., federal \"guidelines\" for local health planning: cutting costs (?) at whose expense? Oscar A. Thorup. 3/29/78. WA 546.1 H75 1978 To catch a kidney: the who, the how, the hassle. Frederic B. Westervelt, George G. Grattan, John A. Jane, and Leslie E. Rudolf. 4/19/78. WJ 368 T63 1978 Male chauvinism and contraception. Thomas H. Hunter, Donna S. Cowan, Joseph Fletcher, and Stuart S. Howards. 9/20/78. WP 630 M35 1978 Ageism. Thomas H. Hunter, Richard Lindsey, David C. Wilson, and William Poe. 9/27/78. WT 120 A34 1978 The hospice movement. Carlton Sweetser, Oscar Thorup, and Cicely Saunders. 10/4/78. WX 28.61 H655 1978 The Care and management of the sick and incompetent physician. Thomas H. Hunter, W. Dimmock Buxton, Robert C. Green, and George J. Carroll. 10/18/78. W 62 C35 1978 Ethical problems in neonatal intensive care. Howard Brody, Hallam Ivey, Haavi Morreim, and Christopher Slobogin. 10/25/78. WS 420 E85 1978 The medical devices explosion: who protects the victim?. Anthony Shaw, Howard Brody, John Kattwinkel, and Richard Merrill. 11/1/78. W 26 M45 1978 Terrorism. Conrad Hassle, Browning Hoffman, and John H. Moore. 11/15/78. HV 6431 T45 1978 Why are your hospital costs so high? Oscar Thorup, John Forrest, Robert M. Heisel, and John Harlan. 11/29/78. W 74 W55 1978 Should we allow judges to make medical decisions? Dick Howard, Joseph Fletcher, and Roger Dworkie. 12/6/78. W 700 S55 1978 In vitro fertilization. Oscar Thorup, Joseph Schulman, Roger Dworkin, and Joseph Fletcher. 1/17/79. WQ 205 I55 1979 Teenage drug, alcohol and cigarette use: some disturbing trends. Oscar A. Thorup. 1/24/79. WS 460 T45 1979 How far should we go?: ethical decisions on the medical wards. James F. Childress. 1/31/79. W 50 .H65 1979 The American diet: best in the world or major cause of disease? Munsey Wheby, John Owen, Judy Thwing, and Martin Albert. 2/7/79. QT 235 A45 1979 Nurses and doctors: conflict or cooperation? Barbara Brodie, Annette Schwackhawmer, and Carolyn Brunner. 2/21/79. WY 87 N85 1979 National health insurance. William Glazier, Tom Nesbit, John Holloman and Oscar A. Thorup. 2/28/79. WA 540 AA1 N35 1979 Home health services: a less expensive alternative to institutional care? Oscar Thorup, Richard Prindle, Linda Pohland, and Steven Rhoads. 3/7/79. WY 115 H65 1979 Environmental influences on cancer. James C. Dunstan, Oscar Thorup, Richard A. Merill and Joseph K. Wagner. 3/21/79. QZ 202 E55 1979 Your medical record just how confidential is it? Lillian BeVier, Oscar A. Thorup, Joseph Fletcher and Jane Rodgers. 3/29/79. W 700 Y65 1979 Health maintenance organizations: do they work? Oscar A. Thorup, Samuel Goldfine, Gary Jessman, and James B. Murray. 4/4/79. W 125 H45 1979 Health manpower. Robert Graham, Allen Tarloff, Clark Havighurst, and Oscar Thorup. 4/18/79. W 76 H43 1979 Children's rights and parental authority. Raymond Duff, T. H. Hunter, Roger Dworkin, and Joseph Fletcher. 4/25/79. WS 105.5.F2 C55 1979 Hospice in the general hospital. Richard W. Lindsay, M. Caroline Martin, and Cicely Saunders. 9/19/79. WX 28.61 H65 1979 Parents and children: rights in conflict? Donna L. Cowan, Joseph Fletcher, Walter J. Wadlington and Oscar A. Thorup. 10/3/79. WS 105.5.F2 P35 1979 Hazards of nuclear power. Roger A. Rydin, Arthur R. Tamplin, Paul T. Raford, and Thomas H. Hunter. 10/17/79. WA 470 H35 1979 The beta adrenergic blocking agents and their clinical uses. Alan S. Nies. 10/24/79. QV 132 B45 1979 Involuntary sterilization. Joseph Fletcher, Thaddeus E. Kelly, U. G. Turner, and Thomas E. Hunter. 10/31/79. HV 4989 I57 1979 Prevention of disease: is life-style change the answer? Samuel E. Miller, Richard J. Bonnie, Lawrence W. Green, and Thomas H. Hunter. 11/28/79. WA 108 P73 1979 The Impact of institutional review boards on research. Richard A. Merrill, Ferid Murad, John A. Owen, and Thomas H. Hunter. 12/5/79. WB 21 I43 1979","\nThis file consists of recordings of Medical Center Hour lectures during the 1980s. The following is a list of the titles, speakers, dates, and call numbers for each recording:\n"," A pious fraud: ethical issues in the use of placebos. Howard Brody, Joseph Fletcher, Wilford W. Spradlin, Oscar A. Thorup. 1/16/80 WB 330 P57 1980   The Nestle boycott: what are the social responsibilities of corporations?. Judith Gussler, Thomas H. Hunter, Louis T. Rader, Artemis Simopoulous. 1/23/80 HD 60 N46 1980   Team health care: its promises and problems (the Diabetes unit at Blue Ridge Hospital). Susan McLeod, Thomas H. Hunter, Stephen L. Pohl, Joan L. Weinbaum. 2/6/80 W 84.8 T44 1980   The Relationship between medicine and the press. Daniel S. Greenberg, Arnold S. Relman, Lewis Wolfson, Oscar A. Thorup. 2/27/80 HM 263 R44 1980   Medical school admissions: can overzealous protection of the applicant harm the public?. Robert L. Beran, Mark N. Ozer, Edwin W. Pullen, Oscar A. Thorup. 3/5/80 W 18 M43 1980   The Pursuit of justice: is the adversary system destroying us?. James F. Childress, John C. McCoid, E. Gerald Tremblay, Oscar A. Thorup. 3/19/80 BJ 1533.J9 P83 1980   Who runs the health center: the government or the university?. Kenneth R. Crispell, Robert Heyssel, John Hogness, Thomas H. Hunter. 4/2/80 W 19 W58 1980   Rights, benefits and the cost of medical care. Peter Alterman, Harvey V. Fineberg, Joseph Fletcher, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr. 4/16/80 W 74 R54 1980   Occupational illness: investigations, compensation and controversy. Lucian W. Heiner, Robert B. Stroube, Paul M. Suratt, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr. 4/23/80 WA 400 O24 1980   Research on heretical subjects. Richard A. Bonnie, Thomas H. Hunter, Ian P. Stevenson, Peter A. Sturrock. 4/30/80 Q 180.A1 R45 1980   Should you choose your baby's sex?: Amniocentesis for sex selection. Haavi Morreim, Thomas H. Hunter, Anthony Shaw, U.G. Turner. 9/10/80 WQ 209 S56 1980   Authority and obedience: the eternal dilemma. James F. Childress, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr., Stephen Worchel. 9/17/80 BJ 1459 A95 1980   Recombinant DNA and the world of business. Martha D. Ballenger, Thomas H. Hunter, Hugh O. McDevitt, Louis T. Rader. 10/8/80 QH 438.7 R46 1980   Where is nursing going? Does anyone know?. Rose M. Chioni, Norman J. Knorr, Sara J. Mapstone, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr. 10/15/80 WY 9 W58 1980   Hospital cost containment: update on a continuing problem. Ronald Bargatze, John F. Harlan, Jr., Oscar A. Thorup, Jr., Andrew Weinberg. 10/22/80 WX 157 H66 1980   Human sperm banks. Joseph Fletcher, Thomas H. Hunter, James D. Kitchin III, Walter J. Wadlington. 10/29/80 HQ 751 H86 1980   OSHA, benzene and the Supreme Court. Richard A. Merrill, Allen Feldman, A.E. Dick Howard, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr. 11/12/80 WA 465 O84 1980   The new anti-vivisectionism: implications of the \"animal rights\" movement. Thomas Beauchamp, Andrew N. Rowan, Nicholas J. Sojka, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr. 11/19/80 HV 4915 N45 1980   Barriers to the handicapped: how many can and should we remove?. Michael J. Bednar, Richard J. Bonnie, Brian R. Hunt, Thomas H. Hunter. 12/10/80 WA 799 B36 1980   H.M.O. in the academic medical center: asset or liability?. Ronald P. Kaufman, Carl J. Schram, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr., Peyton E. Weary. 1/14/81. W 125 H65 1981   Ethical problems in clinical training: who looks after the patient?. James F. Childress, Henry Aranow, Thomas H. Hunter, W. Dean Warren. 1/21/81. W 84.8 E87 1981   Dual career marriages: so you think you want to marry another professional?. James C. Ballenger, Carol G. Johnson Johns, Ann R. Shamaskin, Barbara Strudler Wallston, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr. 1/28/81. HQ 728 D83 1981   Health in the third world: the role of health in foreign policy. Norman J. Knorr, Thomas H. Hunter, Richard D. Pearson, John Ravenhill. 2/11/81. WA 395 H455 1981   Problems of surrogate parenting. James F. Childress, Donna L. Cowan, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr., Walter J. Wadlington. 2/18/81. WS 105.5.F2 P73 1981   Changing sexual mores: new problems in venereal disease. Howard Bahr, Joseph Fletcher, Thomas H. Hunter, Michael F. Rein, Brigham Young. 2/25/81. WC 140 C54 1981   The impact of the coming physician surplus. Daniel S. Greenberg, August G. Swanson, Alvin R. Tarlov, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr. 3/11/81. W 76 I43 1981   Communication between doctors and patients: why don't we do more listening?. Edward W. Hook, Thomas H. Hunter, Haavi Morreim, Wilford W. Spradlin. 3/25/81. W 62 C64 1981   Off-site teaching: an essential ingredient in clinical education. Robert E. Berry, Leighton E. Cluff, Thomas H. Hunter, Robert Wood Johnson, Latham B. Murray. 4/8/81. W 18 O34 1981   The pleasures and hazards of retirement. Richard W. Lindsay, Jean Bigger, Arthur Hess, Walter J. Hurd. 4/15/81. HQ 1062 P65 1981   Competing in the eighties: academic health center under stress. Truman Esmond, Jeff Goldsmith, Robert Heyssel, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr. 4/22/81. W 19 C65 1981   Is access to health care the answer?: The British experience. James F. Childress, John Glasson, John Lister, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr. 4/29/81. WA 540 FA1 I82 1981   Folk medicine: lessons and insights from Brazil, implications and applications in the U.S. Marilyn Nations-Shields, Thomas H. Hunter, David S. Shields, Loudell F. Snow. 9/16/81. WB 50 DB8 F64 1981   Defective newborns: What can be done? What should be done? Who should decide?. Bradley Rogers, James F. Childress, Cora Diamond, Walter J. Wadlington. 9/23/81. QS 675 D44 1981   Psychiatry and the law: the impasse and beyond?. Joseph Fletcher, James C. Ballenger, Richard J. Bonnie, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr. 9/30/81. WM 33.1 P75 1981   Abortion update: controversy continues. Martha D. Ballenger, Willard D. Cates, James F. Childress, David Little. 10/14/81. WQ 440 A26 1981   Nuclear war: can it be stopped?. Joseph Fletcher, Lt. Col. David R. Carlsen, Howard Hiatt, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr. 10/21/81. UF 767 N85 1981   Elements of malpractice: experts on a collision course. David C. Landin, Richard Gladding, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr., E. Gerald Tremblay. 10/28/81. W 44 E45 1981   Principles and problems of clinical drug trials. Frederick A. Clark, James F. Childress, Lawrence Friedman, John A. Owen, Jr. 11/11/81. QV 771 P75 1981   Victims of violence: should they be compensated? If so, how and by whom?. John Buckman, F. Guthrie Gordon, III, John T. Monahan, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr. 11/18/81. W 910 V55 1981   Medicine: high risk profession. Thomas L. Gorsuch, Kenneth R. Crispell, Betty Mawardi, Raymond Pruitt. 12/9/81. W 21 M45 1981   D.E.S. daughters: infertility, neoplasia and compensation?. Saul X. Levmore, Wallace C. Nunley, Peyton T. Taylor, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr. 1/13/82. WP 522 D45 1982   Control of pain: abstract concepts and reality. Albert B. Butler, James F. Childress, Joseph Fletcher, John C. Rowlingson. 1/20/82. WL 704 C65 1982   Problems with the gift of life? Obtaining organs for transplantation. James F. Childress, George R. Hanna, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr., Frederic B. Westervelt. 1/27/82. WO 690 P75 1982   Triage: who will get the last bed in the ICU?. John W. Hoyt, Carl D. Malchoff, Sara J. Mapstone, James F. Childress. 2/10/82. WX 218 T75 1982   Diagnostic computers: will they replace us? Randolph Miller, Jack D. Myers, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr. 2/17/82. WB 141 D55 1982   The training of residents: relations with each other, staff, attendings and patients. Charles L. Bosk, R. Scott Jones, Mark Siegler, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr. 2/24/82. W 20 T75 1982   Informed consent: is it desirable? Is it possible?. James F. Childress, John A. Owen, Leslie E. Rudolf, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr. 3/10/82. W 62 I555 1982   The physician-patient relationship: how has it changed?. B. Lewis Barnett, Jr., Mark Siegler, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr. 3/17/82. W 62 P585 1982   Fetal surgery: medical, ethical and social implications. Haavi Morreim, James F. Childress, Bradley M. Rogers, James B. Sidbury. 3/24/82. WO 925 F45 1982   Orders not to resuscitate. Joanne Lynn, David D. Stone, Walter J. Wadlington, James F. Childress. 4/14/82. W 50 O75 1982   Traditional endocrinology: due for a shakeup?. Richard M. Bergland, Derek LeRoith, Alan D. Rogol, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr. 4/21/82. WK 21 T75 1982   The herpes syndrome: by-product of the sexual revolution. Jack M. Gwaltney, Richard P. Keeling, Cherie L. Kitchell, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr. 4/28/82. WC 140 H44 1982   The Hinckley decision: demands for legal reform. Richard J. Bonnie, Oscar A. Thorup, John Monahan, Park E. Dietz. 9/8/82. W 740 H5 1982   Medical school and beyond: the Black experience. Lester W. Brown, Vivian W. Pinn, Calvin H. Thigpen, William M. Womack, Dudley F. Rochester. 9/15/82. W 18 M45 1982   Prenatal child abuse: behavior restrictions on expectant mothers. F. John Bourgeois, Karen J. Jacobs, Elizabeth G. Taylor, Oscar A. Thorup. 9/29/82. WQ 175 P7 1982   De-institutionalization of the mentally ill: economics or therapeutic?. Robert Lassiter, William Burns, Wilfred Spradlin, Joseph Fletcher, Oscar A. Thorup. 10/13/82. W 84.7 D4 1982   Near-death experiences: what do they hear?. Raymond A. Moody, William Evans, James F. Childress, Oscar A. Thorup. 10/20/82. BF 1040 N4 1982   Hospital medicine: are medical technology and \"caring\" incompatible?. Kenneth R. Crispell, Thomas A. Massaro, Ingelborg G. Mauksch, James F. Childress. 10/27/82. W 85 H6 1982   Promotion of pharmaceutical products: pro-competition or contra-competition?. John A. Owen, B. Blair Garnett, Locke Boyer, James Childress. 12/8/82. WB 330 P7 1982   Aging, role reversal: when your parents become your children. Oscar A. Thorup. 12/15/82. WT 30 A38 1982   Foreign medical school graduates: the status today. Samuel P. Asper, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr., August G. Swanson, Kenneth Crispell. 1/13/83. W 21 F6 1983   The Role of religion in medical care. Julian N. Hartt, James F. Childress; Robert W. Cantrell; Clyde M. Watson, Jr. 1/19/83. WM 61 R6 1983   Nursing homes: past, present and future. Rosemary Hayes. 1/26/83. WT 27 N8 1983   Psychoanalysis: is it really an impossible profession?. James A. Bakhtiar, C. Knight Aldrich, Seymour Rabinowitz, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr. 2/9/83. WM 460 P8 1983   Medicaid: its successes, its failures, its prospects. James Childress, Oscar Thorup, John T. Ashley, Thomas Moloney. 2/16/83. W 275 AA1 M43 1983   Reverse discrimination or affirmative action: Bakke and beyond. A.E. Dick Howard, Arlene P. Nichols, Kelly M. Darden, Jr., Oscar A. Thorup, Jr. 2/23/83. BF 575.P9 R45 1983   Pregnant children: the increasing problem of teen pregnancy. Paula J. Hillard, Catherine Bodkin, Susan McLeod, James F. Childress. 3/9/83. WS 462 P73 1983   Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome: current status and concerns. Oscar A. Thorup, Dick P. Wenzel, Michael F. Rein, Eliot R. Pearl. 3/16/83. WD 308 A25 1983   Abortion: do men have rights?. Martha D. Ballenger, et al. 3/23/83. HQ 767 A154 1983   The Cocaine epidemic: fallacies and facts. Robert L. Dupont, et al. 3/30/83. WM 280 C659 1983   Hospital ownership: does it make any difference?. William B. Deal, et al. 4/13/83. WX 100 H828 1983   Should physicians and hospitals prepare for war?. Podge M. Reed, et al. 4/27/83. WX 185 S559 1983   Update on AIDS: social and clinical significance. Oscar A. Thorup, Michael F. Rein, Richard P. Wenzel, James F. Childress. 9/14/83. WD 308 U66 1983   Fraud in science. Bernard B. Davis, John A. Owen, Jr., Thomas H. Hunter. 9/21/83. Q 172.5.F7 F845 1983   The Baby Doe rule: necessity or intrusion?. John Kattwinkel, Paul Marschand, Haavi Morreim, James F. Childress. 9/28/83. W 50 B115 1983   Medical school admissions: how do we select the best?. Edwin W. Pullen, Robert L. Kellogg, Thomas L. Pearce, Oscar A. Thorup. 10/12/83. W 19 M489 1983   Feeding: is it morally required for everyone?. David D. Stone, Joanne Lynn, Priscilla K. Ludy, James F. Childress. 10/26/83. W 50 F295 1983   Impaired physicians: what are we doing for them?. William J. Farley, William Barney, Lisabeth Kopp, John A. Owen. 11/16/83. W 21 I34 1983   Medical confidentiality: is it possible in the modern hospital?. Mark Siegler, Sara T. Fry, Kenneth Abraham, James F. Childress. 11/30/83. W 700 M489 1983   Diagnosis related groups (DRGs) and discharge planning. Miriam Birdwhistell, James Bentley, Haavi Morreim, Oscar A. Thorup. 12/14/83. WX 157 D536 1983   The Day after: another look at its implications. Thomas Doran, Matthew Lambert, Cal Thomas, James F. Childress. 1/18/84. UF 767 D273 1984   Athletes and androgens: what's wrong with steroids. Alan D. Rogol, Ernst H. Soudek, James Reardon, Oscar A. Thorup. 1/25/84. WK 150 A871 1984   Hospital ethics committees: what is their role?. Robert M. Veatch, Irving L. Kron, Robert A. Darnall, Jr., James F. Childress. 2/8/84. W 50 H644 1984   PPOs, HMOs, and IPAs: new and developing access and cost programs in medicine. James Gore, Robert Williams, Hilton Almond, Oscar A. Thorup. 2/15/84. W 74 P894 1984   Thin bones. osteoporosis, calcium and estrogen: is there an answer?. Paul B. Underwood, Michael R. Wills, John A. Owen, Kenneth R. Crispell. 2/22/84. WB 250 T443 1984   Head injury care: immediate and long term. Rebecca W. Rimel, Thomas R. Johns, John A. Jane, Oscar A. Thorup. 2/29/84. WE 706 H433 1984   Coronary artery bypass surgery: is it needed?. Eugene Passamani, Ivan K. Crosby, George B. Craddock, Jr., Oscar A. Thorup. 3/14/84. WG 169 C8225 1984   Ethics questions on professional examinations: is it possible to test ethical judgments and virtues on board and bar examinations?. Edward W. Hook, Julia E. Connelly, Kent Sinclair, James F. Childress. 3/21/84. W 50 E84 1984   The Sick citadel: tensions and conflicts within and without. James D. Bentley, Cecil G. Sheps, Kenneth R. Crispell, 0scar A. Thorup. 4/11/84. WX 27 AA1 S566 1984   Childhood and adult immunization: priorities in public policy and their implementation in clinical practice. Gregory F. Hayden, Richard A. Prindle, Jack M. Gwaltney, David S. Fedson. 4/25/84. QW 806 C536 1984   Debris of divorce: the effect on children. Andre P. Derdeyn, Robert E. Emery, Jr., Elizabeth S. Scott, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr. 9/19/84. WS 105.5.A8 D288 1984   What's to become of hospice?. Rev. Dinah L. Ansley, David M. Synder, Christopher P. Zazakos, Jr., Oscar A. Thorup. 9/26/84. WX 28.6 AA1 W555 1984   Mercy and compassion: are we insensitive to the needs of patients?. John T. Ashley, Sara J. Mapstone, Ian P. Stevenson, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr. 10/10/84. WX 162 M557 1984   Medical education: do we need a new Flexner Report?. Robert L. Kellogg, William D. Mattern, Benjamin Sturgill, Oscar A. Thorup. 10/17/84. W 18 M42 1984   Childhood depression: infancy and beyond. Andre P. Derdeyn, James Duffee, Charles H. Gleason, Oscar A. Thorup. 10/24/84. WM 171 C536 1984   Women in medicine: what progress are we making?. Ruth B. Weeks, Marguerite C. Lippert, Elizabeth S. Higgs, John A. Owen, Jr. 10/31/84. W 21 W872 1984   \"Birthing in America\": options and problems. Paula Hilard, Hallum Hurt, Paul B. Underwood. 11/28/84. WQ 415 B621 1984   Child abuse: sexual abuse of children. Park E. Dietz, Kenneth Lanning, Frank T. Saulsbury, Oscar Thorup Jr., moderator. 12/12/84. WA 320 C536 1984   The Crisis at Tampa General: the issues of hospital survival. James Bentley, Phil Birnbaum, Julian Rice, Oscar A. Thorup. 3/20/85. WX 157 C932 1985   DRGs: are they working?. Peter Munger, Robert A. Reid, Tim Keating, Oscar A. Thorup. 3/27/85. WX 157 D778 1985   Nuclear arms: whose responsibility?. Sidney Alexander, Joseph Fletcher, John Rhinelander, Oscar A. Thorup, moderator. 4/10/85. JX 1974 N8 1985   Informed consent: is it really possible?. Jay Katz, Leslie Rudolf, Walter J. Wadlington, Oscar A. Thorup, moderator. 4/24/85. W 33 I43 1985   Alzheimer's disease: public perception and medical facts. H. Robert Brashear, Eric W. Lothman, James Q. Miller, Oscar A. Thorup. 10/9/85. WM 220 A47815 1985   AIDS: public health and private rights. Michael Rein, Jeffrey O'Connell, James F. Childress, Richard Keeling, moderator. 10/23/85. WD 308 A28813 1985   When does child abuse start?: Fetal alcohol syndrome. W. Allen Hogge, Thomas J. Czelusta, James F. Childress, Leslie Rudolf, moderator. 10/30/85. WQ 211 W567 1985   Uncompensated care: which patients and what can be done?. Robert Tell, Carter Melton, Louis Rossiter, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr., moderator. 11/20/85. WX 157 U54 1985   Cocaine, illicit drugs and public policy. Robert DuPont; Richard Bonnie; Joseph Fletcher; Oscar Thorup, Jr., moderator. 12/11/85. WM 280 C6595 1985   The death penalty: dilemmas for physicians and society. Park Dietz, Paul Applebaum, Richard Bonnie, Oscar J. Thorup, moderator. 2/19/86. HV 8699.U5 D2855 1986   Surrogate parenting: should the contract be enforced?. Angela Holder, Walter J. Wadlington, JoAnn Pinkerton, James F. Childress. 4/15/87. HQ 759.5 S962 1987   Should foreign nationals have access to U.S. cadaver organs for transplantation?. Frederic B. Westervelt, Gene Pierce, James F. Childress, Oscar A. Thorup Jr., moderator. 4/29/87. WO 660 S559 1987   Screening for AIDS: what should we do?. James F. Childress, Jack M. Gwaltney, Richard P. Keeling, Oscar A. Thorup. 9/9/87. WD 308 S433 1987   Court-ordered obstetrical interventions: fetal and maternal rights. Medical Television Services, University of Virginia Medical Center. 9/16/87. R11.M4 9/16/87.   Report of University of Virginia's Drug task force: what now?. Randolph J. Canterbury, John A. Owen, Jr., Sybil Todd, Oscar A. Thorup. 9/23/87. HV 4999.4.C48 R425 1987   Future of nursing: what must be done?. Rose M. Chioni, Ann Minnick, Jean Sorrells-Jones, John F. Harlan. 9/30/87. WY 16 F996 1987   Alzheimer's disease in a family member: frustrations and coping strategies. Ann Brushwood, Richard W. Lindsay, Sue Winslow, Oscar A. Thorup. 10/14/87. WM 220 A4783 1987   Mapping and sequencing the human genome: scientific, social, and ethical issues. Robert Cook-Deegan, John C. Fletcher, Thaddeus E. Kelly, James F. Childress. 10/21/87. QH 447 M297 1987   Lying and its detection: recent empirical and ethical studies. Bella M. DePaulo, James F. Childress, Kenneth Crispell. 10/28/87. BJ 1421 L985 1987   Use of fetal tissues in transplantation: promising therapy and/or dangerous practice. Lynn A. Baker, James P. Bennett, James F. Childress, John A. Owen. 11/11/87. WO 690 U84 1987   Crisis at Tampa General Hospital revisited: resolution?. Newell France, James Bentley, Philip Birnbaum, Oscar A. Thorup. 12/9/87. WX 157 C9323 1987   Impaired providers: prevention, identification and sanctions. Gerald J. Bechamps, Jacob A. Lohr, John A. Owen, Jr., Oscar A. Thorup, Jr., moderator. 1/13/88. HV 5825 I34 1988   When the menses cease: the latest on menopause. Paul B. Underwood, Jr., JoAnn V. Pinkerton, Diane Snustad, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr., moderator. 1/20/88. WP 580 W567 1988   How do we learn?: why do we forget?. James E. Deese, H. Robert Brashear, Paul E. Gold, Oscar A. Thorup. 1/27/88. BF 378.F7 H847 1988   Should the parents be allowed to donate the organs of anencephalic new borns?. John C. Fletcher, Bradley M. Rodgers, Nicholas J. Lenn, James F. Childress. 2/24/88. WO 690 S559 1988   Legal problems in emergency rooms, other than malpractice. Rebecca W. West, Joseph F. Chance, Robert D. Powers, Oscar A. Thorup. 3/9/88. WX 215 L496 1988   The Case of a court-ordered cesarean section for a terminally ill woman: What are the facts? What should have been done?. Barbara Mishkin, JoAnn V. Pinkerton, John C. Fletcher, James F. Childress. 3/23/88. WQ 33.1 C337 1988   Management of chronic pain: Can we do better?. Phoebe M. Orebaugh, Gerald Goldstein, John C. Rowlingson, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr., moderator. 4/13/88. WL 704 M2665 1988   AIDS, children and hemophiliacs. Louis M. Aledort, Jack M. Gwaltney, Karen A. Bringelsen, Oscar A. Thorup. 4/20/88. WD 308 A28818 1988   Sick building syndrome: an expensive headache. Thomas A. Platts-Mills, Allen H. Neims, David N. Easton, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr., moderator. 4/27/88. QT 230 S566 1988   AIDS in 1988: medical, legal and ethical developments. Michael F. Rein, Richard J. Bonnie, John C. Fletcher, Richard P. Keeling. 9/14/88. WD 308 A28822 1988   Fraud and misrepresentation in science: what can be done?. Franklyn N. Arnhoff, Dennis Barnes, Paul R. Gross, James F. Childress, moderator. 9/21/88. Q 180 U5 F845 1988   Residency training: Problems and possible reforms. Amy Tucker, Brent Williams, Patricia Porterfield, Munsey Wheby. 10/26/88. W 20 R433 1988   The resource-based relative value scale for physician reimbursement: What are its implications. James Nuckols, Robert Epstein, Brian Conway, Edward Hook. 11/9/88. W 275 AA1 R434 1988   Should tissues from aborted fetuses be used in transplantation?. John C. Fletcher, James F. Childress, Rebecca W. West, John A. Owen, Jr. 11/16/88. WO 690 S5592 1988   Setting limits: should age be used as a criterion in the allocation of health care?. Daniel Callahan, Joseph Fletcher, Richard Lindsay, James Childress. 11/30/88. WT 30 S495 1988   Medical liability reform: the range of considerations. Kenneth S. Abraham, Robert E. Reynolds, James F. Childress, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr., moderator. 1/18/89. W 44 M4885 1989   Illicit drugs: reducing the demand. Robert DuPont, Randolph Canterbury, Richard Bonnie, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr., moderator. 2/8/89. WM 270 I29 1989   The New hospital: how it got here and what it means. John T. Ashley, Don E. Detmer, Peter L Munger, William H. Muller, Jr. 2/15/89. WX 28 AV8 N532 1989   Medical informatics: strategic weapon for health care, education and research. Robert Beck, Don Kaiser, Robert Darnall, Jr. Judy Ozbolt, Robert Reynolds. 2/22/89. Z 699.5.M39 M489 1989   Medical school: stresses and successes. Randy Comerford, Janet Jeffries, Steve McNamara, John Martin. 3/8/89. W 18 M489 1989   Increasing incidence of sexually transmitted diseases: risk taking and sexual behavior. Michael Rein, William Gardner, Christine Peterson; moderator, Oscar Thorup, Jr. 3/15/89. WC 140 I37 1989   Cholesterol screening and education: from research to community action. Charles Olech, Robert Douglas Abbott, Rebecca Reeve; moderator, Richard Prindle. 4/19/89. WB 425 C547 1989   Graduate medical education: financing and structure. Ruth Hanft, Cecil Samuelson, Peter Munger, Oscar A. Thorup. 9/20/89. W 20 G733 1989   Substance abuse in pregnancy: examining the options. JoAnn Pinkerton, Sidney Callahan, Willis Spaulding. 9/27/89. WM 280 S941 1989   Who are the homeless: where did they come from? What can be done if they refuse help?. David Hilfiker, Carl Yank, James F. Childress. 11/8/89. HV 4505 W628 1989   Update on AIDS: testing and treatment. Willard Cates, Brian Wispelwey, James F. Childress, Oscar A. Thorup. 11/15/89. WD 308 U662 1989 ","Event poster advertising a visiting exhibit at the Claude Moore Health Sciences Library, held in conjunction with a Medical Center Hour lecture featuring Michael Sappol.","Event poster advertising two events at UVA related to Theater of War, held in conjunction with a Medical Center Hour lecture.","This accession consists of a digital file of the Vivian Pinn portrait created by Jonathan Linton that currently hangs in Pinn Hall of the UVA School of Medicine (as of 4/2/2025), as well as a description card with an image of the photograph on one side and an image of artist Jonathan Linton painting the image on the other.","Unless otherwise noted, the University of Virginia owns the copyright to the materials in this collection that have not yet entered the public domain. You are free to use collection materials in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use. For other uses you need to obtain permission from the rights-holder(s).","Copyright restrictions may apply.","The University of Virginia owns the copyrights to the annual and biennial reports.","Copyright restrictions may apply.","Copyright restrictions may apply.","Copyright restrcitions may apply.","Copyright restrictions may apply.","Copyright restrictions may apply.","Historical Collections and Services must restrict reproduction and redistribution of these materials according to copyright law because the creator of the film is unknown.","Copyright restrictions may apply.","The University of Virginia owns the copyrights to the publications of the School of Medicine.","The University of Virginia owns the copyrights to the journals and magazines in this subseries.","The University of Virginia owns the copyrights to the newsletter in this subseries.","Copyright restrictions may apply.","Copyright restrictions may apply.","Copyright restrictions may apply.","Copyright restrictions may apply.","Copyright restrictions may apply.","Use restrictions may apply.","Use restrictions may apply.","The University of Virginia owns the copyrights to the course schedules and catalogs.","Use restrictions may apply.","The University of Virginia owns the copyrights to the admissions publications.","Copyright restrictions may apply.","Copyright restrictions may apply.","The content collected in this series may be subject to copyright restrictions. The copyright of some content may be owned by the University of Virginia. The rights to non-UVA publications are likely held by other entities.","Copyright restrictions may apply.","Copyright restrictions may apply.","Copyright restrictions may apply.","Copyright restrictions may apply.","Copyright restrictions may apply.","Copyright restrictions may apply.","Copyright restrictions may apply.","Some materials may be subject to copyright restrictions.","Copyright restrictions may apply.","Copyright restrictions may apply.","Note: Oversize materials are located on Row 19, located behind Row 1.","Claude Moore Health Sciences Library","English"],"unitid_tesim":["RG.17.1","Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","/repositories/7/resources/212"],"normalized_title_ssm":["University of Virginia School of Medicine records"],"collection_title_tesim":["University of Virginia School of Medicine records"],"collection_ssim":["University of Virginia School of Medicine records"],"repository_ssm":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"access_terms_ssm":["Unless otherwise noted, the University of Virginia owns the copyright to the materials in this collection that have not yet entered the public domain. You are free to use collection materials in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use. For other uses you need to obtain permission from the rights-holder(s)."],"access_subjects_ssim":["University of Virginia"],"access_subjects_ssm":["University of Virginia"],"has_online_content_ssim":["true"],"extent_ssm":["71 Linear Feet 11 Records boxes, 76 document boxes, and (approximately) 22 linear feet of bound material."],"extent_tesim":["71 Linear Feet 11 Records boxes, 76 document boxes, and (approximately) 22 linear feet of bound material."],"date_range_isim":[1825,1826,1827,1828,1829,1830,1831,1832,1833,1834,1835,1836,1837,1838,1839,1840,1841,1842,1843,1844,1845,1846,1847,1848,1849,1850,1851,1852,1853,1854,1855,1856,1857,1858,1859,1860,1861,1862,1863,1864,1865,1866,1867,1868,1869,1870,1871,1872,1873,1874,1875,1876,1877,1878,1879,1880,1881,1882,1883,1884,1885,1886,1887,1888,1889,1890,1891,1892,1893,1894,1895,1896,1897,1898,1899,1900,1901,1902,1903,1904,1905,1906,1907,1908,1909,1910,1911,1912,1913,1914,1915,1916,1917,1918,1919,1920,1921,1922,1923,1924,1925,1926,1927,1928,1929,1930,1931,1932,1933,1934,1935,1936,1937,1938,1939,1940,1941,1942,1943,1944,1945,1946,1947,1948,1949,1950,1951,1952,1953,1954,1955,1956,1957,1958,1959,1960,1961,1962,1963,1964,1965,1966,1967,1968,1969,1970,1971,1972,1973,1974,1975,1976,1977,1978,1979,1980,1981,1982,1983,1984,1985,1986,1987,1988,1989,1990,1991,1992,1993,1994,1995,1996,1997,1998,1999,2000,2001,2002,2003,2004,2005,2006,2007,2008,2009,2010,2011,2012,2013,2014,2015,2016,2017,2018,2019,2020],"accessrestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eAll materials in this collection are available for public access unless otherwise noted. Restrictions on access are made in accordance with the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (HIPAA), the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act of 1974 (FERPA), the Virginia Freedom of Information Act, and any related policies or regulations.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAccess restrictions may differ between the collections filed in this series.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThere may be restrictions on access to some annual and biennial reports. Records in this series must be reviewed for personally identifiable information and anonymous donor information before release. This protected information may need to be redacted before access is given.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThere are no known access restrictions.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThere are no restrictions on access to the commencement records.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThere may be restrictions on access to some of the planning documents and reports. Records in this series must be reviewed before access is given.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThere are no restrictions on access to the educational accreditation files.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThere are no restrictions on access to the photographs and negatives.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThere are no restrictions on access to the public relations files.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThere are no restrictions on access to the publications of the School of Medicine.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThere are no restrictions on access to the journals and magazines in this subseries.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThere are no restrictions on access to the newsletters in this subseries.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThere are no restrictions on access to the publications of the School of Medicine.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eArchives staff must review materials before release to researchers, materials may contain proprietary information protected by VA FOIA (see VA FOIA 2.2-3705.6).\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThere are no restrictions on access to student organization records and student publications.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThere are no restrictions on access to administrative organization and structure files.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThere are no restrictions on access to the policies, procedures, and handbooks.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThere are no restrictions on access to the syllabi and course materials.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eRecords in this series must be reviewed for personally identifiable information, wealth assessments, and anonymous donor information before release. Protected information may need to be redacted before access is given.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eRecords in this series must be reviewed for personally identifiable information and anonymous donor information before release. This protected information may need to be redacted before access is given.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eContent is restricted.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThere are no restrictions on access to the course schedules and catalogs.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eRecords in this series must be reviewed for personally identifiable information and anonymous donor information before release. This protected information may need to be redacted before access is given.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThere are no restrcitions on access to the admissions publications.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThere are no restrcitions on access to the admissions publications.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThere are no restrictions on access to the conference reports and programs.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eRestrictions on access to the records in this series varies between the constituent subseries.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe biographies and biographical files are open to researchers. However, before providing access, archivists must review the requested records for personally identifiable information (PII). This protected information may need to be redacted before access is given.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThere are no restrictions on access to the materials in this subseries.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThere are no restrictions on access to the materials in this subseries.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThere are no restrictions on access to the materials in this subseries.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAccess to scrapbooks may be restricted. Records in this sub-series must be reviewed before access is given.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eRestrictions on access to the records in this series may vary.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eRestrictions on access to the records in this series may vary. Records in this series must be reviewed before release. Protected information may need to be redacted before access is given.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAccess to these materials is partially restricted under the provisions of the official policies of the University of Virginia.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSome content restricted due to FERPA.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSome content restricted due to FERPA.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAccess to these materials is partially restricted under the provisions of the official policies of the University of Virginia.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAccess to materials in this series may be restricted according to the provisions of the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA), Virginia law, and Univeristy of Virginia policies. Permission to see student records must be obtained through formal procedures established by the University of Virginia that comply with federal and state law.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThere are no restrcitions on access to the directories.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThere are no restrictions on access to the committee records and meeting minutes.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThere are no restrictions on access to awards, honors, and commemorations records.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThere are no restrictions on access to the lectures and presentations.\u003c/p\u003e"],"accessrestrict_heading_ssm":["Conditions Governing Access","Conditions Governing Access","Conditions Governing Access","Conditions Governing Access","Conditions Governing Access","Conditions Governing Access","Conditions Governing Access","Conditions Governing Access","Conditions Governing Access","Conditions Governing Access","Conditions Governing Access","Conditions Governing Access","Conditions Governing Access","Conditions Governing Access","Conditions Governing Access","Conditions Governing Access","Conditions Governing Access","Conditions Governing Access","Conditions Governing Access","Conditions Governing Access","Conditions Governing Access","Conditions Governing Access","Conditions Governing Access","Conditions Governing Access","Conditions Governing Access","Conditions Governing Access","Conditions Governing Access","Conditions Governing Access","Conditions Governing Access","Conditions Governing Access","Conditions Governing Access","Conditions Governing Access","Conditions Governing Access","Conditions Governing Access","Conditions Governing Access","Conditions Governing Access","Conditions Governing Access","Conditions Governing Access","Conditions Governing Access","Conditions Governing Access","Conditions Governing Access","Conditions Governing Access","Conditions Governing Access"],"accessrestrict_tesim":["All materials in this collection are available for public access unless otherwise noted. Restrictions on access are made in accordance with the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (HIPAA), the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act of 1974 (FERPA), the Virginia Freedom of Information Act, and any related policies or regulations.","Access restrictions may differ between the collections filed in this series.","There may be restrictions on access to some annual and biennial reports. Records in this series must be reviewed for personally identifiable information and anonymous donor information before release. This protected information may need to be redacted before access is given.","There are no known access restrictions.","There are no restrictions on access to the commencement records.","There may be restrictions on access to some of the planning documents and reports. Records in this series must be reviewed before access is given.","There are no restrictions on access to the educational accreditation files.","There are no restrictions on access to the photographs and negatives.","There are no restrictions on access to the public relations files.","There are no restrictions on access to the publications of the School of Medicine.","There are no restrictions on access to the journals and magazines in this subseries.","There are no restrictions on access to the newsletters in this subseries.","There are no restrictions on access to the publications of the School of Medicine.","Archives staff must review materials before release to researchers, materials may contain proprietary information protected by VA FOIA (see VA FOIA 2.2-3705.6).","There are no restrictions on access to student organization records and student publications.","There are no restrictions on access to administrative organization and structure files.","There are no restrictions on access to the policies, procedures, and handbooks.","There are no restrictions on access to the syllabi and course materials.","Records in this series must be reviewed for personally identifiable information, wealth assessments, and anonymous donor information before release. Protected information may need to be redacted before access is given.","Records in this series must be reviewed for personally identifiable information and anonymous donor information before release. This protected information may need to be redacted before access is given.","Content is restricted.","There are no restrictions on access to the course schedules and catalogs.","Records in this series must be reviewed for personally identifiable information and anonymous donor information before release. This protected information may need to be redacted before access is given.","There are no restrcitions on access to the admissions publications.","There are no restrcitions on access to the admissions publications.","There are no restrictions on access to the conference reports and programs.","Restrictions on access to the records in this series varies between the constituent subseries.","The biographies and biographical files are open to researchers. However, before providing access, archivists must review the requested records for personally identifiable information (PII). This protected information may need to be redacted before access is given.","There are no restrictions on access to the materials in this subseries.","There are no restrictions on access to the materials in this subseries.","There are no restrictions on access to the materials in this subseries.","Access to scrapbooks may be restricted. Records in this sub-series must be reviewed before access is given.","Restrictions on access to the records in this series may vary.","Restrictions on access to the records in this series may vary. Records in this series must be reviewed before release. Protected information may need to be redacted before access is given.","Access to these materials is partially restricted under the provisions of the official policies of the University of Virginia.","Some content restricted due to FERPA.","Some content restricted due to FERPA.","Access to these materials is partially restricted under the provisions of the official policies of the University of Virginia.","Access to materials in this series may be restricted according to the provisions of the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA), Virginia law, and Univeristy of Virginia policies. Permission to see student records must be obtained through formal procedures established by the University of Virginia that comply with federal and state law.","There are no restrcitions on access to the directories.","There are no restrictions on access to the committee records and meeting minutes.","There are no restrictions on access to awards, honors, and commemorations records.","There are no restrictions on access to the lectures and presentations."],"arrangement_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003e\nThe UVA School of Medicine records (RG-17-1) is part of a larger records group for the UVA Health System (RG-17). The School of Medicine records are further arranged into subdivisions, generally based on format. These subdivisions in many cases were chosen to reflect the Records Retention and Disposition Schedules Record Series maintained by the Library of Virginia (LVA); however, in some cases subdivisions do no have clear equivalents in the LVA schema. Some subdivisions (noted as \"Series\" in ArchivesSpace) are further divided into Sub-Series). Files are arranged alphabetically, by date, or by some other system best-suited to the contents.\n\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\nSubdivisions in use for the UVA Health System records (RG-17) are listed below:\n\u003c/p\u003e","\u003col\u003e\n\u003cil\u003eDepartment and Legacy Collections\u003c/il\u003e\n\u003cil\u003eAnnual Reports\u003c/il\u003e\n\u003cil\u003eCorrespondence and Subject Files of Selected Deans [Not currently included in RG-17-1]\u003c/il\u003e\n\u003cil\u003eCorrespondence and Subject Files of Major Department Heads\u003c/il\u003e\n\u003cil\u003eCommencement Records\u003c/il\u003e\n\u003cil\u003ePlanning Documents and Reports\u003c/il\u003e\n\u003cil\u003eMotion Pictures [Not currently included in RG-17-1]\u003c/il\u003e\n\u003cil\u003eFinal Accreditation Files\u003c/il\u003e\n\u003cil\u003ePhotographs, Slides, and Negatives\u003c/il\u003e\n\u003cil\u003ePublic Relations Files [Not currently included in RG-17-1]\u003c/il\u003e\n\u003cil\u003ePublications\u003c/il\u003e\n\u003cil\u003eAudiovisual Recordings [Not currently included in RG-17-1]\u003c/il\u003e\n\u003cil\u003eFinal Research Reports [Not currently included in RG-17-1]\u003c/il\u003e\n\u003cil\u003eStudent Organization Records and Publications\u003c/il\u003e\n\u003cil\u003eWebpages\u003c/il\u003e\n\u003cil\u003eOrganizational Charts\u003c/il\u003e\n\u003cil\u003ePolicies, Procedures, and Handbooks\u003c/il\u003e\n\u003cil\u003eSyllabi and Other Course Materials\u003c/il\u003e\n\u003cil\u003eMajor Donor Records [Not included in RG-17-1]\u003c/il\u003e\n\u003cil\u003eFundraising Planning and Reporting [Not currently included in RG-17-1]\u003c/il\u003e\n\u003cil\u003eTrust and Endowment Records [Not currently included in RG-17-1]\u003c/il\u003e\n\u003cil\u003eCourse Schedules and Catalogs\u003c/il\u003e\n\u003cil\u003eLibrary Accession Records [Not currently included in RG-17-1]\u003c/il\u003e\n\u003cil\u003eLibrary Deaccessioning Records [Not currently included in RG-17-1]\u003c/il\u003e\n\u003cil\u003eAdmissions Publications\u003c/il\u003e\n\u003cil\u003eFoundation Agreements and Management Reports\u003c/il\u003e\n\u003cil\u003eFinal Budget [Not currently included in RG-17-1]\u003c/il\u003e\n\u003cil\u003eConference Programs and Reports\u003c/il\u003e\n\u003cil\u003eLegacy Patient Records [Not currently included in RG-17-1]\u003c/il\u003e\n\u003cil\u003eHistories and Biographical Files\u003c/il\u003e\n\u003cil\u003eManagement Reports\u003c/il\u003e\n\u003cil\u003eOther Reports (Historically Significant)\u003c/il\u003e\n\u003cil\u003eMedical Student Records\u003c/il\u003e\n\u003cil\u003eDirectories\u003c/il\u003e\n\u003cil\u003eMeeting Minutes\u003c/il\u003e\n\u003cil\u003eAwards and Honors\u003c/il\u003e\n\u003cil\u003eLectures and Presentations\u003c/il\u003e\n\u003cil\u003eRoll Books [Not currently included in RG-17-1]\u003c/il\u003e\n\u003cil\u003eOther Logs and Ledgers [Not currently included in RG-17-1]\u003c/il\u003e\n\u003cil\u003eExhibit Materials [Not currently included in RG-17-1]\u003c/il\u003e\n\u003c/ol\u003e","\u003cp\u003eDepartment and Legacy collections are arranged into subseries. The subseries are then arranged alphabetically. The arrangements of the files and items in each subseries vary by collection.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAnnual reports are arranged according to the department or unit described in the reports. Each department is assigned a file. The files are arranged in their series alphabetically by their title. Inside the files, reports are arranged in chronological order by the date of creation for the reports.  Annual reports for the School of Medicine as a whole will be placed in a file titled \"School of Medicine\". The file will be placed at the beginning of the series regardless of its position alphabetically in the series.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe correspondence and subject files in this series are arranged into subseries accourding to the indiviual who created the records. The subseries are then arranged alphabetically by the last name of each individual. Arrangement of materials at the subseries level may vary.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMaterials in this subseries are arranged in chronological order.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe bulk of the commencement records are arranged into two subseries. The first subseries contains materials related to final exercises and graduation excercises. The second subseries contains materials related to baccalaureate services. Materials in these two subseries are grouped together into files according to the date of exercises and services. The files are then arranged in chronological order. \u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eCommencement records that do not belong in either of the two subseires described above are filed into a third subseries called \"Other commencement records\". All of the materials in this subseries are arranged chronologically according to their date of creation.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIn this series, a file is created for each planning report and its associated documents. The files are arranged chronologically by the date of creation for the materials they contain.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThis series consists of records that document the formal accreditation of the School of Medicine or other educational programs by a relevant educational accreditation body. This series may include, but is not limited to: self study reports, final reports, and questions and responses.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe photographs and negatives are arranged into subseries by either subject or office of creation. The subseries are then arranged alphabetically by title. The arrangements of the files in the subseries vary.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe public relations files are arranged into subseries according to types of materials (e.g. clippings collections and press releases). The subseries are then arranged alphabetically. The arrangements of the files in the subseries vary.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe publications are arranged into subseries according to types of materials (e.g. journals and magazines, newsletters, weblogs, patient education resources). The subseries are then arranged alphabetically. The arrangements of the files in the subseries vary.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eJournals and magazines are arranged into files by title. The files are then arranged alphabetically by title.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe newsletters are arranged into files according to title. The files are then arranged alphabetically by title.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe final research reports and associated documents are arranged into files according to the title of the report. The files are then arranged alphabetically.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eStudent organization records are grouped into subseries according to the organization name. The subseries are arranged alphabetically by the name of the organization. Three additional subseries come after the student organizations in the following order: 1. Medical student class plays and talent shows 2. Yearbooks 3. Other student publications. The arrangements of files and items in the subseries vary.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe materials in this series are arranged by the department or unit with which they are associated. Each department is assigned a file. The files are arranged in the series alphabetically by their title. Inside the files, materials are arranged in chronological order by their date of creation.  Records for the School of Medicine as a whole will be placed in a file titled \"School of Medicine\". The file will be placed at the beginning of the series regardless of its position alphabetically in the series.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe policies, procedures, and handbooks are arragned into the following subseries in this order: Policies, Faculty procedures and handbooks, Staff procedures and handbooks, Student procedures and handbooks, and Other procedures and handbooks. The arrangements of the files in the subseries vary.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSyllabi and other course materials are arranged into sub-series by course subject or title. The sub-series are then arranged alphabetically by the course subject or title. At the end of the series, there is a sub-series for files that contain materials from more than one course. Within each subseries, materials are arranged chronologically into files.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMaterials are arranged chronologically within the series.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMaterials in this series are arranged chronologically.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe course schedules and catalogs are arranged into files. The files are then arranged chronologically by date of creation. When a catalog is reocurring (e.g. annually), all of the records in that series are placed together in a single file.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eArrangement within this series may vary.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAdmissions publications are arranged into subseries by the educational programs to which they are related (e.g. undergraduate medical education). These subseries are arranged alphabetically. A final subseries consists of admissions publications for \"Other educational programs\" that don't fit neatly in any of the other subseries.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eResidencies and fellowships informational brochures for the entire Medical Center are collected in a file named \"University of Virginia Medical Center.\" Department-specific brochures are arranged alphabetically into files below the general file.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eConference records and programs are arranged into files by conference title. The files are arranged chronologically. All of the instances of a reoccurring conference are gathered together into the same file.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe materials in this series are arranged into 5 subseries: \u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003e1. Biographies and biographical files \n2. Department histories \n3. Historically significant events \n4. History essays, articles, and monographs \n5. Scrapbooks   \u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eThe arrangements of files in each subseries vary.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMaterials are arranged into files by the name of the person they describe. The files are then arranged alphabetically by the last name of the person. Because of the presence of legacy content from multiple sources, there may be multiple biographical files for the same individual.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eDepartment histories are arranged alphabetically according to the name of the department with which they are associated.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eFiles in this subseries are arranged chronologically.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eEssays, articles, and monographs in this subseries are arranged chronologically by their date of creation.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMaterials in this sub-series are arranged chronologically.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe reports are arranged into files. The files are then arranged chronologically by their date of creation. When a report is reocurring (e.g. monthly operating reports), all of the reports in that series are placed together in a single file.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe reports are arranged into files. The files are then arranged chronologically by their date of creation. When a report is reoccurring, all of the reports in that series are placed together in a single file.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe medical student records are arranged into subseries that represent periods of time. The student record is placed into a given time period according to the student's date of graduation or their last day of attendance. The arrangements of the files in the subseries vary.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe directories are arranged into files. The files are then arranged chronologically by date. When a directory is reocurring (e.g. annually), all of the reports in that series are placed together in a single file.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eOriginal Arrangement Note: \"Files are arranged by chronological order.\"\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe records in this series are arranged into subseries according to committee or department (when the department is holding a general committee meeting). The subseries are then arranged alphabetically by title. The arrangements of the files in the subseries vary.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe awards, honors, and commemorations are arranged into files. The files are then arranged chronologically by date. When an award, honor, or commemoration is reoccurring (e.g. annually), all of the records in that series are placed together in a single file.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe records for stand-alone lectures and presentations are arranged into a subseries called \"Single lectures and presentations\". The records of lectures and presentations that belong to a program or lecture series are arranged into subseries named after the program or lecture series. Following the subseries titled \"Single lectures and presentations\", the remaining lecture series are arranged alphabetically by title. Records in all of the subseries are arranged into files titled with the names of the lectures and presentations. The files are then arranged chronologically by date of creation.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMaterials in this sub-series are arranged chronologically.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMaterials in this sub-series are arranged chronologically.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMaterials in this sub-series are arranged chronologically.\u003c/p\u003e"],"arrangement_heading_ssm":["Arrangement","Arrangement","Arrangement","Arrangement","Arrangement","Arrangement","Arrangement","Arrangement","Arrangement","Arrangement","Arrangement","Arrangement","Arrangement","Arrangement","Arrangement","Arrangement","Arrangement","Arrangement","Arrangement","Arrangement","Arrangement","Arrangement","Arrangement","Arrangement","Arrangement","Arrangement","Arrangement","Arrangement","Arrangement","Arrangement","Arrangement","Arrangement","Arrangement","Arrangement","Arrangement","Arrangement","Arrangement","Arrangement","Arrangement","Arrangement","Arrangement","Arrangement"],"arrangement_tesim":["\nThe UVA School of Medicine records (RG-17-1) is part of a larger records group for the UVA Health System (RG-17). The School of Medicine records are further arranged into subdivisions, generally based on format. These subdivisions in many cases were chosen to reflect the Records Retention and Disposition Schedules Record Series maintained by the Library of Virginia (LVA); however, in some cases subdivisions do no have clear equivalents in the LVA schema. Some subdivisions (noted as \"Series\" in ArchivesSpace) are further divided into Sub-Series). Files are arranged alphabetically, by date, or by some other system best-suited to the contents.\n","\nSubdivisions in use for the UVA Health System records (RG-17) are listed below:\n","Department and Legacy Collections Annual Reports Correspondence and Subject Files of Selected Deans [Not currently included in RG-17-1] Correspondence and Subject Files of Major Department Heads Commencement Records Planning Documents and Reports Motion Pictures [Not currently included in RG-17-1] Final Accreditation Files Photographs, Slides, and Negatives Public Relations Files [Not currently included in RG-17-1] Publications Audiovisual Recordings [Not currently included in RG-17-1] Final Research Reports [Not currently included in RG-17-1] Student Organization Records and Publications Webpages Organizational Charts Policies, Procedures, and Handbooks Syllabi and Other Course Materials Major Donor Records [Not included in RG-17-1] Fundraising Planning and Reporting [Not currently included in RG-17-1] Trust and Endowment Records [Not currently included in RG-17-1] Course Schedules and Catalogs Library Accession Records [Not currently included in RG-17-1] Library Deaccessioning Records [Not currently included in RG-17-1] Admissions Publications Foundation Agreements and Management Reports Final Budget [Not currently included in RG-17-1] Conference Programs and Reports Legacy Patient Records [Not currently included in RG-17-1] Histories and Biographical Files Management Reports Other Reports (Historically Significant) Medical Student Records Directories Meeting Minutes Awards and Honors Lectures and Presentations Roll Books [Not currently included in RG-17-1] Other Logs and Ledgers [Not currently included in RG-17-1] Exhibit Materials [Not currently included in RG-17-1]","Department and Legacy collections are arranged into subseries. The subseries are then arranged alphabetically. The arrangements of the files and items in each subseries vary by collection.","Annual reports are arranged according to the department or unit described in the reports. Each department is assigned a file. The files are arranged in their series alphabetically by their title. Inside the files, reports are arranged in chronological order by the date of creation for the reports.  Annual reports for the School of Medicine as a whole will be placed in a file titled \"School of Medicine\". The file will be placed at the beginning of the series regardless of its position alphabetically in the series.","The correspondence and subject files in this series are arranged into subseries accourding to the indiviual who created the records. The subseries are then arranged alphabetically by the last name of each individual. Arrangement of materials at the subseries level may vary.","Materials in this subseries are arranged in chronological order.","The bulk of the commencement records are arranged into two subseries. The first subseries contains materials related to final exercises and graduation excercises. The second subseries contains materials related to baccalaureate services. Materials in these two subseries are grouped together into files according to the date of exercises and services. The files are then arranged in chronological order. ","Commencement records that do not belong in either of the two subseires described above are filed into a third subseries called \"Other commencement records\". All of the materials in this subseries are arranged chronologically according to their date of creation.","In this series, a file is created for each planning report and its associated documents. The files are arranged chronologically by the date of creation for the materials they contain.","This series consists of records that document the formal accreditation of the School of Medicine or other educational programs by a relevant educational accreditation body. This series may include, but is not limited to: self study reports, final reports, and questions and responses.","The photographs and negatives are arranged into subseries by either subject or office of creation. The subseries are then arranged alphabetically by title. The arrangements of the files in the subseries vary.","The public relations files are arranged into subseries according to types of materials (e.g. clippings collections and press releases). The subseries are then arranged alphabetically. The arrangements of the files in the subseries vary.","The publications are arranged into subseries according to types of materials (e.g. journals and magazines, newsletters, weblogs, patient education resources). The subseries are then arranged alphabetically. The arrangements of the files in the subseries vary.","Journals and magazines are arranged into files by title. The files are then arranged alphabetically by title.","The newsletters are arranged into files according to title. The files are then arranged alphabetically by title.","The final research reports and associated documents are arranged into files according to the title of the report. The files are then arranged alphabetically.","Student organization records are grouped into subseries according to the organization name. The subseries are arranged alphabetically by the name of the organization. Three additional subseries come after the student organizations in the following order: 1. Medical student class plays and talent shows 2. Yearbooks 3. Other student publications. The arrangements of files and items in the subseries vary.","The materials in this series are arranged by the department or unit with which they are associated. Each department is assigned a file. The files are arranged in the series alphabetically by their title. Inside the files, materials are arranged in chronological order by their date of creation.  Records for the School of Medicine as a whole will be placed in a file titled \"School of Medicine\". The file will be placed at the beginning of the series regardless of its position alphabetically in the series.","The policies, procedures, and handbooks are arragned into the following subseries in this order: Policies, Faculty procedures and handbooks, Staff procedures and handbooks, Student procedures and handbooks, and Other procedures and handbooks. The arrangements of the files in the subseries vary.","Syllabi and other course materials are arranged into sub-series by course subject or title. The sub-series are then arranged alphabetically by the course subject or title. At the end of the series, there is a sub-series for files that contain materials from more than one course. Within each subseries, materials are arranged chronologically into files.","Materials are arranged chronologically within the series.","Materials in this series are arranged chronologically.","The course schedules and catalogs are arranged into files. The files are then arranged chronologically by date of creation. When a catalog is reocurring (e.g. annually), all of the records in that series are placed together in a single file.","Arrangement within this series may vary.","Admissions publications are arranged into subseries by the educational programs to which they are related (e.g. undergraduate medical education). These subseries are arranged alphabetically. A final subseries consists of admissions publications for \"Other educational programs\" that don't fit neatly in any of the other subseries.","Residencies and fellowships informational brochures for the entire Medical Center are collected in a file named \"University of Virginia Medical Center.\" Department-specific brochures are arranged alphabetically into files below the general file.","Conference records and programs are arranged into files by conference title. The files are arranged chronologically. All of the instances of a reoccurring conference are gathered together into the same file.","The materials in this series are arranged into 5 subseries: ","1. Biographies and biographical files \n2. Department histories \n3. Historically significant events \n4. History essays, articles, and monographs \n5. Scrapbooks   ","The arrangements of files in each subseries vary.","Materials are arranged into files by the name of the person they describe. The files are then arranged alphabetically by the last name of the person. Because of the presence of legacy content from multiple sources, there may be multiple biographical files for the same individual.","Department histories are arranged alphabetically according to the name of the department with which they are associated.","Files in this subseries are arranged chronologically.","Essays, articles, and monographs in this subseries are arranged chronologically by their date of creation.","Materials in this sub-series are arranged chronologically.","The reports are arranged into files. The files are then arranged chronologically by their date of creation. When a report is reocurring (e.g. monthly operating reports), all of the reports in that series are placed together in a single file.","The reports are arranged into files. The files are then arranged chronologically by their date of creation. When a report is reoccurring, all of the reports in that series are placed together in a single file.","The medical student records are arranged into subseries that represent periods of time. The student record is placed into a given time period according to the student's date of graduation or their last day of attendance. The arrangements of the files in the subseries vary.","The directories are arranged into files. The files are then arranged chronologically by date. When a directory is reocurring (e.g. annually), all of the reports in that series are placed together in a single file.","Original Arrangement Note: \"Files are arranged by chronological order.\"","The records in this series are arranged into subseries according to committee or department (when the department is holding a general committee meeting). The subseries are then arranged alphabetically by title. The arrangements of the files in the subseries vary.","The awards, honors, and commemorations are arranged into files. The files are then arranged chronologically by date. When an award, honor, or commemoration is reoccurring (e.g. annually), all of the records in that series are placed together in a single file.","The records for stand-alone lectures and presentations are arranged into a subseries called \"Single lectures and presentations\". The records of lectures and presentations that belong to a program or lecture series are arranged into subseries named after the program or lecture series. Following the subseries titled \"Single lectures and presentations\", the remaining lecture series are arranged alphabetically by title. Records in all of the subseries are arranged into files titled with the names of the lectures and presentations. The files are then arranged chronologically by date of creation.","Materials in this sub-series are arranged chronologically.","Materials in this sub-series are arranged chronologically.","Materials in this sub-series are arranged chronologically."],"bioghist_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eHistorical Overview of the School of Medicine\n\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cbr\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\nThe School of Medicine* at the University of Virginia has been a key part of the University since its establishment in 1819 by Thomas Jefferson. In his early plans, Jefferson recommended the creation of a School of Anatomy and Medicine with a rigorous academic model, where students could attain medical education in nine months, a term that was twice as long as many schools at the time. Students would read, attend lectures, and watch demonstrations, but there would be few opportunities for them to work firsthand with patients, because there was no teaching hospital in Charlottesville. When the University opened its doors to students in 1825, Dr. Robley Dunglison taught all of the classes offered by the School of Anatomy and Medicine. Beginning in 1827, medical classes were held in the Anatomical Theatre, a building designed by Jefferson (though completed after his death) to accomodate a space for anatomical dissections. The study of anatomy was an important piece of early medical education; however, there was no systematic way for medical schools to obtain bodies for dissection prior to the Virginia Anatomical Act of 1884, and so cadavers were frequently procured through illegal and unethical means. Often this involved body snatching from local graves, most commonly those found in cemeteries of Virginia's slave, free black, and poor white populations. \n\u003cbr\u003e\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cbr\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\nDunglison remained at UVA until 1833, and during that time he persuaded the UVA Board of Visitors to hire additional faculty for his medical department. In the mid-19th century, the UVA medical school was known for providing a good theoretical education. Academic activities were largely stagnant during the years of the Civil War, when Professor of Anatomy and Surgery James L. Cabell oversaw a Confederate military hospital erected in part on the Grounds of UVA, and later when Charlottesville was occupied by Union troops at the end of the war. In the decades after the Civil War, a period of biomedical revolution began to redefine the practice of medicine. In response, UVA initiated educational reforms to its medical curriculum, gradually lengthening the degree program to four years by the end of the 19th century, and introducing coursework in new fields like bacteriology and histology. In order to create increasingly important clinical opportunities for students, UVA committed to building its own facilities, including a dispensary for out-patient care in 1892 and finally a hospital, which opened in 1901. While science and medicine had entered a period of dramatic revolution, social systems were less inclined to evolve, and access to medical education at UVA remained restricted for many members of the population.\n\u003cbr\u003e\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cbr\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\nIn the early 20th century, the University of Virginia was transforming into a modern university, dedicated to both education and research. At the center of this change were UVA's health sciences programs. The University invested heavily in the School of Medicine, increasing the number of faculty in order to support emerging medical specialties and a new research mission. This period was also marked by the culmination of a fierce debate over the dual existence of state-supported medical programs in both Charlottesville and Richmond, VA. In 1921, a state-appointed commission recommended the relocation of the UVA School of Medicine to Richmond. UVA mobilized alumni and recruited political allies in order to wage a fierce campaign for the preservation of its medical program. They were ultimately successful, with the General Assembly deciding in favor of UVA. The period that followed was marked by continued expansion to the University's academic medical center, including greater specialization across the field of medicine and an increase of students, faculty, and associated personnel throughout the health sciences programs.\n\u003cbr\u003e\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cbr\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\nAlso of note during this time, in 1920 a resolution of the UVA Board of Visitors agreed to admit women into graduate and professional degree programs at UVA. The first woman to graduate from the School of Medicine, Sarah Ruth Dean, a transfer student, did so in 1922. In 1924, Lila Morse Bonner became the second woman to graduate from the School of Medicine and the first to attend all four years of medical school at UVA.\n\u003cbr\u003e\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cbr\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\nBy the 1940s, public confidence in the health professions was strong among much of the U.S. public. After World War II, there was broad support for wider investment in academic medical centers. At UVA, federal grants were used to build new facilities, including the construction of a multi-story hospital tower. However, also at this time, access to education, employment opportunities, and health care at UVA continued to be unequal. With the rise of the Civil Rights movement, a combination of factors including, community activism, federal legislation, and court rulings compelled the University to start removing barriers to access. In 1953, Edward Bertram Nash and Edward Thomas Wood became the first two African Americans to be admitted to the UVA School of Medicine. Both went on to graduate in 1957.\n\u003cbr\u003e\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cbr\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\nThroughout the second half of the 20th century, the UVA health system continued to expand. A new medical education building was dedicated in 1972. (Originally named for Harvey E. Jordan, a former Dean of the School of Medicine and known proponent of eugenics; the building was renamed in honor of Dr. Vivian W. Pinn in 2016). This era of expansion also saw the opening of a nursing education building, health sciences library, primary care center, and finally, in 1989, a massive new hospital building. The 1980s and 1990s also saw efforts at the School of Medicine to increase access to the health professions among under-represented groups, including women and people of color.\n\u003cbr\u003e\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cbr\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\nRapid developments in the health sciences continued to demand new facilities for research and education. The Claude Moore Medical Education Building opened as the new central location for the School of Medicine in 2010. Also in 2010, the School of Medicine launched a four college system, designed to preserve close student-faculty relationships and maintain a high-quality student experience while accommodating increased medical class size and a revised curriculum. Ten years later, the School of Medicine embraced further expansions with the launch of its Inova Campus in Northern Virginia, which provides clerkship opportunities for some upperclass medical students. The first cohort to spend their third and fourth years of medical school at the Northern Virginia campus arrived there in 2021.\n\u003cbr\u003e\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cbr\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\n*Note about naming conventions: Briefly known as the \"School of Anatomy and Medicine\" (1825-1827), the name \"School of Medicine\" was adopted by the Board of Visitors in July 1827. However, shortly later the name \"Department of Medicine\" came to be used (though some records still refer to the institution as \"School of Medicine\"). By the 1950s, the preferred name was again \"School of Medicine\". \n\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\nDeans of the UVA School of Medicine\n\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cul\u003e\n\u003cil\u003eRichard Henry Whitehead, MD, 1905-1916\u003c/il\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\u003cil\u003eTheodore Hough, PhD, [Acting Dean: 1916-1917], 1917-1924\u003c/il\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\u003cil\u003eJames Caroll Flippin, MD, [Acting Dean: 1925-1927] 1927-1939\u003c/il\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\u003cil\u003eHarvey Ernest Jordan, PhD, 1939-1949\u003c/il\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\u003cil\u003eVernon W. Lippard, MD, 1949-1953\u003c/il\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\u003cil\u003eThomas Harrison Hunter, MD, 1953-1964 [Leave of Absence: 1962-1964]\u003c/il\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\u003cil\u003eKenneth R. Crispell, MD, [Acting Dean: 1962-1964], 1964-1971\u003c/il\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\u003cil\u003eJames T. Hamlin III, MD, [Acting Dean: 1971-1972]\u003c/il\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\u003cil\u003eWilliam R. Drucker, MD, 1972-1977\u003c/il\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\u003cil\u003eNorman J. Knorr, MD, 1977-1986\u003c/il\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\u003cil\u003eRobert M. Carey, MD, 1986-2002\u003c/il\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\u003cil\u003eArthur \"Tim\" Garson Jr., MD, MPH 2002-2007\u003c/il\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\u003cil\u003eSharon L. Hostler, MD, Interim Dean: 2007-2008\u003c/il\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\u003cil\u003eSteven T. DeKosky, MD, 2008-2013\u003c/il\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\u003cil\u003eNancy E. Dunlap, MD, PhD, 2013-2014\u003c/il\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\u003cil\u003eRandolph J. Canterbury, MD, Interim Dean: 2014-2015\u003c/il\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\u003cil\u003eDavid S. Wilkes, MD, 2015-2021\u003c/il\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\u003cil\u003eMelina R. Kibbe, MD, 2021-\u003c/il\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\n\u003c/ul\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\nPrior to Richard Henry Whitehead's appointment by the Board of Visitors to the position of Dean of the Medical Faculty (as found in the UVA Board of Visitors Meeting Minutes, July 20, 1905), the position of Dean at the UVA School of Medicine was not in use. The appointment dates listed above are derived from the Board of Visitors Meeting Minutes.\n\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\nDr. Craig joined the School of Medicine at the University of Virginia in 1972 as Professor of Internal Medicine and Associate Dean of the School of Medicine. The materials in this subseries reflect major developments of the Medical Center during the early portion of his career at the University of Virginia.\n\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\nAlpha Omega Alpha was founded in 1902 and is the national medical honor society. It started at the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Chicago when a small number of medical students, led by William Webster Root, wanted to foster professional values and good conduct in fellow medical students and sometimes in their faculty. Modeled after Phi Beta Kappa, they stated that membership in the new society would be based on both academic achievement and professional conduct.\n\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\nBy 2012 there were more than 130 chapters in medical schools throughout the United Sates. The AOA mission statement found on their website indicates that it is \"dedicated to the belief that in the profession of medicine we will improve care for all by recognizing high educational achievement, honoring gifted teaching, encouraging the development of leaders in academia and the community, supporting the ideals of humanism, and promoting service to others.\"\n\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\nThe University of Virginia chapter started in 1919 and was the 23rd member. The first school in Virginia to join, its chapter is named Alpha Virginia. Each chapter may elect to membership no more than one-sixth of the anticipated number of graduates. Those elected must come from the top quartile of students academically. According to the UVa School of Medicine Student Handbook on the SOM website, those chosen from UVa must not only exhibit the necessary academic attainment, but also leadership, professionalism, a sense of ethics, promise of future success in medicine, and commitment to service. At UVa generally 6-9 students are elected by their peers after their second year, and another 17 or so are elected after their third year.\n\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\"Since its inception in the summer of 1967, the Mulholland Society has served as the UVa School of Medicine's coherent student voice. Collectively, the organization's goals are two-fold. First, the Society looks outward, endeavoring to promote the various interests and concerns of all medical students to the faculty and staff of the health system and the University and Charlottesville community at large. Second, the Society looks inward, seeking to provide an outlet for the academic, social, athletic, and personal interests. The Mulholland Society is named in honor of the late Dr. Henry Bearden Mulholland, a distinguished figure in American medicine and a member of the faculty from 1917 to 1962.\"\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\nDescription from the Mulholland Society website: https://students.med.virginia.edu/mulholland/about/ (2022 January)\n\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe exam was given by Albert H. Tuttle. Handwriting is by John Staige Davis.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eOriginal Biographical/Historical Note: \"The University of Virginia School of Medicine was established as one of the University's original eight schools when UVa opened in 1824, and in 1901 the University of Virginia Hospital was opened with Dr. Paul Barringer as Superintendent. Since its opening in 1901, the University of Virginia Hospital has expanded its physicians, departments, and Hospital facilities. The list of the UVa physicians from 1951 to 1990 show general changes that took place in the Hospital through these years, including the increase in the number of physicians, promotion process of the physicians, and specialization of the Hospital departments.\"\u003c/p\u003e"],"bioghist_heading_ssm":["Biographical / Historical","Biographical / Historical","Biographical / Historical","Biographical / Historical","Biographical / Historical","Biographical / Historical","Biographical / Historical"],"bioghist_tesim":["Historical Overview of the School of Medicine\n","","\nThe School of Medicine* at the University of Virginia has been a key part of the University since its establishment in 1819 by Thomas Jefferson. In his early plans, Jefferson recommended the creation of a School of Anatomy and Medicine with a rigorous academic model, where students could attain medical education in nine months, a term that was twice as long as many schools at the time. Students would read, attend lectures, and watch demonstrations, but there would be few opportunities for them to work firsthand with patients, because there was no teaching hospital in Charlottesville. When the University opened its doors to students in 1825, Dr. Robley Dunglison taught all of the classes offered by the School of Anatomy and Medicine. Beginning in 1827, medical classes were held in the Anatomical Theatre, a building designed by Jefferson (though completed after his death) to accomodate a space for anatomical dissections. The study of anatomy was an important piece of early medical education; however, there was no systematic way for medical schools to obtain bodies for dissection prior to the Virginia Anatomical Act of 1884, and so cadavers were frequently procured through illegal and unethical means. Often this involved body snatching from local graves, most commonly those found in cemeteries of Virginia's slave, free black, and poor white populations. \n","","\nDunglison remained at UVA until 1833, and during that time he persuaded the UVA Board of Visitors to hire additional faculty for his medical department. In the mid-19th century, the UVA medical school was known for providing a good theoretical education. Academic activities were largely stagnant during the years of the Civil War, when Professor of Anatomy and Surgery James L. Cabell oversaw a Confederate military hospital erected in part on the Grounds of UVA, and later when Charlottesville was occupied by Union troops at the end of the war. In the decades after the Civil War, a period of biomedical revolution began to redefine the practice of medicine. In response, UVA initiated educational reforms to its medical curriculum, gradually lengthening the degree program to four years by the end of the 19th century, and introducing coursework in new fields like bacteriology and histology. In order to create increasingly important clinical opportunities for students, UVA committed to building its own facilities, including a dispensary for out-patient care in 1892 and finally a hospital, which opened in 1901. While science and medicine had entered a period of dramatic revolution, social systems were less inclined to evolve, and access to medical education at UVA remained restricted for many members of the population.\n","","\nIn the early 20th century, the University of Virginia was transforming into a modern university, dedicated to both education and research. At the center of this change were UVA's health sciences programs. The University invested heavily in the School of Medicine, increasing the number of faculty in order to support emerging medical specialties and a new research mission. This period was also marked by the culmination of a fierce debate over the dual existence of state-supported medical programs in both Charlottesville and Richmond, VA. In 1921, a state-appointed commission recommended the relocation of the UVA School of Medicine to Richmond. UVA mobilized alumni and recruited political allies in order to wage a fierce campaign for the preservation of its medical program. They were ultimately successful, with the General Assembly deciding in favor of UVA. The period that followed was marked by continued expansion to the University's academic medical center, including greater specialization across the field of medicine and an increase of students, faculty, and associated personnel throughout the health sciences programs.\n","","\nAlso of note during this time, in 1920 a resolution of the UVA Board of Visitors agreed to admit women into graduate and professional degree programs at UVA. The first woman to graduate from the School of Medicine, Sarah Ruth Dean, a transfer student, did so in 1922. In 1924, Lila Morse Bonner became the second woman to graduate from the School of Medicine and the first to attend all four years of medical school at UVA.\n","","\nBy the 1940s, public confidence in the health professions was strong among much of the U.S. public. After World War II, there was broad support for wider investment in academic medical centers. At UVA, federal grants were used to build new facilities, including the construction of a multi-story hospital tower. However, also at this time, access to education, employment opportunities, and health care at UVA continued to be unequal. With the rise of the Civil Rights movement, a combination of factors including, community activism, federal legislation, and court rulings compelled the University to start removing barriers to access. In 1953, Edward Bertram Nash and Edward Thomas Wood became the first two African Americans to be admitted to the UVA School of Medicine. Both went on to graduate in 1957.\n","","\nThroughout the second half of the 20th century, the UVA health system continued to expand. A new medical education building was dedicated in 1972. (Originally named for Harvey E. Jordan, a former Dean of the School of Medicine and known proponent of eugenics; the building was renamed in honor of Dr. Vivian W. Pinn in 2016). This era of expansion also saw the opening of a nursing education building, health sciences library, primary care center, and finally, in 1989, a massive new hospital building. The 1980s and 1990s also saw efforts at the School of Medicine to increase access to the health professions among under-represented groups, including women and people of color.\n","","\nRapid developments in the health sciences continued to demand new facilities for research and education. The Claude Moore Medical Education Building opened as the new central location for the School of Medicine in 2010. Also in 2010, the School of Medicine launched a four college system, designed to preserve close student-faculty relationships and maintain a high-quality student experience while accommodating increased medical class size and a revised curriculum. Ten years later, the School of Medicine embraced further expansions with the launch of its Inova Campus in Northern Virginia, which provides clerkship opportunities for some upperclass medical students. The first cohort to spend their third and fourth years of medical school at the Northern Virginia campus arrived there in 2021.\n","","\n*Note about naming conventions: Briefly known as the \"School of Anatomy and Medicine\" (1825-1827), the name \"School of Medicine\" was adopted by the Board of Visitors in July 1827. However, shortly later the name \"Department of Medicine\" came to be used (though some records still refer to the institution as \"School of Medicine\"). By the 1950s, the preferred name was again \"School of Medicine\". \n","\nDeans of the UVA School of Medicine\n","Richard Henry Whitehead, MD, 1905-1916 Theodore Hough, PhD, [Acting Dean: 1916-1917], 1917-1924 James Caroll Flippin, MD, [Acting Dean: 1925-1927] 1927-1939 Harvey Ernest Jordan, PhD, 1939-1949 Vernon W. Lippard, MD, 1949-1953 Thomas Harrison Hunter, MD, 1953-1964 [Leave of Absence: 1962-1964] Kenneth R. Crispell, MD, [Acting Dean: 1962-1964], 1964-1971 James T. Hamlin III, MD, [Acting Dean: 1971-1972] William R. Drucker, MD, 1972-1977 Norman J. Knorr, MD, 1977-1986 Robert M. Carey, MD, 1986-2002 Arthur \"Tim\" Garson Jr., MD, MPH 2002-2007 Sharon L. Hostler, MD, Interim Dean: 2007-2008 Steven T. DeKosky, MD, 2008-2013 Nancy E. Dunlap, MD, PhD, 2013-2014 Randolph J. Canterbury, MD, Interim Dean: 2014-2015 David S. Wilkes, MD, 2015-2021 Melina R. Kibbe, MD, 2021-","\nPrior to Richard Henry Whitehead's appointment by the Board of Visitors to the position of Dean of the Medical Faculty (as found in the UVA Board of Visitors Meeting Minutes, July 20, 1905), the position of Dean at the UVA School of Medicine was not in use. The appointment dates listed above are derived from the Board of Visitors Meeting Minutes.\n","\nDr. Craig joined the School of Medicine at the University of Virginia in 1972 as Professor of Internal Medicine and Associate Dean of the School of Medicine. The materials in this subseries reflect major developments of the Medical Center during the early portion of his career at the University of Virginia.\n","\nAlpha Omega Alpha was founded in 1902 and is the national medical honor society. It started at the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Chicago when a small number of medical students, led by William Webster Root, wanted to foster professional values and good conduct in fellow medical students and sometimes in their faculty. Modeled after Phi Beta Kappa, they stated that membership in the new society would be based on both academic achievement and professional conduct.\n","\nBy 2012 there were more than 130 chapters in medical schools throughout the United Sates. The AOA mission statement found on their website indicates that it is \"dedicated to the belief that in the profession of medicine we will improve care for all by recognizing high educational achievement, honoring gifted teaching, encouraging the development of leaders in academia and the community, supporting the ideals of humanism, and promoting service to others.\"\n","\nThe University of Virginia chapter started in 1919 and was the 23rd member. The first school in Virginia to join, its chapter is named Alpha Virginia. Each chapter may elect to membership no more than one-sixth of the anticipated number of graduates. Those elected must come from the top quartile of students academically. According to the UVa School of Medicine Student Handbook on the SOM website, those chosen from UVa must not only exhibit the necessary academic attainment, but also leadership, professionalism, a sense of ethics, promise of future success in medicine, and commitment to service. At UVa generally 6-9 students are elected by their peers after their second year, and another 17 or so are elected after their third year.\n","\"Since its inception in the summer of 1967, the Mulholland Society has served as the UVa School of Medicine's coherent student voice. Collectively, the organization's goals are two-fold. First, the Society looks outward, endeavoring to promote the various interests and concerns of all medical students to the faculty and staff of the health system and the University and Charlottesville community at large. Second, the Society looks inward, seeking to provide an outlet for the academic, social, athletic, and personal interests. The Mulholland Society is named in honor of the late Dr. Henry Bearden Mulholland, a distinguished figure in American medicine and a member of the faculty from 1917 to 1962.\"","\nDescription from the Mulholland Society website: https://students.med.virginia.edu/mulholland/about/ (2022 January)\n","The exam was given by Albert H. Tuttle. Handwriting is by John Staige Davis.","Original Biographical/Historical Note: \"The University of Virginia School of Medicine was established as one of the University's original eight schools when UVa opened in 1824, and in 1901 the University of Virginia Hospital was opened with Dr. Paul Barringer as Superintendent. Since its opening in 1901, the University of Virginia Hospital has expanded its physicians, departments, and Hospital facilities. The list of the UVa physicians from 1951 to 1990 show general changes that took place in the Hospital through these years, including the increase in the number of physicians, promotion process of the physicians, and specialization of the Hospital departments.\""],"odd_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003ePotentially Harmful Materials Statement:\nMaterials in this collection may contain distressing or disturbing content in a written, visual, or/and audiovisual format. Viewers should proceed with caution.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePhotograph is possibly misidentified.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePhotograph is possibly misidentified.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThree volumes from to the Alpha Omega Alpha records were originally processed as a distinct collection, labelled MS-53. These three volumes consisted of a chapter roll and minutes book from 1919 to 1955, a roll and minutes book from 1955 to 1969, and a treasurer's ledger covering 1922 to 1978.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy Identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of 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Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy biographical file. Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy biographical file. Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy biographical file. Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLegacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia 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Harmful Materials Statement:\nMaterials in this collection may contain distressing or disturbing content in a written, visual, or/and audiovisual format. Viewers should proceed with caution.","Photograph is possibly misidentified.","Photograph is possibly misidentified.","Three volumes from to the Alpha Omega Alpha records were originally processed as a distinct collection, labelled MS-53. 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University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy biographical file. Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy biographical file. Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy biographical file. Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: MS-36, University of Virginia School of Medicine biographical files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Legacy identifier: VIU-H-2015-0027, University of Virginia School of Medicine: faculty files","Digitized copy available.","Digitized copy available.","Originally processed as part of the School of Medicine Reports collection.","Materials in Box 77 comprise a set of directories previously collected and organized as \"Housestaff listings.\" These files contain the names, associated departments, and contact information for residents and interns.","Digitized copy available.","Digitized copy available.","Digitized copy available.","This file was originally processed as a separate collection, MS-25, titled the \"UVA Hospital Professional Staff Files, 1951-1990\". It has been incorporated into RG-17-1, however, its original order and arrangement has not been revised. Box 1 has been relabelled Box 88 and Box 2 relabelled Box 89.","The name of this group changes several times: 1976-1994 it is called the Pediatric Executive Committee; 1994-2005 it is called the Children's Medical Center Administrative Council; 2005-2011 it is called the Pediatric Administrative Council.","Potentially Harmful Materials Statement:","These videos may contain distressing or disturbing content in an audiovisual format. Viewers should proceed with caution. "],"processinfo_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eRG-17-1 includes records from multiple legacy collections held by the Claude Moore Health Sciences Library, including the UVA School of Medicine Reports (MS-66), UVA School of Medicine Biographical Files (MS-36), UVA Hospital Professional Staff Files (MS-25), UVA School of Medicine Chapter of Alpha Omega Alpha records (MS-53), and UVA Department of Medicine Housestaff and Chief Residents Photograph collection (MS-62). RG-17-1 also includes materials previously cataloged as separate items in Virgo (such as journals, newsletters, and reports), and materials from semi-processed legacy accessions, including the UVA School of Medicine Council on Medical Education records (Viuh-2015-26), UVA School of Medicine Faculty Files (Viuh-2015-27), and UVA School of Medicine Faculty Minutes (Viuh-2015-28). Bound materials are housed separately from the rest of the collection, and are generally referenced by individual item records (e.g. \"BIR-100\").\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe items in this subseries formed a legacy collection originally processed in 2005 by Jiyoun Lee. This small legacy collection was referred to as the \"Reports from the Office of the Associate Dean of the Medical School, 1972-1977, MS-24\".\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePlaceholder Sub-Series: No content at this time.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePlaceholder Sub-Series: No content at this time.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePlaceholder Series: No content at this time.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePlaceholder Sub-Series: No content at this time.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\nSome items in this series represent legacy content from two collections: \"University of Virginia School of Medicine Biographical files\" (Legacy identifier: MS-36) and the University of Virginia School of Medicine Faculty files (Legacy identifier: \tViU-H-2015-0027).\n\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\nLegacy collection description from the MS-36 finding aid: \"This collection contains biographical information about University of Virginia School of Medicine faculty and friends mainly collected from University of Virginia publications, including the \"Bulletin of the University of Virginia Medical School and Hospital\" from 1941 to 1946, \"University of Virginia Medical Alumni News Letter\" from 1948-1973, \"University of Virginia Medical Alumnews\" from 1974-1991, and \"UVa Medical AlumNews\" beginning in 1992 and ongoing. Multiple articles from \"The Daily Progress\" as early as 1942 are also included as are single articles from other publications.\"\n\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eFormer barcode number for item: 3470347210 (Inactive)\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePlaceholder Sub-Series: No content at this time.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePlaceholder Series: No content at this time.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eFolder assigned barcode: 3470316978 (relevant MARC record)\u003c/p\u003e"],"processinfo_heading_ssm":["Processing Information","Processing Information","Processing Information","Processing Information","Processing Information","Processing Information","Processing Information","Processing Information","Processing Information","Processing Information","Processing Information"],"processinfo_tesim":["RG-17-1 includes records from multiple legacy collections held by the Claude Moore Health Sciences Library, including the UVA School of Medicine Reports (MS-66), UVA School of Medicine Biographical Files (MS-36), UVA Hospital Professional Staff Files (MS-25), UVA School of Medicine Chapter of Alpha Omega Alpha records (MS-53), and UVA Department of Medicine Housestaff and Chief Residents Photograph collection (MS-62). RG-17-1 also includes materials previously cataloged as separate items in Virgo (such as journals, newsletters, and reports), and materials from semi-processed legacy accessions, including the UVA School of Medicine Council on Medical Education records (Viuh-2015-26), UVA School of Medicine Faculty Files (Viuh-2015-27), and UVA School of Medicine Faculty Minutes (Viuh-2015-28). Bound materials are housed separately from the rest of the collection, and are generally referenced by individual item records (e.g. \"BIR-100\").","The items in this subseries formed a legacy collection originally processed in 2005 by Jiyoun Lee. This small legacy collection was referred to as the \"Reports from the Office of the Associate Dean of the Medical School, 1972-1977, MS-24\".","Placeholder Sub-Series: No content at this time.","Placeholder Sub-Series: No content at this time.","Placeholder Series: No content at this time.","Placeholder Sub-Series: No content at this time.","\nSome items in this series represent legacy content from two collections: \"University of Virginia School of Medicine Biographical files\" (Legacy identifier: MS-36) and the University of Virginia School of Medicine Faculty files (Legacy identifier: \tViU-H-2015-0027).\n","\nLegacy collection description from the MS-36 finding aid: \"This collection contains biographical information about University of Virginia School of Medicine faculty and friends mainly collected from University of Virginia publications, including the \"Bulletin of the University of Virginia Medical School and Hospital\" from 1941 to 1946, \"University of Virginia Medical Alumni News Letter\" from 1948-1973, \"University of Virginia Medical Alumnews\" from 1974-1991, and \"UVa Medical AlumNews\" beginning in 1992 and ongoing. Multiple articles from \"The Daily Progress\" as early as 1942 are also included as are single articles from other publications.\"\n","Former barcode number for item: 3470347210 (Inactive)","Placeholder Sub-Series: No content at this time.","Placeholder Series: No content at this time.","Folder assigned barcode: 3470316978 (relevant MARC record)"],"relatedmaterial_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eMaterials found within the RG-17 classifications are frequently inter-related. Researchers of RG-17-1 UVA School of Medicine records may also want to consult: RG-17-2 UVA Medical Center records, RG-17-3 UVA School of Nursing records, RG-17-4 Claude Moore Health Sciences Library records, RG-17-5 Office of the Vice President for Health Affairs records, and RG-17-6 Department of Student Health records. [Some of these materials may not be currently available. All finding aids are works-in-progress.]\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMore information related to this Report can be found in the University of Virginia Medical Alumni Association records, MS-21.\u003c/p\u003e"],"relatedmaterial_heading_ssm":["Related Materials","Related Materials"],"relatedmaterial_tesim":["Materials found within the RG-17 classifications are frequently inter-related. Researchers of RG-17-1 UVA School of Medicine records may also want to consult: RG-17-2 UVA Medical Center records, RG-17-3 UVA School of Nursing records, RG-17-4 Claude Moore Health Sciences Library records, RG-17-5 Office of the Vice President for Health Affairs records, and RG-17-6 Department of Student Health records. [Some of these materials may not be currently available. All finding aids are works-in-progress.]","More information related to this Report can be found in the University of Virginia Medical Alumni Association records, MS-21."],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Content Description","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Content Description"],"scopecontent_tesim":["The UVA School of Medicine records primarily document the history of the School at all levels of the organization during the 20th and 21st centuries.","Administrative records, including annual reports, meeting minutes, planning documents policies, and other materials, document operations, strategic initiatives, and decision making.","Communications records, including newsletters, blogs, websites, pamphlets, publications, and recordings, document events and public relations work.","Medical education and research records, including accreditation files, student records, syllabi, course catalogs, student organization records, commencement records, lectures, and conference reports, document the School's primary missions.","\nThe collection includes a number of records previously described elsewhere (e.g. as part of a former archival collection or as an indiviudal item described in the Library catalog). Among these are a large group of bound items. \n","\nThe UVA School of Medicine continues to transfer analog and digital records to the Claude Moore Health Sciences Library for inclusion in this collection.\n","Prior to the establishment of the records classification scheme outlined in this document, institutional archives were often organized by their office of creation. Rather than dividing these legacy collections, they are being kept intact and filed under this series.","This small legacy collection contains information related to awards given to faculty and students of the School of Medicine. Materials include descriptions of awards and the names of award recipients. The first folder, containing award information by year, concerns current and discontinued awards. Information on current awards given by the School of Medicine can be accessed at https://med.virginia.edu/student-affairs/student-resources/awards-and-honors/","\nThis series consists of annual and biennial reports produced by the School of Medicine and its constituent departments and units. This does not include individual faculty annual reports used for evaluation or review.\n","\nIn addition to annual reports produced by the School of Medicine, this series also contains several annual reports produced by the University of Virginia's Office of the President.\n","Department of Pediatrics Biennial Evaluation for 1984-1986 and Planning Report for 1988-1998","The annual report contains reports from individual departments or divisions: Anatomy, Anesthesiology, Biochemistry, Biomedical Engineering, Clinical Pathology, Dermatology, Internal Medicine, Microbiology, Neurological Surgery, Neurology, Obstetrics and Gynecology, Orthopedics, Otolaryngology, Pathology, Pediatrics, Pharmacology, Physiology, Psychiatry, Radiology, Surgery, and Urology. Internal Medicine was formally organized during the course of the year with the establishment of 12 divisions: Biometrics, Cardiology, Clinical Pharmacology, Endocrinology and Metabolism, Epidemiology and Virology, Gastroenterology, Hematology, Infectious Diseases, Nephrology, Oncology, Pulmonary-Allergy, and Rheumatology. Ten medical students were dropped for academic deficiencies during 1969-1970.","The annual report contains reports from individual departments or divisions: Anatomy, Anesthesiology, Biochemistry, Biomedical Engineering, Dermatology, Internal Medicine, Medical Library, Microbiology, Neurology, Neurological Surgery, Obstetrics and Gynecology, Ophthalmology, Orthopedics, Otolaryngology, Pathology, Pediatrics, Pharmacology, Physiology, Plastic Surgery, Psychiatry, Radiology, Surgery, Urology, and Vivarium. No students were dropped for academic deficiencies. Special recruitment was done by the Admissions Committee and faculty who visited 13 colleges with predominantly black enrollment.","The annual report contains reports from individual departments or divisions: Anatomy, Anesthesiology, Biochemistry, Biomedical Engineering, Dermatology, Internal Medicine, Medical Library, Microbiology, Neurosurgery, Neurology, Obstetrics and Gynecology, Ophthalmology, Orthopedics, Otolaryngology, Pathology, Pediatrics, Pharmacology, Physiology, Plastic Surgery, Psychiatry, Radiology, Student Health, Surgery, Urology, Vivarium, and Equal Opportunity Program. The report from the Equal Opportunity Program includes selection of new faculty and non-academic personnel of those underrepresented in the school. Specifically mentioned are women, black, Chicanos, Orientals, and Chinese.","Part I: The annual report contains reports from individual departments or divisions: Anatomy, Anesthesiology, Biochemistry, Biomedical Engineering, Dentistry, Dermatology, Family Medicine, Internal Medicine, Health Sciences Library, and Microbiology. At the front of the report is the School of Medicine Annual Report, 1973-74 and 1974-75, Part II Academic Affairs , Section III Dean's Summary and Recommendations. It states that due to new pressures and the need for better organization in the School of Medicine, and in response to University–wide programs, several tasks were completed by faculty. Some of these are included in the report including the identification and adoption of institutional goals, a report on plans and projections, a financial report to the President, and a preliminary policy report on promotions and tenure. The dean's summary gives information on a variety of topics, but of note is the formation of the Department of Family Practice on July 1, 1975 and a Division of Dentistry in 1974, the completion of the new Health Sciences Library, an award toward the construction of a Primary Care Building, and an experimental or alternative curriculum for the School of Medicine.","Part II: The annual report continues the reports from individual departments or divisions: Neurosurgery, Neurology, Obstetrics and Gynecology, Ophthalmology, Orthopedics, Otolaryngology, Pathology, Pediatrics, Pharmacology, Physiology, Plastic Surgery, Psychiatry, Radiology, Student Health, Surgery, and Urology.","The departments filled out reports addressing the selection of new faculty, the selection and promotion of non-academic personnel, and special efforts.","Section A, Part I: The annual report contains reports from individual departments or divisions: Anatomy, Anesthesiology, Biochemistry, Biomedical Engineering, Dentistry, Dermatology, Family Practice, Internal Medicine, Health Sciences Library, and Microbiology.","Section A, Part II: The annual report continues the reports from individual departments or divisions: Neurosurgery, Neurology, Obstetrics and Gynecology, Ophthalmology, Orthopedics, Otolaryngology, Pathology, Pediatrics, Pharmacology, Physiology, Plastic Surgery, Psychiatry, Radiology, Student Health, Surgery, and Urology.","Part C: Academic Planning, 1975 September 1 - 1976 September 1\nThe annual report includes a letter of request, summary of requests for faculty and space, and a one year extension of academic plan for the Departments of: Anatomy, Anesthesiology, Biochemistry, Biomedical Engineering, Dentistry, Dermatology, Family Practice, Internal Medicine, Microbiology, Neurology, Neurosurgery, Obstetrics and Gynecology, Ophthalmology, Orthopedics, Otolaryngology, Pathology, Pediatrics, Pharmacology, Physiology, Plastic Surgery, Psychiatry, Radiology, Surgery, Urology, and Western State Hospital.","The Dean's Summary includes Medical School Administration; Improving the Academic Environment for Students; Summary of Major Accomplishments in Instruction, Research, and Public Service; Summary of Major Modifications in Academic Programs, 1978-79; Major space considerations, 1978-79; Memorandum to Departments regarding Annual Report. Norman J. Knorr is the School of Medicine Dean. ","Part III, Book 1:The annual report contains reports from individual departments or divisions: Anatomy, Anesthesiology, Biochemistry, Biomedical Engineering, Dermatology, Dentistry, Family Practice, Internal Medicine, Microbiology, Neurology, and Neurosurgery.","Part III, Book 2: The annual report continues the reports from individual departments or divisions: Obstetrics and Gynecology, Orthopedics, Otolaryngology, Pathology, Pediatrics, Pharmacology, Physiology, Plastic Surgery, Psychiatry, Radiology, Surgery, Urology, and Roanoke.","The annual report includes a \"Summary of Major Accomplishments in Instruction, Research, and Public Service\" which highlights a few of the major accomplishments of the individual departments. Dean Norman Knorr mentions a major revision of the preclinical curriculum by the council on Medical Education and a new Division of Geriatrics under the leadership of Richard Lindsay with the anticipation of a special geriatric unit to be established at the Blue Ridge Sanatorium in the future. Currently there are established programs in epilepsy and outpatient Psychiatry at Blue Ridge. Another new Division is Geographic Medicine under the direction of Richard Guerrant. There is a report from the Office of Student Affairs and a break-down of SOM admissions.","The annual report contains the reports from individual departments or divisions: Anatomy, Anesthesiology, Biochemistry, Biomedical Engineering, Dentistry, Dermatology, Family Practice, Internal Medicine, Microbiology, Neurology, Neurosurgery, Obstetrics and Gynecology, Ophthalmology, Orthopedics, Otolaryngology, Pathology, Pediatrics, Pharmacology, Physiology, Plastic Surgery, Psychiatry, Radiology, Surgery, Urology, Roanoke Program.","A memo inserted in front of the 1978-1979 Annual Report from Dean Norman Knorr, dated September 14, 1981, indicates that the School of Medicine Biennial Report (formerly Annual Report) is waived this year as the plan is to submit the Self-Study Report in its place. The 1978-1979 annual report includes a \"Summary of Major Accomplishments in Teaching Programs, Research Programs, and Public Service Activities\" and a report from the Office of Student Affairs.","The annual report contains the reports from individual departments or divisions: Anatomy, Anesthesiology, Behavioral Medicine and Psychiatry, Biochemistry,  Biomedical Engineering, Dermatology, Dentistry, Family Practice, Internal Medicine, Microbiology, Neurology, Neurosurgery, Obstetrics and Gynecology, Ophthalmology, Orthopedics, Otolaryngology, Pathology, Pharmacology, Physiology, Plastic Surgery, Radiology, Surgery, Urology, Roanoke Program, Pediatrics.","This summary of the biennial report highlights a few of the accomplishments in teaching programs, training programs, clinical service programs, research programs, and public service activities. The School of Medicine did a self-study in preparation for the LCME accreditation site visit held in February 1982. The LCME conferred full accreditation of the program for 10 years. A new graduate program in Cell and Molecular Biology was established in 1982 and a number of new divisions were formed. New units opened at Blue Ridge Hospital and a Travelers Clinic and the Blue Ridge Poison Control Center were established at the University Hospital. UVa Medcial Center was designated a Level I Trauma Center in 1982. James W. Craig submitted a report from the Office of Student Affairs.","The annual report contains the reports from individual departments or divisions: Anatomy, Anesthesiology, Biochemistry,  Biomedical Engineering, Comparative Medicine, Dermatology, Family Medicine, Internal Medicine, Microbiology, Neurology, Neurosurgery, Obstetrics and Gynecology, Ophthalmology, Orthopedics, Otolaryngology, Pathology, Pediatrics, Pharmacology, Physiology, Plastic Surgery, Behavior Medicine and Psychiatry, Radiology, Surgery, Urology.","The annual report contains the reports from individual departments or divisions: Anatomy, Anesthesiology, Behavior Medicine and Psychiatry, Biochemistry,  Biomedical Engineering, Comparative Medicine, Dentistry, Family Medicine, Internal Medicine, Microbiology, Neurology, Neurosurgery, Obstetrics and Gynecology, Ophthalmology, Orthopedics, Otolaryngology, Pathology, Pediatrics, Pharmacology, Physiology, Plastic Surgery, Radiology, Surgery, Urology.","Reports from: Robert M. Epstein, Chair of the Department of Anesthesiology; W.W. Spradlin, Chair of the Department of Behavioral Medicine and Psychiatry; Charles J. Flickinger, Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology; Department of Biochemistry; Department of Biomedical Engineering; Department of Comparative Medicine; Byard S. Deputy, Chair of the Department of Dentistry; Department of Dermatology; John C. Herr, Lymphocyte Culture Center; Edward W. Hook, Chair of the Department of Medicine; Department of Microbiology; John A. Jane, the Department of Neurosurgery; T. J. Johns, Chair of the Department of Neurology; Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology; Brian P. Conway, Chair of the Department of Ophthalmology; Department of Otolaryngology; Thomas W. Tillack, Chair of the Department of Pathology; Robert M. Blizzard, Chair of the Department of Pediatrics; Department of Pharmacology; Department of Physiology; Gaylord S. Williams, the Department of Plastic and Maxillofacial Surgery; T. E. Keats, Chair of the Department of Radiology; Department of Surgery; Department of Urology.","Titled \"The University Report\"; likely a precursor to the University of Virginia President's Report publications.","Correspondence and subject files of selected deans and department heads and other significant leaders in the School of Medicine.","\nContent in this subseries documents the history of the University of Virginia Medical Center from 1972 to 1977. In this period, the University Medical Center was taking steps toward not only the enlargement of its resources - facilities, personnel, and finance - but also its major programs - education, research, and patient care. The beginning of the Family Practice Primary Care Curriculum in 1975 and the projects for the expansion of existing hospital buildings and purchase of the Towers Hospital were remarkable developments in this period. All these projects were planned based on the UVA Medical Center's wide-ranging self-surveys and implemented under the guidance of William R. Drucker, Dean of the School of Medicine and James W. Craig, Associate Dean of the School of Medicine.\n","\nIncluded are reports on the University of Virginia Medical Center from 1972 to 1977 which detail extensive information on the Medical Center in this period, its organization, administration, educational programs, faculty, student, library system, finances, medical center facilities, major activities, graduate program, clinical activities, admission data, etc. Of Particular interest are documents on the Family Practice Primary Care Curriculum that was planned and organized by James W. Craig in 1975. Also present are materials on the Medical Center's expansion project including the purchase of the Towers Hospital.\n","[Final] Report of the President's ad hoc Committee on Faculty Staffing Policy of the University of Virginia, submitted to University President Edgar F. Shannon Jr.","The records in this series document commencement and graduation events for the School of Medicine. They include, but are not limited to programs and schedules of events.","The records in this series document the planning of historically significant administrative changes or projects, major purchases, and significant events which are historically significant at the School of Medicine.","This series documents the formal accreditation of the School of Medicine by educational accreditation organizations. Materials in this series may include, but is not limited to: self study reports, final reports, and questions and responses.","\"University of Virginia School of Medicine Summary of the Findings and Recommendations of the Institutional Self-Study Task Force.\" The Chair of the Steering Committee was Fritz E. Dreifuss. Also included is a Synopsis of Student Opinion.","\"Report of the Survey of the University of Virginia School of Medicine By the Liaison Committee on Medical Education Representing the American Medical Association and the Association of American Medical Colleges.\" The Ad Hoc Survey Team recommended that the School of Medicine continue in full accreditation for a period of ten years and that a report be submitted to the Liaison committee on Medical Education (LCME) in five years to address issues of concern noted in the summary of this report.","\"University of Virginia School of Medicine, Summary of the Findings and Recommendations of the Institutional Self-Study Task Force\"","Report of the University of Virginia School of Medicine, Charlottesville, Virginia, Prepared by an Ad Hoc Survey Team for the Liaison Committee on Medical Education (LCME) representing the Association of American Medical Colleges and the American Medical Association.\nThe report is the final report for 1998, and includes a prior accreditation survey and progress reports.","University of Virginia School of Medicine LCME Institutional Self Study Summary Report","Medical Education Database Sections I-V, and Appendix of Supporting Documents. The sections are: I. Institutional Setting, II. Educational Program for the M.D. Degree, III. Medical Students, IV. Faculty, V. Educational Resources","Required Course and Clerkship Forms (Years One through Four), University of Virginia School of Medicine","Medical Student Analysis and Graduation Questionnaire Results University of Virginia School of Medicine for the Liaison Committee on Medical Education","University of Virginia School of Medicine LCME Self-Study Summary Report","Required Course and Clerkship forms (Years One through Four) University of Virginia School of Medicine","Medical Student Analysis and Graduation Questionnaire Results for the Liaison Committee on Medical Education","Medical Education Database Sections I-V University of Virginia School of Medicine. LCME Data Collection Instrument for Full Accreditation Academic Year 2014-2015; Section I. Institutional Setting, II. Educational Program for the M.D. Degree, III. Medical Students, IV. Faculty, V. Educational Resources.","University of Virginia Self-Study Summary Report, Edited by Elaine M. Hadden, 1974 August 21\nThe report is part of the reaccreditation process that is required every ten years by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools. This report covers the entire university with only a part devoted to the School of Medicine.","University of Virginia Self-Study Report, 1984-1986, the executive summary of Continuing Education, Institutes, and other outreach activities. A letter from Oscar A. Thorup to William H. Muller discusses the summary that is included.","Norman J. Knorr from the School of Medicine is sent the report and asked to review the Draft. This report states that UVa as a \"predominately white, southern institution has been trying for several years to achieve genuine heterogeneity by encouraging the admission of minority students, and particularly black students to every school of the University. Partly under the pressure of a 1978 court order, substantial steps have been taken towards meeting this goal and it is the purpose of this section of our report to evaluate our achievements to date.\" There are two copies of the draft, one with changes written in.","Article titled \"Self-study moves to review phase\"","This series consists of digital and analog images showing the people and activities of the School of Medicine. Image formats in this series include, but are not limited to, photographic prints, film negatives, glass plate negatives, jpeg files, tiff files, and 35mm film slides. The series does not include official identification photographs for faculty, students, and staff.","Left to right: Richard E. Katholi, Edward W. Hook (Department Chair), John F. Kiraly III","Left to right: George B. Craddock, Edward W. Hook (Department Chair), L. Dwight Wooster","Left to right: James E. Sipes, Edward W. Hook (Department Chair), Robert L. Thompson","Left to right: John W. Zirkle, Edward W. Hook (Department Chair), Richard P. Keeling","Left to right: Sandra C. Foote, Edward W. Hook (Department Chair)","Left to right: Robert S. Gibson, Merle A. Sande, Oksanna M. Korzeniowski","Left to right: Edward W. Hook (Department Chair), John T. Bowers, Michael J. Oblinger","Left to right: Richard J. Gualtieri, Gary C. Murray, Edward W. Hook (Department Chair)","Left to right: Carl D. Malchoff, Robert E. Boyd, Edward W. Hook (Department Chair)","Left to right: Michael S. Collins, Edward W. Hook (Department Chair), Michael E. Williams","Left to right: Edward W. Hook (Department Chair), John B. Schorling, Donald R. Lilly, Munsey S. Wheby","Left to right: Christopher D. Lind, Munsey S. Wheby, Edward W. Hook (Department Chair), R.M. Fulchiero","Left to right: Munsey S. Wheby, Shalendra K. Varma, C. Foster Jennings, Edward W. Hook (Department Chair)","Left to right: Ali T. Afrookteh, Edward W. Hook (Department Chair), Munsey S. Wheby, Herbet E. Cushing","Left to right: Edward W. Hook (Department Chair), Raymond P. Smith, Brian E. Robinson, Munsey S. Wheby","Left to right: Munsey S. Wheby, Walter E. Smalley Jr., Nicholas W. Gemma, Edward W. Hook (Department Chair)","Left to right: Munsey S. Wheby, Kevin P. High, Colleen A. McNamara, Edward W. Hook (Department Chair)","Left to right: John C. Marshall (Department Chair), Raymond Brig, Munsey S. Wheby, William V. Burgess","Left to right: John C. Marshall (Department Chair), Matthew T. Goodman, Brian G. Bachhuber, Munsey S. Wheby","Left to right: Paul V. DeMarco, John C. Marshall (Department Chair), Glen L. Portwood","Left to right: April C. Sempien, John C. Marshall (Department Chair), Paul S. Buckley","Left to right: Gregory R. Weidner, John C. Marshall (Department Chair), Anthony Marano","Left to right: Christina W. Prillaman, John C. Marshall (Department Chair), William H. Maynard","Left to right: Scott A. Robinson, Munsey S. Wheby (Department Chair), Margaret R. Reitmeyer","Left to right: Christopher A. Klipstein, Michael O. Thorner (Department Chair), Thomas R. Gehrig","Left to right: J. Murray Estess, Michael O. Thorner (Department Chair), Richard M. Ingram","Left to right: Mitchell H. Rosner, Michael O. Thorner (Department Chair), Maria O. Masedo","Left to right: Christopher S. Reid, Michael O. Thorner (Department Chair), [unidentified]","Left to right: Andrew E. Lazar, Michael O. Thorner (Department Chair), [unidentified]","Left to right: [unidentified], Michael O. Thorner (Department Chair; seated), Aalya H. Crowl","Left to right: [unidentified], Robert M. Strieter (Department Chair), [unidentified], [unidentified]","First row, left to right: Jennifer L. Kirby, [unidentified]; Second row, left to right: Robert M. Strieter (Department Chair), Jason J. Lewis","Left to right: Jonathan Bleeker, Clay A. Cauthen, Robert M. Strieter (Department Chair), Adam Helms, [unidentified]","Left to right: Adam Zivony, Luther Bartelt, Robert M. Strieter (Department Chair), Joshua King, Danielle M. Rottkamp","Left to right: [unidentified], [unidentified], Mitchell H. Rosner (Department Chair), [unidentified], [unidentified]","Left to right: Mitchell H. Rosner (Department Chair), Heather Y. Hughes, Christopher J. Arnold, Amanda Russell-Kleiner","Internal Medicine, Third year residents: First row, left to right: Catherine Staropoli, April Stempien, Joyce Geilker, Shannon Story, Janine Maenza, Cherly Quigley, Carolyn Apple; Second row, left to right: Zach Dameron, Rodney Sepich, Alex Fenton, Charlie Duckworth, David Balaban; Third row, left to right: Andy Lazris, Steve Stephenson, Ralph Buckley, Mo Nadkarni","Left to right: John C. Marshall (1991-1996), William Parson (1949-1966), Edward W. Hook (1969-1990)","First row, left to right: William Parson (1949-1966), Michael O. Thorner (1997-2006), Munsey S. Wheby (1996-1997); Second row, left to right: John C. Marshall (1991-1996), Edward W. Hook (1969-1990)","Internal Medicine group photographs","First row: Daniel Mohler, Julian Beckwith, Thomas Hunter, Andrew Hart, unidentified, Edward Hook, Richard Guerrant, Bryd Leavell, John Guerrant, unidentified, unidentified","Box 81: Folder 38 contains photographs of Susan Gaston, Latha Shivaram, Meg Keeley, Kathy Smith, Mark Mendelsohn, Margaret Mohrman, and one unidentified. Box 92: Folder 18 contains photographs of 15 identified persons.","Most individuals identified. Photograph includes faculty members, assistant residents, and interns. Surgery faculty pictured: William Roberts Sandusky, Elton Meredith Alrich, Charles Bruce Morton II, George Ridgeway Minor, and Duncan Parham. (Not pictured: Everett Cato Drash.)","Photograph of a portrait of Barringer, includes several negatives.","Students with Harvey E. Jordan (first row, eighth from left)","Possibly members of the Class of 1925. Theodore Hough: first row, fifth from left. Harvey E. Jordan: first row, sixth from left.","Possibly members of the Class of 1926. Harvey E. Jordan is in the first row, fifth from left. Photograph by Holsinger.","These items consist of two (2) 16mm silent black and white film reels with a total amount of around 15 minutes of footage. The films seem to depict people exiting a building on the University of Virginia grounds after the 1946 School of Medicine commencement ceremonies.","Documents information that the School of Medicine provides to the public and business or government communities. Includes statements, visual aids, press releases and news clippings regarding historically significant events.","This series consists of publications produced by the School of Medicine for public distribution or general internal distribution. Publications include, but are not limited to, magazines, journals, monographs, newsletters, weblogs, weekly announcements, online publications, marketing materials, and patient education resources. This series contains both print and digital publications. This series does not include student publications or admissions materials.","This subseries consists of both digital and print magazines and journals published by the School of Medicine.","Publication subtitle: \"A journal of reflective practice in word and image\". Published by the University of Virginia School of Medicine. Features art, photography, fiction, and poetry by medical student authors. Some issues of the publication were also published online: http://hospitaldrive.org/","A journal published by the Center for the Study of Mind and Human Interaction at the University of Virginia. The Center was founded by psychiatrist Dr. Vamik Volkan. Subjects covered in the journal include psychiatry and psychoanalysis. Intended as a quarterly publication; some issues may be missing from the Library's collections. Publication discontinued September 2005. Description of the journal from Volume 4, No. 3: Mind \u0026 Human Interaction \"explores the unconscious and conscious interplay between the internal and external worlds of human beings. It analyzes current events by drawing on the expertise of an international and interdisciplinary pool of scholars and statesmen, primarily from a psychoanalytic frame of reference\".","Published by the University of Virginia School of Medicine. Periodical highlights research and news pertaining to medical education and clinical care.","Biannual journal published by the University of Virginia Health System. Content includes \"clinical vignettes,\" medical grand rounds, clinical reviews and commentaries, and editorial pieces. Discontinued in October 2011. Some issues were also published online: https://med.virginia.edu/dom/education/professional-education/journal-of-medicine-archive/","Publication includes a collection of creative works by medical students; publication organized by the Program of Humanities in Medicine and the Center for Biomedical Ethics and Humanities at the School of Medicine. Co-directors include Marcia Day Childress and Julia E. Connelly. \"Veritas is the University of Virginia School of Medicine's literary arts magazine. Published annually since 1994 and student-edited since 2000. Veritas showcases original writing, art, and photography by UVA medical students.\" (Description from Veritas Volume 33)","Volumes 28-31, and 33.","This subseries consists of digital and print newsletters that provide information about the activities of the School of Medicine and its units and departments.","Newsletter of the University of Virginia Department of Biomedical Engineering. \"[The Newsletter] will provide a vehicle for informing the UVA community of activities within the Department of Biomedical Engineering and... establish a continuous link with... BME alumni who have graduated over the last twenty-five years.\" (From the Spring 1990 issue)","Published by the University of Virginia Hospital for the staff of the departments of ophthalmology and otolaryngology.","Periodical published by the University of Virginia School of Medicine, Office of the Dean. Includes topics pertaining to the history of the Department of Medicine and University Hospital. Available issues: Vol. 1, No. 1 - Vol. 3, No. 2 (Fall 1941-Spring 1947).","Produced by the Beirne B. Carter Center for Immunology Research at the University of Virginia. Alternate title: \"BCC News\". Print newletter transitioned to a publication in electronic form (no longer available). Publication discontinued.","Published by the University of Virginia School of Medicine, Office of the Dean. Authored by Dr. William R. Drucker. Issues published irregularly during 1974-1977;  topics covered relate to medical education news, medical faculty, and internship assignments.","Subtitle: \"A Newsletter from the Heart Center\". May 2002, Issue 76 is the only issue present in the collection. Issue 76 is a National Hospital Week 80th anniversary edition, featuring \"then and now\" sections comparing cardiovascular care in the 1980s and early 2000s.","Newsletter of the University of Virginia Department of Biomedical Engineering. Includes departmental news, remarks from the Chair, and student and faculty highlights.","Published by the University of Virginia Medical Center. Alternate title \"House Staff Newsletter\".","Publication produced by University Communications. The 2017 issue (Volume 5) is the Bicentennial edition of the publication. Also published online at https://illimitable.virginia.edu/ Appears to have been discontinued in 2019.","Institute for Substance Abuse Studies (I.S.A.S.) Update, a University of Virginia Health Sciences Center newsletter from the Institute for Substance Abuse Studies. 2 issues present in the collection: April 1992, Number 1 and August 1992, Number 2.","Published by the University of Virginia Medical School, Pediatrics Department.","Published by the University of Virginia School of Medicine, Division of Clinical Pharmacology. Variant title: \"Pharmacy and the physician\".","A newsletter from the School of Medicine, published as an online blog on http://www.healthsystem.virginia.edu and later on http://www.medicine.virginia.edu. Issues in the collection are print-outs from these websites. Topics include School of Medicine news and events, faculty spotlights, information on grants and accreditation processes, and written remarks from the Dean.","Published by the University of Virginia Department of Radiology as a quarterly departmental newsletter. Publication discontinued.","Published by the University of Virginia Medical Center, Department of Psychiatry. Some volumes are missing from the series.","Produced by the University of Virginia School of Medicine; includes lists of administrators and departmental leaders; faculty, housestaff, and student statistics; highlights of faculty achievements; description of academic programs; description of teaching hospital and patient care facilities; selected research highlights; brief overview of financial affairs and School of Medicine budget. Contents may vary by year.","Brochure featuring seven women chosen for a photographic portrait project on women faculty in the School of Medicine. Brochure includes small reproductions of the seven portraits. Project participants: Tracy Hoke, MD; Victoria Norwood, MD; Elayne Phillips, RN, MPH, PhD, FAAN; Myla Goldman, MD, MSc; Veronica Michaelsen, MD, MSc; Mary Ropka, PhD; and Lori Cronkin, MD.","Pediatric research promotional brochure","Final reports for research projects conducted by students, faculty, and staff of the School of Medicine where the results are not published. Does not include research data.","This series consists of the records of student organizations sponsored by the School of Medicine. These records include, but are not limited to charters, bylaws, membership lists, leadership information, significant photographs, web pages, meeting minutes, and audiovisual recordings. This series also includes student publications including, but not limited to, student-produced newsletters, weblogs, and yearbooks.","The book includes minutes of meetings, lists of new members, and peakers and topics of the talks given at the meetings for inducted members. Also included are news clippings of an event in November 1947 in which Dr. Philip S. Hench gave a presentation about Walter Reed and yellow fever, one clipping about the March 1950 AOA elections at UVA, and one about the 1945 elections.","The book includes minutes of meetings, lists of new members, and speakers and topics of the talks given at the meetings for inducted members.","The book includes expenses and income from dues, banquets, printing, lecture costs, etc.","Newsletter of the Mulholland Society, a UVA medical student organization. Published by the University of Virginia School of Medicine. Variant title: \"M.D.\" Collection contains an incomplete run of the publication.","UVA Chapter of  Phi Beta Pi, a professional fraternity for medical students that dates back to the 1890s. This fraternal organization is no longer active.","\n\"Founded in 1964 at Meharry Medical College and Howard University College of Medicine, the Student National Medical Association is the oldest and largest independent, student-run organization focused on the needs and concerns of medical students of color. SNMA has grown to over 5000 members throughout the United States and the Caribbean. Our mission is to address community health issues impacting underserved Americans and to increase minority representation in health professional fields. Through our signature MAPS, HPREP, and YSEP programs, SNMA members work with students from elementary school through college to introduce them to science and serve as mentors. In this way, SNMA strengths the educational pipeline that leads from elementary school to medical school.\"\n","\nDescription from the SNMA website: https://med.virginia.edu/snma/about/ (2022 January)\n","Newsletter of the University of Virginia Chapter of the Student National Medical Association. Collection contains: Vol. 1, No. 1 April 1994. Variant title: University of Virginia SNMA medical newsletter. Publication discontinued (date of discontinuation unknown).","\nAnnual programs produced by the University of Virginia School of Medicine fourth year class. Video recordings of the program are available for most years listed below (original video format varies). Printed programs and scripts are available for some years only. Variant titles include: Medical show, School of Medicine student class play, Medical school class play, 4th year class play, Fourth year class play, 4th year class movie, Fourth year class movie, University of Virginia School of Medicine class video.\n","\nProgram titles:","Amoritis (love bug fever) (The medical show - 1937) \"Holza-poppin\" (The medical show - 1940) \"Men in tattle-tale gray\" (The medical school show - 1947) Post mortem class of 1950 (Medical school class film 1950) Last class play (Medical school class play - 1972) Guiding light (Medical school class play - 1974) Doctor in the house (Medical school class play - 1976) Tonight show, with Johny Carcinoma (Medical school class play - 1980) Hospital box office journal of medicine (Medical school class play - 1981) Ileus and the oddity of gomer (Medical school class play - 1983) MDTV guide: the new wave (Medical school class play - 1984) Trivial pursuit: tales of the scutbusters (Medical school cass play - 1985) Real to reel (Medical school class play - 1986) 60 beats: ectopic focus on the medical world (Medical school class play - 1987) From the far side: late night with Dr. Letterman (Medical school class play - 1988) On the road to wizdom (Medical school class play - 1989) Lost in the link (Medical school class play - 1990) MDTV guide: [skits, songs, etc.] (Medical school class play - 1991) Wonder years (Medical school class play - 1992) Quantum beep (Medical school class play - 1993) Health care reform school (Medical school class play - 1994) Class play skits program (Medical school class play - 1999) Must see M.D. (Medical school class play - 2000) Rolling stone (Carey's Angels, Matchless and the Crocodile Hunter) Saturday night live (Medical school class play - 2001) Surgical snack mask and survivor intro (Medical school class movie? - 2001) Carey's angels footage (Medical school class movie? - 2001) DirectMD: a multimedia experience in two acts (Medical school class play - 2002) A day in the life of a med student (Medical school class play - 2003) The greatest show on earth (Medical school class play - 2004) \"True confessions\" (Medical school class play - 2007) Med school movie 2008 (Medical school class play - 2008) University of Virginia School of Medicine class of 2009 video (Medical school class play - 2009) 4th year movie, SMD 2010 (Medical school class movie - 2010)","This item is a program from the May 7-9, 1981 play entitled \"The Hospital Box Office Journal of Medicine.\"","This item is a program for the play \"Candida Camera,\" a Class of 1982 production running May 6-8, 1982.","Yearbooks for the School of Medicine have been produced inconsistently over the years. For some early years, medical students can be found in the University-wide Corks \u0026 Curls publications (not available in this collection except for 1941-1942; see the Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections Library for additional items). For a short time between 1947-1970, a yearbook for the medical school titled \"Biopsy\" was produced. During the 1980s, a medical school edition of Corks \u0026 Curls was produced. From 1989-2017, a School of Medicine-specific yearbook was produced by the medical students. The medical school yearbook was discontinued after 2017.","Only four volumes of the University of Virginia School of Medicine yearbook titled \"Biopsy\" were published, for the years: 1947, 1948, 1949, and 1970. The yearbook also incorporated content featuring students from the University of Virginia School of Nursing. Variant title: Medical School student yearbook.","Corks \u0026 Curls Medical School Edition. Volumes from 1982-1988 include a special section pertaining to the activities and students of the University of Virginia School of Medicine. Corks \u0026 Curls is the student yearbook of the University of Virginia, started in 1888 and produced by students until 2008. Student yearbooks have been produced inconsistently since 2008. See the Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections Library for all available volumes.","Student yearbooks produced annually by the students of the School of Medicine from 1989-2017. Design and content varies by year; some years have individual titles. Variant titles: Vitruvius, Just In Time, At Last, Medical School Yearbook.","\"Prepared and funded under the auspices for the Student Council of the University of Virginia.\" Section on legal aspects (p. 13-22) includes information on drug control laws of Virginia, U.S., Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and New York.","Produced by the University of Virginia School of Medicine Class of 1899 as a biographical and historical record of the Class.","Produced by the University of Virginia School of Medicine Class of 1899. Includes faculty listing, class resolution and history, a poem titled \"Reveries of a young practitioner\" by Charles Bickly Fox, and a list of graduates. 16 pages. Variant titles: Ninety nine, Medical class of 1899 of the University of Virginia.","Contains biographical letters written in 1910 by members of the University of Virginia School of Medicine Class of 1899 to the Class Secretary, David Russell Lyman. 47 pages.","Published by the University of Virginia Medical Center. Caption reads: \"A student journal of opinion and debate, U.VA. School of Medicine.\" Vol. 1, No. 1 dated January 1969. Incomplete run of publication in collection.","News of the Students and Faculty of the Univeristy of Virginia School of Medicine. Newsletter produced by a UVA medical student editorial board. Journal issued bimonthly during the academic year. Incomplete run of publication in collection.","The records in this series document the organizational structure of the School of Medicine. It also contains records that document administrative reorganizations of the School of Medicine. These materials include, but are not limited to, organizational charts and reports.","Copyright restrictions may apply.","This series contains policies, procedures, and handbooks produced by the School of Medicine to direct and guide the conduct of its faculty, staff, and students. These records may also formally describe and define the relationship between the School of Medicine and its faculty, staff, and students.","Published by the University of Virginia. \"The purpose of the handbook is ... to provide a guide to the organization, governance, and administration of the School of Medicine ... to bring together the major policies of the School of Medicine ... [and] to alert the faculty to other sources of information and services.\" Description from 1997 Handbook, page iii. Variant title: School of Medicine faculty handbook.","A resource guide for graduate and professional students at the University of Virginia produced by the Office of the Dean of Students. Includes content on the history of UVA, information on student services and student government, guide to local activities and entertainment, and short essays by faculty on the subject of \"Perspectives on the Educational Experience\".","Student handbook or manual produced for matriculating students at the University of Virginia School of Medicine. Title and contents vary by year. Variant titles: Information for Entering Students, Student Handbook. Later available in electronic form titled \"The Student Source\".","\"Prepared by Virginia Delta Chapter, Alpha Epsilon Delta and Thomas L. Pearce, Assistant Dean, College of Arts and Sciences, Preprofessional Advisor, Office of Career Planning and Placement.\" Published by the Office of Career Planning \u0026 Placement. Variant title: University of Virginia Premedical handbook","Produced by ClubMed of the University of Virginia. ClubMed is \"a student run organization whose purpose is to foster interest in Internal Medicine.\" Guide is intended \"to provide orientation for 3rd year medical students embarking on their Internal Medicine clerkships\" and \"to answer most of the questions which arise at the beginning of third year, while providing advice, suggestions, and practical approaches for the medicine wards.\" (Description from Preface.) Item cover reads \"Fifth Edition\". Fifth Edition Editor: Neil Zakai.","The series contains historically significant syllabi and other educational materials (e.g. laboratory notebooks, course notes) used in courses offerred by the School of Medicine. The majority of the items in this series are single instances of syllabi from a particular course or professor.","Materia Medica Notes: Published for the Use of the Class in the University of Virginia, by Anderson Bros., Publishers and Bookseller, Copyrighted by Anderson Bros., University of Virginia. 1892.\nCopy 1: Owned by Dr. William Levi Old, Class of 1894, and donated to the Health Sciences Library by his grandson, Dr. William Levi Old, III, Class of 1976. Copy is signed: \"W. Levi Old, Univ. of Va., 1893-4, 2nd year Med.\"; with extensive handwritten notes throughout.\nCopy 2: Signed \"Paul B. Barringer, Univ. of Va.\"; some handwritten notes; \"P.B.B.\" and \"B\" printed in pen on edge of pages; damaged binding and spine.","Materia Medica: Drug Lists and Laboratory Exercises, Foreward by James Alexander Waddell.\nSigned and donated by Fred E. Cleveland, School of Medicine Class of 1941; handwritten notes throughout.","Syllabus of the Lectures on Medical Jurisprudence and on the Treatment of Poisoning \u0026 Suspended Animation,\ndelivered in the University of Virginia, by Professor [Robley] Dunglison. Printed for the use of the students. [Charlottesville] University of Virginia, Printed by C. P. M'Kennie, 1827.","Postgraduate course in Obstetrics and Gynecology conducted by The Department of Clinical and Medical Education of the Medical Society of Virginia, in cooperation with the University of Virginia Medical School, the Medical College of Virginia, the Virginia State Department of Health, the Children's Bureau, United States Department of Labor. Issued by the University of Virginia Extension Division.","Postgraduate course in Obstetrics and Gynecology conducted by The Department of Clinical and Medical Education of the Medical Society of Virginia, in cooperation with the University of Virginia Medical School, the Medical College of Virginia, the Virginia State Department of Health, the Children's Bureau, United States Department of Labor. Issued by the University of Virginia Extension Division.","Laboratory Manual for Experimental Pharmacology, published by Department of Pharmacology, Univeristy of Virginia School of Medicine, [1965], for use in an introductory laboratory course in pharmacology; exercises designed for 3 hour laboratory periods.","This series consists of the records of the development and creation of fundraising campaigns and reporting of campaign status. Includes financial information, theme and branding information, and master plans.","University of Virginia Advancement publication; Contains an article on Randolph Pillow, an alumnus who donated artifacts to the School of Medicine that now reside at the Claude Moore Health Sciences Library.","This series consists of records of trusts or endowments to the School of Medicine, including history of trustees and investments. Includes agreements, stipulations, stock accounts, and end of year reports.","This series documents the classes offered in the School of Medicine each semester. This series may include, but is not limited to: course descriptions and faculty course assignments.","The University of Virginia record, published by the University of Virginia. Includes a catalogue of the officers (faculty, instructors, administrators, and other staff) and students of the University of Virginia, descriptions of individual schools and departments, rules and regulations related to admissions and graduation, and information on curricula and textbooks used. Contents may vary by year.","Issues of the University of Virginia record pertaining to the School of Medicine, published by the University of Virginia; in some places referred to as the \"School of Medicine Announcements\" or \"Catalogs\". Includes listings of faculty, instructors, administrators, other personnel, and students of the University of Virginia School of Medicine, rules and regulations related to admissions and graduation, description of medical education and clinical facilities, and information on the medical curriculum. Each issue also includes a list of graduates with an M.D. from the previous year. Contents may vary by year.","Alternate title: \"Electives at the University of Virginia\". Includes material related to the medical curriculm. Transferred to the archives from the School of Medicine Office of Student Affairs.","Issues of the University of Virginia record (graduate edition), also known as the course catalog, published by the University of Virginia.","Issues of the University of Virginia record (undergraduate edition), also known as the course catalog, published by the University of Virginia.","Item published in 1979 by the Claude Moore Health Sciences Library. Lists the University of Virginia medical faculty from 1825-1826 to 1944-1945 and the position(s) they held. 50 pages.","This series documents the addition of donated items, including artwork, into the collections of the School of Medicine. This series may include receipts, agreements, logs, and any other records documenting custody or ownership.","This series consists of publications that were produced in order to recruit students to apply and attend educational programs at the School of Medicine. May include information on programs, majors, schools, and other academic and community activities.","The Biomedical Sciences Graduate Program (BIMS) is an interdisciplinary graduate program at the University of Virginia. It provides training and research opportunities for PhD candidates in partnership with the School of Medicine, Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, and School of Engineering and Applied Sciences.","PUblished by the Office of University Publications at the University of Virginia. Contains entrance requirements and admissions information for admitted students to the University of Virginia Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. Variant title: Admissions catalog","Informational publication for students in Biochemistry and Molecular Genetics. Also includes admission policies and procedures and faculty profiles. Variant title: The Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Genetics graduate program information","Promotional brochure prepared for students entering the University of Virginia School of Medicine. 20 pages.","This series consists of programs and reports that document the history of conferences and symposia hosted by the [major administrative unit]. Programs and reports often contain the following information: lists of speakers, presentation titles, schedules of events, and lecture abstracts. The following coneference records are not included in this series:","registration records\nfinancial records\norganization records\nattendance lists","Materials include programs and flyers for the University of Virginia Department of Medicine's annual research day. Variant titles: Annual Research Day in Internal Medicine, Internal Medicine Research Day","This series consists of significant material that conveys the history of the School of Medicine, its administration, its accomplishments, its officials or employees. Includes, but is not limited to, scrapbooks, photographs, articles, program notes and documentation of events sponsored or funded by the agency. Also included are narratives; printed, audio, or audiovisual histories; or matters of significant historical importance.","This subseries consists of biographies and files that contain biographical information for significant faculty, staff, and students associated with the School of Medicine. Materials in the biographical files include, but are not limited to, resumes, currciculum vitaes, clippings, obituaries, articles, and photographs. Some of the biographical files have been assembled by archivists others by various departments in the School of Medicine.","\"A Celebration of Lifetime Achievements in Honor of Robert M. Carey, MD, MACP, FAHA, FRCPI\", by University of Virginia School of Medicine, Division of Endocrinology and Metabolism, 2015 [?].\nContains numerous photographs and remembrances of Dr. Carey written by colleagues and friends, including Zhenqi Liu, Nancy Dunlap, Mitchell Rosner, Carlos Ayers, Gene Barrett, Paula Barrett, George A. Beller, Sarah Creef Baugher, Eric Davis, Don D. Detmer...","Reprinted from the Bulletin of the New York Academy of Medicine, Second Series, Vol. 48, No. 5, pp. 791-798, June 1972.","Manuscript of a history of Robley Dunglison written by Jack Owen Tannett, the great-great-grandson of Dunglison, in honor of the 200th anniversary of Dunglison's birth. Also contains correspondence from Tannett regarding his research.","\"Edwin Partridge Lehman, Professor of Surgery: An Appreciation of Twenty Years as a Teacher of Surgery at the University of Virginia, School of Medicine\".\nProceedings of a dinner held November 19, 1948, at Farmington in honor of Dr. Edwin P. Lehman. Speakers included Colgate Darden, Harvey E. Jordan, I.A. Bigger, Daniel Elkin, Edwin Shearburn. Program includes a list of Dr. Lehman's publications, 1914-1948.","Contained within the Alumni Bulletin of the University of Virginia, Third Series, Vol. I, No. 1. January 1908.\n\"John J. Moran,\" 3 excerpts, p. 67-69.\nTable of Contents for this issue also lists: \"The growth of public education in America\", \"The University of Virginia in 1829\", \"History of the Ph.D. degree of the University of Virginia\", \"The University and Virginia\", \"Class organization\", \"Training in public speaking\", \"The colonnade club\", \"Jefferson bust\", \"Professor Francis H. Smith honored\", \"Professor Noah K. Davis honored\", \"New members of the teaching staff\", \"Goings and doings of the faculty\", \"Items of interest\" and \"Literary notices\".","\"Lawrence Thomas Royster, MD\"Article by Armistead Page Booker. In \"Pediatric Newsletter\", Vol. 9, No. 2, Spring 1985. Publication of the Department of Pediatrics, Children's Medical Center of the University of Virginia. p. 2-4","Contained within the Alumni Bulletin of the University of Virginia, Third Series, Vol. IX, No. 3. July 1916.\n3 pieces on Richard Henry Whitehead, and 1 piece written by Richard Henry Whitehead.\n\"Richard Henry Whitehead--An Appreciation\", by Edwin A. Alderman, p. 379-380. Reprinted from Corks and Curls, 1916.\n\"Richard Henry Whitehead--Early Years and Life at the University of North Carolina\", by William de B. MacNider, p. 380-384.\n\"Richard Henry Whitehead and the University of Virginia\", by Theodore Hough, p. 385-399.\n\"University Atmosphere\", by R.H. (Richard Henry) Whitehead, p. 400-405. Presidential address delivered before the Philosophical Society of the University of Virginia, May 6, 1915. Reprinted from the Proceedings of the Philosophical Society, 1912-1915.\nTable of Contents for this issue also lists: \"Finals\", \"President Alderman's last word\", \"The graduates\", \"Apppointments by the Board of Visitors\", \"Rector Gordon's welcome to the alumni\", \"Alumni present at finals\", \"Business meeting of the general alumni association\", \"The old University in the new\", \"Democracy and education\", \"A great night\", \"Resolutions of the general faculty\", \"Theodore Sandford Garnett, Jr., 1844-1915\", \"The department of education\", \"News of the University and faculty\".","This subseries consists of narrative essays, articles, and monographs that tell the story of discrete units and departments in the School of Medicine. Note that some histories may be the product of informal projects or research and may contain inconsistencies or inaccuracies.","\n\"A History of the Department of Dermatology, University of Virginia\", by Edward P. Cawley and William H. Kaufman. Published in 1987. Foreword by Peyton E. Weary, graduate of the University of Virginia School of Medicine Class of 1955, and former Chair of the Department of Dermatology. The book covers the period from 1902 to 1985. The first section largely focuses on the formation of the Department of Dermatology (originally known as the Department of Syphilology and Dermatology) and the department's growth under its first Chair: Dudley C. Smith, M.D., whose tenure lasted from 1924-1950. The second half of the book follows the redirection of the department under two Chairs: Edward Phillip Cawley, M.D., whose tenure lasted from 1950-1976, and Peyton E. Weary, M.D., whose tenure lasted from 1976-1993. Much of the book's contents relate to faculty biographies. Also included are lists of Dermatology Residents.\n","Division of Infectious Diseases 50th Anniversary Celebration: Early Infectious Disease Activities associated with the University of Virginia: A Personal History by Jack Gwaltney; The Start of Hospital Epidemiology at UVA by Richard Wenzel; Reflections on Emerging Infectious Diseases by James Hughes; Reminiscences of the First Fellow by Michael Rein; Discovery with Microbes \u0026 Infectious Diseases Society of American Strategic Priorities; From Mouse to Man: Lessons about Infectious Diseases in Transplant Patients by Michael Ison; Chasing a Gene: Lessons Learned on Antimicrobial Resistance Dissemination; and Brief Reflections on UVA Division of Infectious Diseases by Gerald Mandell, Richard Guerrant, Richard Pearson, Gerlad Donowitz, William Petri, Brian Wispelwey, Carlene Muto, Rebecca Dillingham and Eric Houpt. Includes program and written talk, Reminiscences of the First Fellow, by Michael Rein.","\n\"Early History of the Department of Neurology at the University of Virginia School of Medicine\" by James Q. Miller, Professor of Neurology, Charlottesville VA, July 1998. Includes chronological lists of faculty, fellows, and residents.\n","\n\"Obstetrics and Gynecology at the University of Virginia, 1825-1999, A Chronical [sic],\" by Guy M. Harbert.\nIncludes chronology of the department, listings of department chairmen and residents, publication lists, biographies, and photographs (in a separate folder).\n","\nContents: \"Obstetrics and Gynecology: The Early Years, 1825-1924\", \n\"Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology: The First 75 Years, 1925-1999\", \n\"Chronology\", \n\"Chairmen\", \n\"Faculty\", \n\"Chief Residents\", \n\"Fellowship Trainees\", \n\"Publications from the Department\", \n\"Statics [sic]\", \n\"John M. Nokes Lectureship\", \n\"W. Norman Thornton Symposia\", \n\"Ellen Newman-Half Century of Service\", \n\"Tiffany J Williams, 1897-1947\", \n\"John M. Nokes, 1903-1990\", \n\"William Norman Thornton, Jr., 1912-1999\".\n","\"Department of Otolaryngology and Maxillofacial Surgery, University of Virginia: History and Notes, 1896-1977\", bound manuscript by G. Slaughter Fitz-Hugh. Dr. Fitz-Hugh chronicles the development of the specialty of otolaryngology in the UVa School of Medicine and Hospital from 1896-1977 with special emphasis on personnel. Photographic portraits of some faculty members in the department from 1896-1951 are inserted. Includes some references and footnotes.","\n\"Pharmacology at the University of Virginia School of Medicine,\" by Chalmers L. Gemmill and Mary Jeanne Jones. Published by University of Virginia Printing Office, 1966. The book primarily consists of a series of biographical sketches of the professors in the Department of Pharmacology (early professors of Materia Medica and Pharmacy are included).\n","\nContents:\nRobley Dunglison, M.D., L.L.D., 1825-1827, \nJohn Patten Emmet, M.D., 1827-1842, \nRobert Empie Rogers, M.D., L.L.D., 1842-1852, \nJohn Lawrence Smith, M.D., 1852-1853, \nJohn Staige Davis, M.A., M.D., 1853-1885, \nWilliam Beverley Towles, M.D., 1885-1893, \nPaul Brandon Barringer, M.D., L.L.D., 1893-1907, \nWilliam Alexander Lambeth, M.D., Ph.D., 1902-1907, \nJohn Augustine English Eyster, M.D., 1908-1910, \nJames Alexander Waddell, M.D., 1911-1945, \nChalmers Laughlin Gemmill, M.D., 1945- . \nSome copies inscribed and signed by the author.\n","\"Department of Radiology, University of Virginia Health Sciences Center: Genesis and Growth,\" November 1994. By John F. Harlan, Jr. and C. David Teates. One version is reprinted from the American Journal of Roentgenology, the other is a manuscript copy.","\n\"History of the Department of Surgery, School of Medicine, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia, 1824-1971\", by Charles Bruce Morton II.\nPublished by the Division of Medical Art and Photography, University of Virginia Medical Center.\n","\nContents: \n\"Procuring a Faculty\", \n\"The Piedmont Hospital\", \n\"The University of Virginia Hospital\", \n\"The Department of Surgery and Gynecology\", \n\"Geographic Full-time Faculty\", \n\"Departmental Expansion and Development\", \n\"Todays Department of Surgery (1970-71)\".\n","Department of Urology historical overview: a chronological list of Chairmen of the Department from 1928 to 2016. Compiled by M.C. Wilhelm, M.D., in 2016.","This subseries consists of files containing materials that document significant events, moments, and turning points in the history of the School of Medicine.","This file contains articles, reports, and other collected writings focused on the proposed relocation of the University of Virginia School of Medicine to Richmond, VA. In 1921, a state-appointed commission recommended that the UVA School of Medicine be moved to Richmond. This recommendation was prompted by a debate over the best setting for a medical school--a small town like Charlottesville, or a larger city like Richmond. Before the Virginia General Assembly met to vote on the recommendation, UVA waged a fierce campaign to preserve the medical program as it was. The University mobilized alumni, recruited powerful political allies, and printed persuasive literature, such as that found in this file. The campaign ultimately succeeded, and the General Assembly decided in favor of leaving the School of Medicine at UVA.","The Response of the Board of Visitors of the Medical College of Virginia to the Invitation of the Commission on Medical Education in Virginia \"To make any contribution of facts or considerations pertinent to the subject of investigation by the Commission: Namely, the best organization of medical education in Virginia.\"\nFrom the Bulletin of the Medical College of Virginia, Vol. XVII, No. 3, September 1920. Caption title: \"Richmond as the location of the state supported medical school,\" A brief prepared by William R. Miller, on behalf of the Board of Vistiors of the Medical College of Virginia; and \"Addresses delivered at a meeting of the Commission on Medical Education in Virginia\". Of note, a section titled: \"Some objections which have been suggested by anxious friends of the University of Virginia\", p. 34-36.","Contained within the Alumni Bulletin of the University of Virginia, Third Series, Vol. XIV, No. 1, January 1921. Cover notes: \"Centennial Celebration May 31-June 3, 1921\".\nContents include: \"The Proper Location of the State-Supported Medical School in Virginia\", By Theodore Hough, p. 1-70. \"A Summary of the Argument for University Location of the Single State-Supported Medical School\", p. 71-80.","Supplement to Bulletin of the Medical College of Virginia, Vol. XVIII, No. 1, March 1921. Published by Medical College of Virginia, Richmond VA.","Written by Abraham Flexner. Reprinted from the report of the Commission on Medical Education in Virginia.","\"Report of the Commission on Medical Education in Virginia: To His Excellency, the Governor of Virginia, the Rector and Board of Visitors of the University of Virginia, the Chairman and Board of Visitors of the Medical College of Virginia\". Commission on Medical Education in Virginia personnel: Wilbur C. Hall, Chairman; Theodore Hough, Secretary.","\"Minority Report of the Commission on Medical Education in Virginia: Submitted to His Excellency, the Governor of Virginia, the Rector and Board of Visitors of the University of Virginia, the Chairman and Board of Visitors of the Medical College of Virginia\".\nCommission on Medical Education in Virginia. Wilbur C. Hall, Theodore Hough, William D. Prince, J. Belmont Woodson, members of the commission. \nText issued also as Virginia General Assembly, 1922. Senate. Doc. 9.","Supplement to University of Virginia Alumni News, Vol. 9, No. 10, May 1921.\nVarious authors. \nContents:\n\"The Virginia commission on medical education\",\n\"The minority report by Dr. Theodore Hough\",\n\"A statement by President Alderman\",\n\"Authorities who aided the commission with advice\",\n\"Opinions of the national leaders in medical education\",\n\"Opinion of the medical faculty\",\n\"A criticism of the majority report\".","Supplement to the Bulletin of the Medical College of Virginia, Vol. XVIII, No. 2, June 1921.\nPublished by the Medical College of Virginia, Richmond, VA.\nAuthors include Dr. Henry S. Pritchett, Dr. Arthur D. Bevan, Dr. A.L. Gray, Dr. Ennion G. Williams, Rev. Edward N. Galisch, J. Hoge Tyler, William Hodges Mann, H.C. Stuart.","Prepared for the General Alumni Association of the University of Virginia by M.C. Elliot, Chairman Executive Committee.\nDistributed by the Association for Retention of the Medical School and Hospital at the University of Virginia.\nDr. Hugh Young and G.M. McNutt, Joint Chairmen. McLane Tilton, Secretary-Treasurer.","Published by the Association to Retain the Medical School and Hospital at the University of Virginia.","Issue of the University of Virginia Alumni News, Vol. 10, No. 1, July 1921.\nCover reads \"Keep the Medical School at the University of Virginia\".\nContents: \n\"The Future of the Endowment Fund\",\n\"Richmond Paper favors University as Place for Medical School\",\n\"Departmental Meetings Great Success. Lawyers and Engineers Form Their Own Associations\",\n\"Removal of Medical School Would be a Breach of Faith Declares Virginia Historian\" [with excerpts from Philip Alexander Bruce],\n\"The New York Sun Comments on the Proposed Removal of the Medical School\",\n\"Rending Jefferson's University\",\n\"Roanoke, Norfolk and Lynchburg Alumni Protest Against Removal\".","Published by the Association to Retain the Medical School and Hospital at the University of Virginia [?].\nIncludes statistics of patients admitted to the University Hospital for two years, July 1, 1919 to July 1, 1921.","A Bulletin from the Virginia State Dental Association to the Taxpayers of Virginia, Vol 1. No. 1.","Appears in the Bulletin of the Medical College of Virginia, Vol. 18, No. 3. September 1921.\nPublished by the Medical College of Virginia, Richmond, VA.","By Theodore Hough, with a Foreword by Edwin A. Alderman.\nReprinted from the Alumni Bulletin of the University of Virginia, Vol. XIV, No. 4, October 1921.","Published by Committee of the Alumni Association for the Expansion of the University of Virginia [?].\nWritten by Milton C. Elliott, Julien H. Hill, Branch Johnson, Fred E. Nolting, Allan J. Saville.","In University of Virginia Alumni News, Vol. 10, No. 6, December 1921 - January 1922, pp. 387-406.\nContents:\n\"The Crisis at Richmond: Life of the Medical School at Stake\",\n\"Dean W.M. Thornton Writes Letter on the Medical School Issue, Gets Down to Brass Tacks\" by William M. Thornton,\n\"Letter to the Alumni of the University of Virginia\" by Hugh H. Young,\n\"Shall the University Hospital Be Destroyed?\",\n\"Eminent American Jurist Opposes Removal of the University Medical School\",\n\"Executive Committee's Christmas Letter to Alumni Chapters\" [includes section on \"Attempt to Remove Medical School to Richmond\"].\nAlso:\nComment by University President Edwin A. Alderman on front cover,\nLetter by McLane Tilton, Alumni Secretary, General Alumni Association of the University of Virginia, on the back cover.","Contained within the Alumni Bulletin of the University of Virginia, Third series, Vol. 15, No. 1. January 1922.\n\"The Medical Department of the University of Virginia--Its Proposed Removal--A Bit of History\" by John Staige Davis. Address delivered before the Norfolk Chapter of the Alumni, 29 December 1921. p. 29-45.\nTable of Contents for this issue also lists: \"President Alderman's Budget Statement\", \"The George Rogers Clark Statue, Presentation Address and Address of Acceptance\", \"George Rogers Clark and the Conquest of the Northeast\", \"The University of Virginia in the World War\".","In University of Virginia Alumni News, Vol. 10, No. 8, March 1922.\nContents:\n\"University Wins Victory as Senate Votes Down Medical Merger Bill: Final Count is 24-16\",\n\"St. Louis Alumni Send Congratulatory Telegram\",\n\"Students Welcome President Alderman and Dean Hough\",\n\"The President's Page\" by Edwin A. Alderman,\n[Letter by McLane Tilton, Alumni Secretary],\n\"Washington and Lee Has School of Journalism Again\",\n\"New Medical Fraternity\",\n\"Endowment Fund Given Added Stimulus by Victory at Richmond and Retention of Medical School\",\n\"The Honor Men\" by James Hay, Jr.,\n\"In the Service of the University: Letter from the Executive Committee of the General Alumni Association\",\n\"Woodrow Wilson Gratified\",\n\"'Dismemberment' up to Date\" [Passage related to medical schools' use of African American bodies in Anatomy classes],\n\"Athletics\",\n\"With the Alumni\".","Contained within the Alumni Bulletin of the University of Virginia, Third Series, Vol. 15, No. 3. April 1922.\nThis article addresses Senate Bill No. 1, presented by Senator Marshall B. Booker, January 11, 1922 to the General Assembly of Virginia. The same bill was later introduced to the House of Delegates by Hon. J. M. Hurt and became known as the Booker-Hurt bill. See also pages 237-242 for \"Miscellanies Relating to the Medical School Question\" for three statements given by opponents of the Booker-Hurt bill and its proposed amendments.\nTable of Contents for this issue also lists: \"Statement of the Recotor of the Board of Visitors\", \"Address of the Presdient of the University\", \"Financial Aspects of the Location of a Single State-Supported Medical School\", \"Clinical Aspects of the Location of a Single State-Supported Medical School\", \"The Attitude of the Medical Profession in Virginia\", \"The Attitude of the Alumni to the Removal of the Medical School\", \"Address Prepared for Delivery before the Senate of Virginia\", \"Miscellanies Relating to the Medical School Question\", \"The University the Natural Home of the Medical School\".","Includes papers which appeared during the discussion of the loaction of the Medical Department of the University of Virginia, collected for historic value and for their contributions to the literature of medical education. 18 excerpts from 8 publications; By various authors.","Compiled responses to a letter sent by Theodore Hough containing a statement of the postion of the medical faculty of the Univeristy of Virginia on the proper location of a single state-supported medical school. Replies from Harvard University: David L. Edsall, Dean of the Medical School at Harvard; W.B. Cannon; Harvey Cushing; M.J. Roseman; Henry A. Christian. Replies from Johns Hopkins: President Goodnow; Lewis H. Weed; J.M.T. Finney; Joseph C. Bloodgood. Replies from Washington University at St. Louis: P.A. Shaffer; George Dock; Joseph Erlanger. Replies from California: Frederick P. Gay; H.M. Evans; W.R. Bloor. Replies from Stanford: President Wilbur; A.W. Hewlett; E.G. Martin. Replies from the University of Chicago: President Judson; Frank Billings; Edwin O. Jordon; Chas. J. Herrick; H. Gideon Wells. Replies from Western Reserve (Ohio): C.F. Hoover; T. Wingate Todd; Torold Sollmann; Paul J. Hanzlik. Replies from the University of Pennsylvania: William Pepper, Dean; Edward Martin. Replies from Cornell University: Charles R. Stockard; John A. Hartwell; Howard Lilienthal. Replies from the University of Minnesota: E.P. Lyon, Dean; Jennings C. Litzenberg; H.E. Robertson. Replies from the University of Missouri: Guy L. Noyes, Dean; Mazyck P. Ravenel. Replies from the University of Nebraska: Irving S. Cutter, Dean; Harold E. Eggers. Replies from the University and Bellevue Hospital Medical College: Warren Coleman; Harlow Brooks. Replies from Yale University: Yandell Henderson; Oliver T. Osborne. Reply from Georgetown University: George T. Vaughan. Reply from Kansas: George E. Coghill. Reply from Colorado: Henry Sewall. Replies from Michigan: V.C. Vaughan; Hugh Cabot; Udo J. Wile; L.H. Newburgh; Marcus L. Ward. Replies from Iowa: President Jessup; Elbert W. Rockwood; Albert H. Byfield; Henry Albert. Replies from Wisconsin: C.R. Bardeen; P.M. Dawson. Reply from Albany: Thomas Ordway. Reply from Cincinnati: Henry Mc.E. Knower. Reply from Oregon: Richard B. Dillehunt. Reply from Texas: William C. Rose.","Produced by the University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA. Includes \"History of Medical School\" by Harvey E. Jordan, \"Address of Presentation\" by Edwin A. Alderman, \"A Statement\" by James C. Flippin, and other addresses by Ray Lyman Wilbur, William Holland Wilmer, John Shelton Horsley, David Russell Lyman, J. Bolling Jones, Hugh S. Cumming, and Chas. A. Stockard.","\nThis subseries consists of essays, articles, monographs that convey narratives about discrete aspects of the history of the School of Medicine. The subjects of these works include, but are not limited to, the history of the following: the medical curriculum, Thomas Jefferson and medical education, the anatomical theatre, medical facilities, the foundation and early history of the School of Medicine, accomplishments of the School of Medicine.\n","\nBiographies and histories of the various departments and units of the School of Medicine are not included in this subseries.\n","By Paul B. Barringer. \n\"An address delivered before the students and alumni of the Medical department of the University of Virginia, October 25th, 1887.\"\nReprint from the Virginia medical monthly, January, 1888.\n\"A History of the Medical Department of the University of Virginia: Its System of Education, and Its Results\"","Contained within The Alumni Bulletin of the University of Virginia, Vol. II, No. 4. February 1896.\n\"The three years' medical course\", uncredited, p. 141.\nTable of Contents for this issue also lists: \"John B. Minor\", \"James A. Harrison, LL.D.\", \"The work of restoration\", \"Report of the architects to the building committee\", Book review, and editorials.","Contained within the Alumni Bulletin of the University of Virginia, New Series, Vol. 3, No. 2. April 1903.\n\"How the Army Yellow Fever Board Conducted Its Experiments Upon Human Beings\" by A.N. Stark, p. 23-29.\nTable of Contents for this issue also lists: \"The proposed athletic club house\", \"The academic department\", \"The beginnings of our museum of culture history\", \"The relation of consolidation of public schools to higher institutions\", \"Bible study at the University\", \"Gymnastic tourney\", \"Fraternity houses at the University\", \"The new calculus of Professor Echols\", \"James B. Baker\", \"Invitaiton to the President\", \"University of Virginia alumni in the Medical Corps of the Army\", \"University of Virginia alumni in the Medical Corps of the Navy\", \"The Maryland assocation of the alumni of the University\", \"The Jefferson Memorial Road\", \"Act incorporating the general alumni association\", \"Constitution of the general alumni association\", \"Items of interest\".","Contained within The Alumni Bulletin of the University of Virginia, New Series, Vol. 3, No. 4. October 1903.\n\"Clinical Teaching of the University of Virginia Hospital\", W.G. (William Gray) Christian, p. 175-176.\nTable of Contents for this issue also lists: \"Requiem--Thomas Randolph Price\", \"The higher education as a factor in political life\", \"Harvard University and the University of Virginia\", \"The founder of the University\", \"The atmosphere of the University\", \"Lewis Littlepage Holladay, B.S.\", \"W.H. Faulkner, M.A., PhD.\", \"On double reversal\", \"The serum precipation test for the identification of blood stains\", \"An unappreciated source of typhoid infection\", \"Neuritis\", \"Use of pig skin graphs on extensive granulating surface in case of superficial gangrene\", \"Religious work of the session\", \"The John B. Cary bible lectureship\", \"Football\", \"The school of methods\", \"The student riot of 1836\", \"University of Virginia alumni in the U.S. Public Health and Marine Hospital Serivce\", \"University of Virginia alumni who have pursued the medical profession in civil life\", \"Thomas Randolph Pierce\", \"Vivit Post Funera Virtus\", \"Memorial of Professors J.A.G. and J.S. Davis\", \"Col. Thos. Lewis Preston\", \"Presentation of a portrait of Wm. Gordon McCabe\", \"The head master\", \"Presentation of a portrait of Matthew Fontaine Maury\", \"Items of interest.\"","By Dr. John Staige Davis. \nReprinted from the Alumni bulletin for July, 1914.\n\"History of the Medical Department of the University of Virginia, 1825-1914\"","Contained within Alumni Bulletin of the University of Virginia, Third Series, Vol. X, No. 1. January 1917.\n\"Medical education at the University\", by Theodore Hough, p. 56-59.\nTable of Contents for this issue also lists: \"The causes of the European war\", \"The school of athens\", \"The letters of George Long\", \"What students owe to the University\", \"A Virginian schoolmaster\", \"The history of the Williams Building Act\", \"Abstract of the report of the bursar\", \"Digest of academic legislation\", notes of the University and Faculty.","\"The University of Virginia in Medicine\", By John Staige Davis, MA, MD, Professor of Practice of Medicine, and Theodore Hough, BA, PhD, Dean of the Department of Medicine. \nProduced by the Executive Committee of the University of Virginia Centennial Endowment Fund, as one of five brief historical sketches on the five departments of the University.","Contained within The Alumni Bulletin of the University of Virginia, Third Series, Vol. XV, No. 3. July-August, 1922.\n\"Research at the University of Virginia\", Compiled by the Faculty Committee on Research, p. 275-320.","\"Research at the Univeristy of Virginia\" includes sections on:\nMcIntire School of Fine Arts, \nAstronomy,\nMiller School of Biology,\nSchool of Chemistry,\nSchool of Economics,\nDepartment of Education,\nSchools of English Literature and Literature,\nSchool of Forestry,\nThe Corcoran and Rogers Schools of Geology,\nSchool of Latin,\nSchool of Mathematics,\nDepartment of Medicine,\nCorcoran School of Philosophy,\nSchool of Physics,\nSchool of Romance Languages.","Table of Contents for this issue also lists: \"Address to graduating class\", \"Founder's Day address\", \"The breadth of an education\", \"Recent resolutions of the faculty\".","By. W.S. (Waller Smith) Leathers, M.D., University of Mississippi. \nReprinted from the July 1923 University of Virginia Alumni Bulletin","Bound photocopy from The University of Virginia Alumni Bulletin, Third Series, Vol. XVI, No. 3, July 1923. Section II, [Department of Medicine Bibliography], p. 276-334. A summary of faculty members of the School of Medicine between 1824 and 1921, with brief biographical statements for each individual and a list of their published works. Alumni Bulletin Editorial Committee: James Southall Wilson, Albert G.A. Balz, Herman Patrick Johnson, James Cook Bardin, John Shelton Patton.","Contained within the Alumni bulletin of the University of Virginia, Third Series, Vol. 17, No. 4, October 1924.\nBy Lawrence T. Royster. p. 471-486. Third annual address before the Alpha Omega Alpha Society of the University of Virginia, April 11, 1914.\nTable of Contents for this issue also lists: \"Liberty and slavery in universities\", \"Convocation address, 1924\", \"Culture at the cross-roads\", \"Virginia men (class poem)\", \"The task of the American scholar\", \"Commencement address, 1924\", \"Founder's day address, 1924\", \"George Long in his old age\", \"Address accepting Shrady's statue of Lee\", \"Research in the University\", \"A new history of Virginia\", \"Wayland's ethics and citizenship\", \"Bibliography\", \"Editor's Note on discontinuing the bulletin\".","\"The Foundation and Early History of the Medical School of the University of Virginia (to 1840)\". \nBy Elise Anderson Rodgers, A Thesis presented to the academic faculty of the University of Virginia in candidacy for the degree of Master of Science, 1930.\"","By Andrew DeJarnette Hart, Jr. \nReprinted from Annals of Medical History, New Series, Vol. 10, No. 1, January 1938. p. 47-60.\nOne copy is addressed to \"Doctor Nuzhet Atuk\" and signed with the author's initials: \"A.D.H.\"","By. H.E. (Harvey Ernest) Jordan. \nManuscript; Typewritten copy.","By Wilhelm Moll.\nReprinted from Virginia Medical Monthly, Vol. 95, March 1968, p. 158-161.","By Clifton Waller Barrett, Chairman of the Education Policy Committee of the Board of Visitors of the University of Virginia. \nAddress of the American Surgical Association, 18 January 1975. William H. Muller, Jr., President.\nOne copy signed by the author; also includes (brief) marginalia.","By G. Slaughter Fitz-Hugh. \nManuscript; Typewritten document.\nIncludes photographs of the Anatomical Laboratory and a student dissecting club.","By Grover C. Pitts. \nReprinted from \"The Physiologist\", Historical Section, Vol. 28, No. 5, 1985. p. 402-406.","Published by University of Virginia School of Medicine. \nPhotographs by Robert Llewellyn, Introduction by Robert M. Carey.\nSigned by Robert M. Carey.","By Charles D. Cheek and Dana B. Heck. \nPrepared for Hartman-Cox Architects and Office of the Curator and Architect for the Academical Village [University of Virginia].\nBound with Appendix II: \"Analysis of Human Remains from the Former Anatomical Theatre Charnel at the University of Virginia Campus, Charlottesville, Virginia. By Thomas A. J. Crist.\"","By Thomas A. J. Crist. 3 p.\nBound as Appendix II of \"Archeological Investigations at the Site of the Anatomical Theatre (44AB443) University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia\"","Brochure prepared by Garth Anderson, (Office of UVA Architect); photocopies by Mark Wenger, (Contractor for UVA, Report \u0026 Survey of Post T.J. Building).\nIncludes floor plans for the West Complex Second Floor variations for 1901-1936. Representations done in 1997.","This series consists of scrapbooks of historical significance that portray the School of Medicine, its students, administration, officials, or employees, and related accomplishments or events.","This series contains historically significant reports documenting the internal control or management of a specific function of the School of Medicine. These reports include, but are not limited to operating reports and financial reports.","This series consists of reports, of a historically significant nature, that do not belong to any other series of the School of Medicine records.","Reprinted in part from \"The University of Virginia in the life of the nation,\" 1905. Published by The University of Virginia, Chalottesville, VA. Contents: I. Accomplishment, II. A Statement of recent growth, [III.] Officers of Instruction and Administration.","Written by J.A. Waddell, Advisor to pre-medical students at the University of Virginia. Published by University of Virginia Press in the Alumni Bulletin of the University of Virginia, Third Series, October 1921, Vol. XIV No. 4.","Written by Theodore Hough, Dean of the Department of Medicine, University of Virginia; with a Foreword by UVA President Alderman. Published by University of Virginia Press in the Alumni Bulletin of the University of Virginia, Third Series, October 1921, Vol. XIV No. 4. Contents: I. Introductory - Historical, II. The Transition from Proprietary and Avocational to University and Vocational Control, III. Can an Adequate Teaching Clinic Be Secured at the University of Virginia, IV. The Cost of Dental Education at the University is No Greater Than in Richmond, V. The Burden of Proof: The Advantages of University Location Overwhelming in the Case of Professional Schools Giving Instruction on a University Basis.","Authored by Fiske Kimball; published in the Alumni Bulletin of the University of Virginia. Includes four black and white drawings of buildings.","Report authored by the Committee of Medical Alumni, Beverly C. Smith (School of Medicine Class of 1915), Chairman.","Authored by Kenneth R. Crispell and Thomas H. Hunter.","The report is primarily concerned with the growth of student enrollment and the development of University facilities to meet student population needs. The report includes recommendations of the committee, historical background, rationale for the recommendations, and appendicies with supporting data and related reports. It is a University-wide report (not limited to the School of Medicine). Membership of the Committee on the Future of the University: David A. Shannon (Chairman), Ralph Eisenberg, Jay L. Chronister, David B. Harned, Eugene C. Paige Jr., Robert M. Berne, Theodore Caplow, Edwin M. Crawford, Brian H. Siegel, Neil H. Borden Jr., Earl M. Gerguson, Norman A. Graebner, Kenneth C. Jacobs, James J. Kauzlarich, Phil Kimball, Larry J. Sabato, Joseph R. Washington, James L. Camp, Irby B. Cauthen Jr., Robert V. Coleman, Robert J. Harris, Thomas H. Hunter, Josephine Ludewig, Jacquelin I. Mason, Frederick D. Nichols, Ken E. Ross, Donald E. Wilson.","\"Selected activities 1974-1975, The University of Virginia School of Medicine,\" by University of Virginia, School of Medicine. \nContents: Pt. I: Administration and finances School of Medicine University of Virginia -- Pt. II: Health care programs in Virginia School of Medicine University of Virginia -- Pt. III: Admissions data: 1959-1974 School of Medicine University of Virginia.","\"Alumni of the University of Virginia School of Medicine: what are they doing where, and with whom,\" by Jules I. Levine and David W. Sheatsley. Published by Division of Health Services Research, University of Virginia. An analysis of 2,802 \"active alumni\" during a study undertaken to determine the status of graduates of the School of Medicine with respect to current location of practice, type of practice, type of employment, and specialty area.","\"Staffing plan 1975 to 1980. Department of Medicine, University of Virginia, School of Medicine. Edward W. Hook, MD, Chairman.\"\nContents: Staffing plan of divisions (Allergy and Respiratory Diseases, Ambulatory Medicine, Biometrics, Cardiology, Clinical Pharmacology, Endocrinology and Metabolism, Epidemiology and Virology, Gastroenterology, Hematology, Infectious Diseases, Oncology, Renal Diseases, Rheumatology) -- Sources of funds supporting present faculty -- New programs needed by 1980 -- Summary of personnel and space needs to 1980.","The previous report was prepared by Jules I. Levine, the director of the division of Health Services Research at the Medical Center. It proposed that a portion of the Pratt funds be used to improve capabilities in the fields of biostatistics and epidemiology.","Produced by the UVA Department of Internal Medicine. Contents include: Self-study [statistics and faculty listing]; Scholarly accomplishments of the faculty of the Department of Medicine, 1975-1980; Publications of the Department of Medicine, 1 September 1979 to 31 August 1980; Publications of the Department of Medicine, 1 September 1976 to 31 August 1977; Publications of the Department of Medicine, 1 September 1977 to 31 August 1978; Publications of the Department of Medicine, 1 September 1978 to 31 August 1979; List of sections of the department; Self-study report part II : evaluation of resources and programs of the Department of Internal Medicine.","The Residency Review Committee for Family Practice approved the program with John H. Danby serving as the Program Director with Virginia Baptist Hospital being the parent hospital. The program had an affiliation agreement wiht the University of Virginia School of Medicine.","The documents mainly focus on increasing the number of minorities in medical school. One of the reports is university wide in its coverage. This file of reports was originally processed as part of the School of Medicine Reports collection, MS-66.","The Final Report was prepared by Wei Li Fang and Maurice Apprey. The course is a six-week program designed to provide minority students with the opportunity to experience the content, volume, and pace of the medical school curriculum.","The Final Report was prepared by Wei Li Fang. The course is a program designed to provide minority and disadvantaged students with the opportunity to experience the content, volume, and pace of the medical school curriculum.","Maurey Apprey from the School of Medicine served on the task force which considered black students, faculty and staff at the University. A letter dated September 28, 1987, from President Robert M. O'Neil is included.","Program Director: Moses K. Woode, Program Evaluator: Kathleen B. Lynch, Assistant Dean of Student Affairs: Maurice Apprey.","Assistant Dean for Student Academic Support and Program Director: Moses K. Woode, Program Evaluator: Kathleen B. Lynch, Assistant Dean of Student Affairs: Maurice Apprey.","Strategies for Increasing Minority Representation in Medicine by Moses K. Woode and Kathleen Bodisch Lynch, Assisting Students Achieve Medical Degrees (ASAMD) Project. \nThis paper was presented at the 16th Annual Meeting of the Sixteen Institutions Health Sciences Consortium in Norfolk, Virginia, February 25-27, 1988.","University of Virginia School of Medicine Assisting Minorities Pursue Medical Education (AMPMED) Program, Supplemental Information for Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Site Visit","Prepared by David S. Fedson, M.D., Associate Professor in the UVA Department of Medicine. Submitted to the Health Resources and Services Administration, Department of Health and Human Services. The proposal is for a new Primary Care Internal Medicine Training program to supplement the existing UVA Internal Medicine Residency Training Program, raising the number of primary care residents at UVA by 33%. Supplemental materials include biographical sketches of faculty members, Internal Medicine Residencey Training brochure, University Medical Associates 1982-1983 Housestaff Manual, and a list of basic readings in the primary care training program curriculum.","Compiled by Edward W. Hook and Richard W. Lindsay. Contributions by the Jefferson Area Board for Aging and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. Table of Contents: Annual meeting 1985; Key project personnel; Housing; Subcontracts; Client consent form; Progress report; University of Virginina Center for the Health of the Elderly (UVACHE) committee.","Created by the University of Virginia Task Force on the Status of Women, a cross-university effort chaired by Prudence M. Thorner, Director of UVA Hospital Supply. The report offers a set of recommendations related to representation, compensation, benefits, professional development, support programs for women, and sexism, sexual harassment, and sexual assault. Tables, surveys, anecdotal evidence, and supporting documentation are included in several appendices.","A report from the UVA School of Medicine Council on Medical Education. Contains sub-committee reports on: the student perspective, internal medicine, neurology, obstetrics and gynecology, pediatrics, psychiatry and behavioral medicine, and surgey. Includes tabulated results of a survey of medical students and residents. Executive Committee members consist of: Robert S. Gibson (Task Force Chairman), Dearing Johns, Charles G. Durbin, Jerry G. Short, Donald L. Kaiser, John H. Armstrong, and John Martin.","Report by the School of Medicine Committee on Women, prepared for Robert M. Carey, Dean of the School of Medicine. The report is the result of the Committee's first year of activities. Contents provide recommendations from the Committee on: Representation; Professional Development; Sexism, Sexual Harassment and Safety; Salary Equity; Support; and Culture. Appendices offer survey and questionnaire results, including data gathered from peer institutions. Committee on Women membership: Sharon L. Hostler (Chair), Carolyn M. Brunner, Randolph J. Canterbury, Claudette E. Dalton, Sharon Davie, Wei Li Fang, Howard Kutchai, Carol Lake, Sally A. Moody, Barbara Oettgen, and Christina L. Wells.","The letter from Dr. Robert Carey to Dr. Sharon Hostler acknowledges receipt of First report by the UVA School of Medicine Committee on Women and provides Carey's preliminary responses to the report's recommendations.","George T. Gillies, Associate professor of engineering physics and biomedical engineering at the University of Virginia co-authored and donated this report. Additional co-authors include Elizabeth Gwinn Quate. Variant title: Torsion Spring Counterbalance for Suspending Large Goniometer-mounted Superconducting Coils. The report covers: Video Tumor Fighter Project; Induced Hyperthermia (instrumentation); Brain Neoplasms (therapy); Stereotaxic Techniques.","A second report from the UVA School of Medicine Committee on Women which summarizes the progress in the implementation of the 37 recommendations initially set forth in the First Report on the Status of Women (November 1990). The updated report includes bibliographical references and some supporting documentation. School of Medicine Committee on Women was chaired by Sharon L. Hostler.","Reports authored by the Research \u0026 Evaluation Division of the Institute for Substance Abuse Studies","Prepared by Linda Watson on behalf of the Information Sciences Council. The Health Informatice Enhancement Program/Project (HIEP) was initiated by the Information Sciences Council in 1992 to encourage innovative informatics projects and provide grants to faculty seeking to learn and apply new technology skills to benefit their work. An appendix includes a list of projects that received HIEP Awards between 1992 and 1996.","Document includes humanities in medicine program purposes, history and highlights, program elements (such as School of Medicine electives, presence in the curriculum, special projects, lectures, awards, and other programs), future directions, challenges, and an attached chart of activities and affiliations.","Mulholland Society Clinical Clerkship Report for June 2002-June 2003. Compiled and edited by the School of Medicine, Class of 2004; Sarah Bass, Editor-in-chief. \"This curriculum review is intended to represent student evaluations of all third year clerkship curriculum.\"","Mulholland Society Clinical Clerkship Report for June 2003-June 2004. Compiled and edited by the School of Medicine, Class of 2005; Joshua Hilton, Editor-in-chief. \"The Clinical Clerkship Report is a written review of the third year medical school curriculum at the University of Virginia.\"","Report by Melanie A. McCollum and A. Bobby Chhabra. Contents: Conceptual model of medical education -- Introduction -- Charge and deliberations of the Education Task Force -- New learning spaces \u0026 opportunities -- Goal statement -- Notes and references -- Executive summary of recommendations. Appendices: ETF subcommittee membership \u0026 timeline of ETF activities -- Innovative uses of the new learning spaces -- SOM organizational charts -- Detailed reccomendations and timeline for implementation -- Report of the medical anatomy curriculum work group -- Key resources. Supporting materials: Curriculum 2020 Project plan -- ETF subcommittee reports -- Simulation center business plan -- Report of the Ad Hoc Committee on Resident/Faculty teaching space for \"skill station\" education of operative skills -- ETF site visit reports (John Hopkins University, UNC, Duke, WakeMed, and Stanford University) -- ETF \u0026 special session minutes.","This series consists of the student records for the School of Medicine. This series may include, but is not limited to: applications, photographs, transcripts, and reviews of clinical performance.","1 certificate for Robert K. Carter, dated 29 June 1859 and signed by J.D. Davis, M.D.","1 certificate, mounted on cardstock, for John W. Field; dated 29 June 1859 and signed by J.S. Davis, M.D.","1 certificate, mounted on cardstock, for B.R. Kennon; dated 29 June 1892 and signed by A.H. Tuttle (Professor of Biology).","1 report of Mr. Beverly R. Kennon for the session of 1891-1892, dated 1 July 1892. Includes list of schools (subjects) with associated professors and provides \"results of examination\" for Kennon's medical coursework.","This series is comprised of directories that contain lists of the School of Medicine's faculty, staff, and students. The directories were created for public use and often include the following information: names, telephone numbers, and job titles.","\"University of Virginia Hospitals, Charlottesville, Virginia 22908. July 1, 1993 - June 30, 1994. Housestaff List.\"\nListing of interns and residents.","\"University of Virginia Hospitals, Charlottesville, Virginia 22908. July 1, 1994 - June 30, 1995. Housestaff List.\"\nListing of interns and residents.","\"University of Virginia Hospitals, Charlottesville, Virginia 22908. July 1, 1997 - June 30, 1998. Housestaff List.\"\nListing of interns and residents.","\nListings of faculty and resident physicians, organized by department.\n","\nOriginal Scope and Contents Note: \"This [file] is composed of lists of physicians who have been appointed by the University of Virginia Hospital from 1951 to 1990. The list of 1953 is not extant. The [file] contains 39 files in two boxes. [Folders] are arranged by chronological order and names of the physicians are listed by department. Some years have more than one version of the list with handwritten corrections and adding explanation on the materials.\"\n","\nThese materials were originally processed as a separate collection known as MS-25, UVA Hospital Professional Staff Files, 1951-1990\"\n","Collection of medical student names with short biographies of each student. No student contact information included.","This series contains correspondence, subject files, online resources, and meeting minutes of committees working within the School of Medicine.","Meeting minutes and reports from the UVA School of Medicine General Faculty meetings.","This series consists of records that document awards, honors, and commemorations presented by the School of Medicine. These records may include, but are not limited to, event programs, lists of recipients, and recipient biographies.","This series consists of records that document lectures and presentations sponsored by the School of Medicine. These records include, but are not limited to, audiovisual recordings, transcripts, announcements, handouts, and correspondence between presenters and event organizers.","The Medical Center Hour is a public forum on medical and society at the UVA School of Medicine. The lecture series is run by the Center for Health Humanities and Ethics at the UVA School of Medicine, previously known as the Center for Biomedical Ethics and Humanities, and originally founded as the Program of Humanities in Medicine by Dr. Edward W. Hook, former Professor and Chair of the UVA Department of Medicine. Materials in this sub-series include lecture recordings, handouts, transcripts, program schedules, and posters. Available materials vary by year and lecture. Many of the Medical Center Hour programs were recorded and are available for viewing. Presently the best way to search Medical Center Hour recordings is through Virgo, the UVA Library Catalog:   search.lib.virginia.edu","\nThis file consists of recordings of Medical Center Hour lectures during the 1970s. The following is a list of the titles, speakers, dates, and call numbers for each recording:\n","Rape: what should we do about it? Miriam Birdwhistell, Ida Hiller, P. Browning Hoffman, and Thomas H. Hunter. 9/10/73. HV 6561 R35 1973 Cosmetic surgery: is it ethical? Milton T. Edgerton, Joseph Fletcher, and Norman J. Knorr. 11/5/73. WO 600 C695 1973 What rights do patients have? Joseph Fletcher, Samuel E. Miller, David D. Stone, and Jane B. Zambuto.12/3/73. W 62 W55 1973 The health of public figures: what should be disclosed? James F. Childress, Richard S. Crampton, Thomas H. Hunter, and Henry J. Abraham.. 1/7/74. W 700 H45 1974 Cruel and usual punishment: solitary confinement. Robert Showalter, Wilfred Abse, Richard J. Bonnie and Browning Hoffman. 3/4/74. HV 8728 C75 1974 Research using live human fetuses: when is it justifiable? Robert M. Blizzard, Joseph Fletcher, Andre E. Hellegers, and Thomas H. Hunter. 4/1/74. W 20.5 R45 1974 Man without kidneys: past, present, and future. Leslie E. Rudolf, W. Kline Bolton, Peter Lobo, and Fred Westervelt. 1/21/76. WJ 368 M35 1976 Medical therapeutics: drug developments. Charles E. Hamner, William Darro, William M. O'Brien and John A. Owen, Jr. 1/28/76. QV 771 M45 1976 Fetal research. Thomas H. Hunter, Douglas Clarke, Joseph Fletcher, and Davis W. Louisell. 2/4/76. W 20.5 F44 1976 Progress and trends in craniofacial surgery. Milton Edgerton and John Jane. 2/18/76. WE 705 P75 1976 Indications for antibiotic prophylaxis. Merle Sande, J. Owen Hendley, Robert Thompson, and William R. Sandusky. 2/25/76. WB 330 I56 1976 Problems of black students in medicine. Thomas H. Hunter, Eric Baugh, William R. Drucker, Eugene Foster, and Vivian Pinn. 3/3/76. W 18 P73 1976 The Cancer cell membrane. Thomas E. Thompson, Robert G. Langdon, Jay C. Brown, and J.T. Parsons. 3/24/76. QH 601 C215 1976 Comprehensive epilepsy program. Fritz E. Dreifuss, Richard H. Gibbs, Linda Harris, and James E. Redenbaugh. 3/31/76. WL 385 C66 1976 Marital breakdown in the medical center. Eric Baugh, Juanita Baugh, Barney Hecker, and Walter Wadlington. 4/7/76. HQ 814 M35 1976 Disciplinary procedures in the medical profession: can we police ourselves? P. Browning Hoffman, Richard J. Bonnie, Kenneth Redden, and Robert C. Green. 4/14/76. W 44 D55 1976 New radiologic approaches to the diagnosis and treatment for old diseases. Theodore E. Keats, William C. Constable, Richard A. Flom, Charles D. Teates and Charles J. Tegtmeyer. 4/21/76. WN 200 R455 1976 Clinical use of prostaglandins. Randall T. Curnow, Robert M. Carey, and Peter Ramwell. 4/28/76. QU 90 C65 1976 Between doctor and patient: \"how informed must consent be?\" P. Browning Hoffman, Richard J. Bonnie, Walter Wadlington. 5/5/76. W 62 B46 1976 Generic prescribing: why, when, and how. John A. Owen, Diane L. Ansley, Sam Crickenberger, and Jackie Young. 5/12/76. QV 748 G45 1976 The challenge to widen the therapeutic index of hazardous drugs: the precise quantitative therapeutic decision. Kenneth L. Melmon. 5/19/76. QV 771 C56 1976 Oral contraceptives. Ferid Murad, Thomas Bithell, Robert C. Haynes, and Siva Thiagarajah. 9/22/76. QV 177 O75 1976 Residencies and manpower needs. Daniel Mohler and William Drucker. 9/26/76. W 20 R45 1976 Drug use during pregnancy. John Owen, Guy M. Harbert, and Thaddeus E. Kelly. 10/6/76. WQ 240 D78 1976 Is behavioral genetics taboo?: the neolysenkoism. Bernard Davis and Joseph Fletcher. 10/13/76. QH 457 I85 1976 Computers in health care: success and failure. Ernst Attinger, Barbara Howard, and William O'Brien. 10/20/76. W 26.5 C65 1976 Why do more newborn infants die in Virginia than in 41 other states? John Kattwinkel, Lynn J. Cook, C. Arnold Renschler, and Robert F. Scorgie. 10/27/76. HB 1323.I4 W55 1976 Ethics of physician advertising. Joseph Fletcher and John C. Jeffries. 11/3/76. W 58 E85 1976 From students to physicians: a sociological study of medical education at the University of Virginia. Jeffrey Hadden, Theodore Long, Tod Hansen, and Marshall Shumsky. 11/10/76. W 18 F77 1976 Kepone: what are the lessons? Robert Jackson, Phillip Allen, Joseph Fletcher, and Gerald Baliles. 11/17/76. WA 240 K45 1976 Swine influenza. P. Browning Hoffman and Jack M. Gwaltney, Jr. 11/24/76. WC 515 S95 1976 How does one determine acceptable risks? Richard Wenzel and Joseph Fletcher. 12/1/76. WB 141 H65 1976 Is there a crisis in medical education?: facts and myths. Kenneth Crispell, Cheves Smythe, Oscar Thorup, and Christian Cimmino. 12/8/76. W 18 I85 1976 The physician as double agent. Thomas Hunter, Richard Bonnie, P. Browning Hoffman and David Little. 1/5/77. W 62 P58 1977 Emergency medicine: T. J. planning district. Richard Crampton, Richard Edlich, Robert Jaskiewicz, and Leslie Rudolf. 1/26/77. WX 215 E45 1977 Health and the developing world. Richard Guerrant, Kenneth Warren, and Thomas Hunter. 2/2/77. WA 395 H45 1977 The Cost of medical education: who should pay? Thomas Hunter, Henry Abraham, John A.D. Cooper. 2/9/77. W 18 C63 1977 Over the counter drugs. Ferid Murad, John A. Owen, Jr., Melvin Parker, and Daniel Spyker 2/16/77. QV 772 O95 1977 Violence on television: a health problem? John deK. Bowen, Ake E. Mattsson, John Mesinger, Thomas Hunter. 2/23/77. WS 105.5.E9 V55 1977 Human needs of the disabled: vocational, social, and sexual. James Q. Miller, Thomas Hunter, Marguerite David. 3/2/77. HV 1553 H84 1977 Stresses in the Medical Center and who helps us cope. Helen Ripple, Norman Knorr, Judy Wilcox and Lee Crigler. 3/9/77. WM 172 S75 1977 Malnutrition in the hospital patient. Munsey S. Wheby, Charles E. Butterworth, and Thomas H. Hunter. 3/23/77. WD 100 M35 1977 Science, pseudoscience, and art in the practice of medicine. Eugene Snead. 3/30/77. WB 100 S35 1977 Women in medicine. Elsa Paulsen, Judith Braslow, Charles Hess, and Robert Van de Castle. 4/6/77. W 21 W65 1977 Unnecessary surgery. Leslie E. Rudolf. 4/13/77. WO 34 U55 1977 Doctors as patients. Richard Keeling, John Zirkle and James Thomson. 4/20/77. W 62 D65 1977 Drug abuse. Randall T. Curnow, George Bright, John Buckman, and Joseph Fletcher. 4/27/77. WM 270 D72 1977 Transsexualism: an insight into the power of psychologic gender. Oscar Thorup, Milton Edgerton, William M. Sheppe, Jr., and U. G. Turner. 9/7/77. WM 610 T75 1977 Genetically transmitted disease. Oscar A. Thorup, Thomas H. Hunter, Joseph Fletcher, and Thaddeus Kelly. 9/21/77. QZ 50 G47 1977 Laetrile: the right to choose. Oscar Thorup, Gerald Goldstein, John Owen, and Charles H. Whitebread. 9/28/77. QV 269 L35 1977 Expanded roles in nursing. Barbara Brodie. 10/5/77. WY 16 E95 1977 Explosive change in the medical center: impact. Edward Hook, Helen Ripple, Darracott Vaughan, and Oscar Thorup. 10/19/77. WX 28 AV8 E95 1977 New drug development: an overdose of FDA. Oscar Thorup, Charles Hamner, Richard Merrill, and Ferid Murad. 10/26/77. WA 697 N45 1977 The family: dynamic dimension in medicine. Oscar A. Thorup, B. Lewis Barnett, David B. Waters, and Henry Willner. 11/2/77. WS 105.5.F2 F37 1977 Family stress and collapse. Oscar A. Thorup, Donna Cowan, Joseph Fletcher, and Ruth B. Weeks.. 11/16/77. WS 105.5.F2 F39 1977 The diabetes center: an exercise in democracy. Oscar A. Thorup, George T. Brooks, Leatrice Ducat, and Joseph Larner. 12/7/77. WK 810 D54 1977 Integration of the medical center with the university: more or less?. Kenneth Crispell, Carleton B. Chapman, Edgar F. Shannon, and Walter J. Wadlington. 1/18/78. W 18 I53 1978 Psychological aspects of persons with difficulties in sexual identity. Oscar A. Thorup, Stanley Berent, James A. Thomson, and Vamik D. Volkan. 1/25/78. WJ 712 P75 1978 A mother's response to her wanted child: lifestyles and home delivery. Guy M. Harbert, Walter J. Wadlington, Marion McCartney, and Anthony Shaw. 2/1/78. WS 105.5.F2 M67 1978 Privacy and the computer: everything you know about yourself, but hoped they'd never find out. Oscar A. Thorup, Brant R. Allen, Richard J. Bonnie, and Browning Hoffman. 2/15/78. W 700 P75 1978 Violence in the family: protecting the abused spouse. Walter J. Wadlington, David Fudella, Elizabeth S. Scott, and Andrew Wright. 2/22/78. BF 575.A3 V55 1978 PSRO: quality of practice - federal responsibility or officious meddling? Oscar A. Thorup, Wyndham B. Blanton, Brian J. Donato, and James C. Respess. 3/15/78. W 84.1 P73 1978 Federal trade commission: nonmedical accreditation of medical training. Oscar A. Thorup, Howard A. Brody, Jonathan Gaines, and Warren H. Pearse. 3/22/78. W 40.1 F45 1978 H.S.A., federal \"guidelines\" for local health planning: cutting costs (?) at whose expense? Oscar A. Thorup. 3/29/78. WA 546.1 H75 1978 To catch a kidney: the who, the how, the hassle. Frederic B. Westervelt, George G. Grattan, John A. Jane, and Leslie E. Rudolf. 4/19/78. WJ 368 T63 1978 Male chauvinism and contraception. Thomas H. Hunter, Donna S. Cowan, Joseph Fletcher, and Stuart S. Howards. 9/20/78. WP 630 M35 1978 Ageism. Thomas H. Hunter, Richard Lindsey, David C. Wilson, and William Poe. 9/27/78. WT 120 A34 1978 The hospice movement. Carlton Sweetser, Oscar Thorup, and Cicely Saunders. 10/4/78. WX 28.61 H655 1978 The Care and management of the sick and incompetent physician. Thomas H. Hunter, W. Dimmock Buxton, Robert C. Green, and George J. Carroll. 10/18/78. W 62 C35 1978 Ethical problems in neonatal intensive care. Howard Brody, Hallam Ivey, Haavi Morreim, and Christopher Slobogin. 10/25/78. WS 420 E85 1978 The medical devices explosion: who protects the victim?. Anthony Shaw, Howard Brody, John Kattwinkel, and Richard Merrill. 11/1/78. W 26 M45 1978 Terrorism. Conrad Hassle, Browning Hoffman, and John H. Moore. 11/15/78. HV 6431 T45 1978 Why are your hospital costs so high? Oscar Thorup, John Forrest, Robert M. Heisel, and John Harlan. 11/29/78. W 74 W55 1978 Should we allow judges to make medical decisions? Dick Howard, Joseph Fletcher, and Roger Dworkie. 12/6/78. W 700 S55 1978 In vitro fertilization. Oscar Thorup, Joseph Schulman, Roger Dworkin, and Joseph Fletcher. 1/17/79. WQ 205 I55 1979 Teenage drug, alcohol and cigarette use: some disturbing trends. Oscar A. Thorup. 1/24/79. WS 460 T45 1979 How far should we go?: ethical decisions on the medical wards. James F. Childress. 1/31/79. W 50 .H65 1979 The American diet: best in the world or major cause of disease? Munsey Wheby, John Owen, Judy Thwing, and Martin Albert. 2/7/79. QT 235 A45 1979 Nurses and doctors: conflict or cooperation? Barbara Brodie, Annette Schwackhawmer, and Carolyn Brunner. 2/21/79. WY 87 N85 1979 National health insurance. William Glazier, Tom Nesbit, John Holloman and Oscar A. Thorup. 2/28/79. WA 540 AA1 N35 1979 Home health services: a less expensive alternative to institutional care? Oscar Thorup, Richard Prindle, Linda Pohland, and Steven Rhoads. 3/7/79. WY 115 H65 1979 Environmental influences on cancer. James C. Dunstan, Oscar Thorup, Richard A. Merill and Joseph K. Wagner. 3/21/79. QZ 202 E55 1979 Your medical record just how confidential is it? Lillian BeVier, Oscar A. Thorup, Joseph Fletcher and Jane Rodgers. 3/29/79. W 700 Y65 1979 Health maintenance organizations: do they work? Oscar A. Thorup, Samuel Goldfine, Gary Jessman, and James B. Murray. 4/4/79. W 125 H45 1979 Health manpower. Robert Graham, Allen Tarloff, Clark Havighurst, and Oscar Thorup. 4/18/79. W 76 H43 1979 Children's rights and parental authority. Raymond Duff, T. H. Hunter, Roger Dworkin, and Joseph Fletcher. 4/25/79. WS 105.5.F2 C55 1979 Hospice in the general hospital. Richard W. Lindsay, M. Caroline Martin, and Cicely Saunders. 9/19/79. WX 28.61 H65 1979 Parents and children: rights in conflict? Donna L. Cowan, Joseph Fletcher, Walter J. Wadlington and Oscar A. Thorup. 10/3/79. WS 105.5.F2 P35 1979 Hazards of nuclear power. Roger A. Rydin, Arthur R. Tamplin, Paul T. Raford, and Thomas H. Hunter. 10/17/79. WA 470 H35 1979 The beta adrenergic blocking agents and their clinical uses. Alan S. Nies. 10/24/79. QV 132 B45 1979 Involuntary sterilization. Joseph Fletcher, Thaddeus E. Kelly, U. G. Turner, and Thomas E. Hunter. 10/31/79. HV 4989 I57 1979 Prevention of disease: is life-style change the answer? Samuel E. Miller, Richard J. Bonnie, Lawrence W. Green, and Thomas H. Hunter. 11/28/79. WA 108 P73 1979 The Impact of institutional review boards on research. Richard A. Merrill, Ferid Murad, John A. Owen, and Thomas H. Hunter. 12/5/79. WB 21 I43 1979","\nThis file consists of recordings of Medical Center Hour lectures during the 1980s. The following is a list of the titles, speakers, dates, and call numbers for each recording:\n"," A pious fraud: ethical issues in the use of placebos. Howard Brody, Joseph Fletcher, Wilford W. Spradlin, Oscar A. Thorup. 1/16/80 WB 330 P57 1980   The Nestle boycott: what are the social responsibilities of corporations?. Judith Gussler, Thomas H. Hunter, Louis T. Rader, Artemis Simopoulous. 1/23/80 HD 60 N46 1980   Team health care: its promises and problems (the Diabetes unit at Blue Ridge Hospital). Susan McLeod, Thomas H. Hunter, Stephen L. Pohl, Joan L. Weinbaum. 2/6/80 W 84.8 T44 1980   The Relationship between medicine and the press. Daniel S. Greenberg, Arnold S. Relman, Lewis Wolfson, Oscar A. Thorup. 2/27/80 HM 263 R44 1980   Medical school admissions: can overzealous protection of the applicant harm the public?. Robert L. Beran, Mark N. Ozer, Edwin W. Pullen, Oscar A. Thorup. 3/5/80 W 18 M43 1980   The Pursuit of justice: is the adversary system destroying us?. James F. Childress, John C. McCoid, E. Gerald Tremblay, Oscar A. Thorup. 3/19/80 BJ 1533.J9 P83 1980   Who runs the health center: the government or the university?. Kenneth R. Crispell, Robert Heyssel, John Hogness, Thomas H. Hunter. 4/2/80 W 19 W58 1980   Rights, benefits and the cost of medical care. Peter Alterman, Harvey V. Fineberg, Joseph Fletcher, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr. 4/16/80 W 74 R54 1980   Occupational illness: investigations, compensation and controversy. Lucian W. Heiner, Robert B. Stroube, Paul M. Suratt, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr. 4/23/80 WA 400 O24 1980   Research on heretical subjects. Richard A. Bonnie, Thomas H. Hunter, Ian P. Stevenson, Peter A. Sturrock. 4/30/80 Q 180.A1 R45 1980   Should you choose your baby's sex?: Amniocentesis for sex selection. Haavi Morreim, Thomas H. Hunter, Anthony Shaw, U.G. Turner. 9/10/80 WQ 209 S56 1980   Authority and obedience: the eternal dilemma. James F. Childress, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr., Stephen Worchel. 9/17/80 BJ 1459 A95 1980   Recombinant DNA and the world of business. Martha D. Ballenger, Thomas H. Hunter, Hugh O. McDevitt, Louis T. Rader. 10/8/80 QH 438.7 R46 1980   Where is nursing going? Does anyone know?. Rose M. Chioni, Norman J. Knorr, Sara J. Mapstone, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr. 10/15/80 WY 9 W58 1980   Hospital cost containment: update on a continuing problem. Ronald Bargatze, John F. Harlan, Jr., Oscar A. Thorup, Jr., Andrew Weinberg. 10/22/80 WX 157 H66 1980   Human sperm banks. Joseph Fletcher, Thomas H. Hunter, James D. Kitchin III, Walter J. Wadlington. 10/29/80 HQ 751 H86 1980   OSHA, benzene and the Supreme Court. Richard A. Merrill, Allen Feldman, A.E. Dick Howard, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr. 11/12/80 WA 465 O84 1980   The new anti-vivisectionism: implications of the \"animal rights\" movement. Thomas Beauchamp, Andrew N. Rowan, Nicholas J. Sojka, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr. 11/19/80 HV 4915 N45 1980   Barriers to the handicapped: how many can and should we remove?. Michael J. Bednar, Richard J. Bonnie, Brian R. Hunt, Thomas H. Hunter. 12/10/80 WA 799 B36 1980   H.M.O. in the academic medical center: asset or liability?. Ronald P. Kaufman, Carl J. Schram, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr., Peyton E. Weary. 1/14/81. W 125 H65 1981   Ethical problems in clinical training: who looks after the patient?. James F. Childress, Henry Aranow, Thomas H. Hunter, W. Dean Warren. 1/21/81. W 84.8 E87 1981   Dual career marriages: so you think you want to marry another professional?. James C. Ballenger, Carol G. Johnson Johns, Ann R. Shamaskin, Barbara Strudler Wallston, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr. 1/28/81. HQ 728 D83 1981   Health in the third world: the role of health in foreign policy. Norman J. Knorr, Thomas H. Hunter, Richard D. Pearson, John Ravenhill. 2/11/81. WA 395 H455 1981   Problems of surrogate parenting. James F. Childress, Donna L. Cowan, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr., Walter J. Wadlington. 2/18/81. WS 105.5.F2 P73 1981   Changing sexual mores: new problems in venereal disease. Howard Bahr, Joseph Fletcher, Thomas H. Hunter, Michael F. Rein, Brigham Young. 2/25/81. WC 140 C54 1981   The impact of the coming physician surplus. Daniel S. Greenberg, August G. Swanson, Alvin R. Tarlov, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr. 3/11/81. W 76 I43 1981   Communication between doctors and patients: why don't we do more listening?. Edward W. Hook, Thomas H. Hunter, Haavi Morreim, Wilford W. Spradlin. 3/25/81. W 62 C64 1981   Off-site teaching: an essential ingredient in clinical education. Robert E. Berry, Leighton E. Cluff, Thomas H. Hunter, Robert Wood Johnson, Latham B. Murray. 4/8/81. W 18 O34 1981   The pleasures and hazards of retirement. Richard W. Lindsay, Jean Bigger, Arthur Hess, Walter J. Hurd. 4/15/81. HQ 1062 P65 1981   Competing in the eighties: academic health center under stress. Truman Esmond, Jeff Goldsmith, Robert Heyssel, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr. 4/22/81. W 19 C65 1981   Is access to health care the answer?: The British experience. James F. Childress, John Glasson, John Lister, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr. 4/29/81. WA 540 FA1 I82 1981   Folk medicine: lessons and insights from Brazil, implications and applications in the U.S. Marilyn Nations-Shields, Thomas H. Hunter, David S. Shields, Loudell F. Snow. 9/16/81. WB 50 DB8 F64 1981   Defective newborns: What can be done? What should be done? Who should decide?. Bradley Rogers, James F. Childress, Cora Diamond, Walter J. Wadlington. 9/23/81. QS 675 D44 1981   Psychiatry and the law: the impasse and beyond?. Joseph Fletcher, James C. Ballenger, Richard J. Bonnie, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr. 9/30/81. WM 33.1 P75 1981   Abortion update: controversy continues. Martha D. Ballenger, Willard D. Cates, James F. Childress, David Little. 10/14/81. WQ 440 A26 1981   Nuclear war: can it be stopped?. Joseph Fletcher, Lt. Col. David R. Carlsen, Howard Hiatt, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr. 10/21/81. UF 767 N85 1981   Elements of malpractice: experts on a collision course. David C. Landin, Richard Gladding, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr., E. Gerald Tremblay. 10/28/81. W 44 E45 1981   Principles and problems of clinical drug trials. Frederick A. Clark, James F. Childress, Lawrence Friedman, John A. Owen, Jr. 11/11/81. QV 771 P75 1981   Victims of violence: should they be compensated? If so, how and by whom?. John Buckman, F. Guthrie Gordon, III, John T. Monahan, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr. 11/18/81. W 910 V55 1981   Medicine: high risk profession. Thomas L. Gorsuch, Kenneth R. Crispell, Betty Mawardi, Raymond Pruitt. 12/9/81. W 21 M45 1981   D.E.S. daughters: infertility, neoplasia and compensation?. Saul X. Levmore, Wallace C. Nunley, Peyton T. Taylor, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr. 1/13/82. WP 522 D45 1982   Control of pain: abstract concepts and reality. Albert B. Butler, James F. Childress, Joseph Fletcher, John C. Rowlingson. 1/20/82. WL 704 C65 1982   Problems with the gift of life? Obtaining organs for transplantation. James F. Childress, George R. Hanna, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr., Frederic B. Westervelt. 1/27/82. WO 690 P75 1982   Triage: who will get the last bed in the ICU?. John W. Hoyt, Carl D. Malchoff, Sara J. Mapstone, James F. Childress. 2/10/82. WX 218 T75 1982   Diagnostic computers: will they replace us? Randolph Miller, Jack D. Myers, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr. 2/17/82. WB 141 D55 1982   The training of residents: relations with each other, staff, attendings and patients. Charles L. Bosk, R. Scott Jones, Mark Siegler, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr. 2/24/82. W 20 T75 1982   Informed consent: is it desirable? Is it possible?. James F. Childress, John A. Owen, Leslie E. Rudolf, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr. 3/10/82. W 62 I555 1982   The physician-patient relationship: how has it changed?. B. Lewis Barnett, Jr., Mark Siegler, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr. 3/17/82. W 62 P585 1982   Fetal surgery: medical, ethical and social implications. Haavi Morreim, James F. Childress, Bradley M. Rogers, James B. Sidbury. 3/24/82. WO 925 F45 1982   Orders not to resuscitate. Joanne Lynn, David D. Stone, Walter J. Wadlington, James F. Childress. 4/14/82. W 50 O75 1982   Traditional endocrinology: due for a shakeup?. Richard M. Bergland, Derek LeRoith, Alan D. Rogol, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr. 4/21/82. WK 21 T75 1982   The herpes syndrome: by-product of the sexual revolution. Jack M. Gwaltney, Richard P. Keeling, Cherie L. Kitchell, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr. 4/28/82. WC 140 H44 1982   The Hinckley decision: demands for legal reform. Richard J. Bonnie, Oscar A. Thorup, John Monahan, Park E. Dietz. 9/8/82. W 740 H5 1982   Medical school and beyond: the Black experience. Lester W. Brown, Vivian W. Pinn, Calvin H. Thigpen, William M. Womack, Dudley F. Rochester. 9/15/82. W 18 M45 1982   Prenatal child abuse: behavior restrictions on expectant mothers. F. John Bourgeois, Karen J. Jacobs, Elizabeth G. Taylor, Oscar A. Thorup. 9/29/82. WQ 175 P7 1982   De-institutionalization of the mentally ill: economics or therapeutic?. Robert Lassiter, William Burns, Wilfred Spradlin, Joseph Fletcher, Oscar A. Thorup. 10/13/82. W 84.7 D4 1982   Near-death experiences: what do they hear?. Raymond A. Moody, William Evans, James F. Childress, Oscar A. Thorup. 10/20/82. BF 1040 N4 1982   Hospital medicine: are medical technology and \"caring\" incompatible?. Kenneth R. Crispell, Thomas A. Massaro, Ingelborg G. Mauksch, James F. Childress. 10/27/82. W 85 H6 1982   Promotion of pharmaceutical products: pro-competition or contra-competition?. John A. Owen, B. Blair Garnett, Locke Boyer, James Childress. 12/8/82. WB 330 P7 1982   Aging, role reversal: when your parents become your children. Oscar A. Thorup. 12/15/82. WT 30 A38 1982   Foreign medical school graduates: the status today. Samuel P. Asper, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr., August G. Swanson, Kenneth Crispell. 1/13/83. W 21 F6 1983   The Role of religion in medical care. Julian N. Hartt, James F. Childress; Robert W. Cantrell; Clyde M. Watson, Jr. 1/19/83. WM 61 R6 1983   Nursing homes: past, present and future. Rosemary Hayes. 1/26/83. WT 27 N8 1983   Psychoanalysis: is it really an impossible profession?. James A. Bakhtiar, C. Knight Aldrich, Seymour Rabinowitz, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr. 2/9/83. WM 460 P8 1983   Medicaid: its successes, its failures, its prospects. James Childress, Oscar Thorup, John T. Ashley, Thomas Moloney. 2/16/83. W 275 AA1 M43 1983   Reverse discrimination or affirmative action: Bakke and beyond. A.E. Dick Howard, Arlene P. Nichols, Kelly M. Darden, Jr., Oscar A. Thorup, Jr. 2/23/83. BF 575.P9 R45 1983   Pregnant children: the increasing problem of teen pregnancy. Paula J. Hillard, Catherine Bodkin, Susan McLeod, James F. Childress. 3/9/83. WS 462 P73 1983   Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome: current status and concerns. Oscar A. Thorup, Dick P. Wenzel, Michael F. Rein, Eliot R. Pearl. 3/16/83. WD 308 A25 1983   Abortion: do men have rights?. Martha D. Ballenger, et al. 3/23/83. HQ 767 A154 1983   The Cocaine epidemic: fallacies and facts. Robert L. Dupont, et al. 3/30/83. WM 280 C659 1983   Hospital ownership: does it make any difference?. William B. Deal, et al. 4/13/83. WX 100 H828 1983   Should physicians and hospitals prepare for war?. Podge M. Reed, et al. 4/27/83. WX 185 S559 1983   Update on AIDS: social and clinical significance. Oscar A. Thorup, Michael F. Rein, Richard P. Wenzel, James F. Childress. 9/14/83. WD 308 U66 1983   Fraud in science. Bernard B. Davis, John A. Owen, Jr., Thomas H. Hunter. 9/21/83. Q 172.5.F7 F845 1983   The Baby Doe rule: necessity or intrusion?. John Kattwinkel, Paul Marschand, Haavi Morreim, James F. Childress. 9/28/83. W 50 B115 1983   Medical school admissions: how do we select the best?. Edwin W. Pullen, Robert L. Kellogg, Thomas L. Pearce, Oscar A. Thorup. 10/12/83. W 19 M489 1983   Feeding: is it morally required for everyone?. David D. Stone, Joanne Lynn, Priscilla K. Ludy, James F. Childress. 10/26/83. W 50 F295 1983   Impaired physicians: what are we doing for them?. William J. Farley, William Barney, Lisabeth Kopp, John A. Owen. 11/16/83. W 21 I34 1983   Medical confidentiality: is it possible in the modern hospital?. Mark Siegler, Sara T. Fry, Kenneth Abraham, James F. Childress. 11/30/83. W 700 M489 1983   Diagnosis related groups (DRGs) and discharge planning. Miriam Birdwhistell, James Bentley, Haavi Morreim, Oscar A. Thorup. 12/14/83. WX 157 D536 1983   The Day after: another look at its implications. Thomas Doran, Matthew Lambert, Cal Thomas, James F. Childress. 1/18/84. UF 767 D273 1984   Athletes and androgens: what's wrong with steroids. Alan D. Rogol, Ernst H. Soudek, James Reardon, Oscar A. Thorup. 1/25/84. WK 150 A871 1984   Hospital ethics committees: what is their role?. Robert M. Veatch, Irving L. Kron, Robert A. Darnall, Jr., James F. Childress. 2/8/84. W 50 H644 1984   PPOs, HMOs, and IPAs: new and developing access and cost programs in medicine. James Gore, Robert Williams, Hilton Almond, Oscar A. Thorup. 2/15/84. W 74 P894 1984   Thin bones. osteoporosis, calcium and estrogen: is there an answer?. Paul B. Underwood, Michael R. Wills, John A. Owen, Kenneth R. Crispell. 2/22/84. WB 250 T443 1984   Head injury care: immediate and long term. Rebecca W. Rimel, Thomas R. Johns, John A. Jane, Oscar A. Thorup. 2/29/84. WE 706 H433 1984   Coronary artery bypass surgery: is it needed?. Eugene Passamani, Ivan K. Crosby, George B. Craddock, Jr., Oscar A. Thorup. 3/14/84. WG 169 C8225 1984   Ethics questions on professional examinations: is it possible to test ethical judgments and virtues on board and bar examinations?. Edward W. Hook, Julia E. Connelly, Kent Sinclair, James F. Childress. 3/21/84. W 50 E84 1984   The Sick citadel: tensions and conflicts within and without. James D. Bentley, Cecil G. Sheps, Kenneth R. Crispell, 0scar A. Thorup. 4/11/84. WX 27 AA1 S566 1984   Childhood and adult immunization: priorities in public policy and their implementation in clinical practice. Gregory F. Hayden, Richard A. Prindle, Jack M. Gwaltney, David S. Fedson. 4/25/84. QW 806 C536 1984   Debris of divorce: the effect on children. Andre P. Derdeyn, Robert E. Emery, Jr., Elizabeth S. Scott, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr. 9/19/84. WS 105.5.A8 D288 1984   What's to become of hospice?. Rev. Dinah L. Ansley, David M. Synder, Christopher P. Zazakos, Jr., Oscar A. Thorup. 9/26/84. WX 28.6 AA1 W555 1984   Mercy and compassion: are we insensitive to the needs of patients?. John T. Ashley, Sara J. Mapstone, Ian P. Stevenson, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr. 10/10/84. WX 162 M557 1984   Medical education: do we need a new Flexner Report?. Robert L. Kellogg, William D. Mattern, Benjamin Sturgill, Oscar A. Thorup. 10/17/84. W 18 M42 1984   Childhood depression: infancy and beyond. Andre P. Derdeyn, James Duffee, Charles H. Gleason, Oscar A. Thorup. 10/24/84. WM 171 C536 1984   Women in medicine: what progress are we making?. Ruth B. Weeks, Marguerite C. Lippert, Elizabeth S. Higgs, John A. Owen, Jr. 10/31/84. W 21 W872 1984   \"Birthing in America\": options and problems. Paula Hilard, Hallum Hurt, Paul B. Underwood. 11/28/84. WQ 415 B621 1984   Child abuse: sexual abuse of children. Park E. Dietz, Kenneth Lanning, Frank T. Saulsbury, Oscar Thorup Jr., moderator. 12/12/84. WA 320 C536 1984   The Crisis at Tampa General: the issues of hospital survival. James Bentley, Phil Birnbaum, Julian Rice, Oscar A. Thorup. 3/20/85. WX 157 C932 1985   DRGs: are they working?. Peter Munger, Robert A. Reid, Tim Keating, Oscar A. Thorup. 3/27/85. WX 157 D778 1985   Nuclear arms: whose responsibility?. Sidney Alexander, Joseph Fletcher, John Rhinelander, Oscar A. Thorup, moderator. 4/10/85. JX 1974 N8 1985   Informed consent: is it really possible?. Jay Katz, Leslie Rudolf, Walter J. Wadlington, Oscar A. Thorup, moderator. 4/24/85. W 33 I43 1985   Alzheimer's disease: public perception and medical facts. H. Robert Brashear, Eric W. Lothman, James Q. Miller, Oscar A. Thorup. 10/9/85. WM 220 A47815 1985   AIDS: public health and private rights. Michael Rein, Jeffrey O'Connell, James F. Childress, Richard Keeling, moderator. 10/23/85. WD 308 A28813 1985   When does child abuse start?: Fetal alcohol syndrome. W. Allen Hogge, Thomas J. Czelusta, James F. Childress, Leslie Rudolf, moderator. 10/30/85. WQ 211 W567 1985   Uncompensated care: which patients and what can be done?. Robert Tell, Carter Melton, Louis Rossiter, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr., moderator. 11/20/85. WX 157 U54 1985   Cocaine, illicit drugs and public policy. Robert DuPont; Richard Bonnie; Joseph Fletcher; Oscar Thorup, Jr., moderator. 12/11/85. WM 280 C6595 1985   The death penalty: dilemmas for physicians and society. Park Dietz, Paul Applebaum, Richard Bonnie, Oscar J. Thorup, moderator. 2/19/86. HV 8699.U5 D2855 1986   Surrogate parenting: should the contract be enforced?. Angela Holder, Walter J. Wadlington, JoAnn Pinkerton, James F. Childress. 4/15/87. HQ 759.5 S962 1987   Should foreign nationals have access to U.S. cadaver organs for transplantation?. Frederic B. Westervelt, Gene Pierce, James F. Childress, Oscar A. Thorup Jr., moderator. 4/29/87. WO 660 S559 1987   Screening for AIDS: what should we do?. James F. Childress, Jack M. Gwaltney, Richard P. Keeling, Oscar A. Thorup. 9/9/87. WD 308 S433 1987   Court-ordered obstetrical interventions: fetal and maternal rights. Medical Television Services, University of Virginia Medical Center. 9/16/87. R11.M4 9/16/87.   Report of University of Virginia's Drug task force: what now?. Randolph J. Canterbury, John A. Owen, Jr., Sybil Todd, Oscar A. Thorup. 9/23/87. HV 4999.4.C48 R425 1987   Future of nursing: what must be done?. Rose M. Chioni, Ann Minnick, Jean Sorrells-Jones, John F. Harlan. 9/30/87. WY 16 F996 1987   Alzheimer's disease in a family member: frustrations and coping strategies. Ann Brushwood, Richard W. Lindsay, Sue Winslow, Oscar A. Thorup. 10/14/87. WM 220 A4783 1987   Mapping and sequencing the human genome: scientific, social, and ethical issues. Robert Cook-Deegan, John C. Fletcher, Thaddeus E. Kelly, James F. Childress. 10/21/87. QH 447 M297 1987   Lying and its detection: recent empirical and ethical studies. Bella M. DePaulo, James F. Childress, Kenneth Crispell. 10/28/87. BJ 1421 L985 1987   Use of fetal tissues in transplantation: promising therapy and/or dangerous practice. Lynn A. Baker, James P. Bennett, James F. Childress, John A. Owen. 11/11/87. WO 690 U84 1987   Crisis at Tampa General Hospital revisited: resolution?. Newell France, James Bentley, Philip Birnbaum, Oscar A. Thorup. 12/9/87. WX 157 C9323 1987   Impaired providers: prevention, identification and sanctions. Gerald J. Bechamps, Jacob A. Lohr, John A. Owen, Jr., Oscar A. Thorup, Jr., moderator. 1/13/88. HV 5825 I34 1988   When the menses cease: the latest on menopause. Paul B. Underwood, Jr., JoAnn V. Pinkerton, Diane Snustad, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr., moderator. 1/20/88. WP 580 W567 1988   How do we learn?: why do we forget?. James E. Deese, H. Robert Brashear, Paul E. Gold, Oscar A. Thorup. 1/27/88. BF 378.F7 H847 1988   Should the parents be allowed to donate the organs of anencephalic new borns?. John C. Fletcher, Bradley M. Rodgers, Nicholas J. Lenn, James F. Childress. 2/24/88. WO 690 S559 1988   Legal problems in emergency rooms, other than malpractice. Rebecca W. West, Joseph F. Chance, Robert D. Powers, Oscar A. Thorup. 3/9/88. WX 215 L496 1988   The Case of a court-ordered cesarean section for a terminally ill woman: What are the facts? What should have been done?. Barbara Mishkin, JoAnn V. Pinkerton, John C. Fletcher, James F. Childress. 3/23/88. WQ 33.1 C337 1988   Management of chronic pain: Can we do better?. Phoebe M. Orebaugh, Gerald Goldstein, John C. Rowlingson, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr., moderator. 4/13/88. WL 704 M2665 1988   AIDS, children and hemophiliacs. Louis M. Aledort, Jack M. Gwaltney, Karen A. Bringelsen, Oscar A. Thorup. 4/20/88. WD 308 A28818 1988   Sick building syndrome: an expensive headache. Thomas A. Platts-Mills, Allen H. Neims, David N. Easton, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr., moderator. 4/27/88. QT 230 S566 1988   AIDS in 1988: medical, legal and ethical developments. Michael F. Rein, Richard J. Bonnie, John C. Fletcher, Richard P. Keeling. 9/14/88. WD 308 A28822 1988   Fraud and misrepresentation in science: what can be done?. Franklyn N. Arnhoff, Dennis Barnes, Paul R. Gross, James F. Childress, moderator. 9/21/88. Q 180 U5 F845 1988   Residency training: Problems and possible reforms. Amy Tucker, Brent Williams, Patricia Porterfield, Munsey Wheby. 10/26/88. W 20 R433 1988   The resource-based relative value scale for physician reimbursement: What are its implications. James Nuckols, Robert Epstein, Brian Conway, Edward Hook. 11/9/88. W 275 AA1 R434 1988   Should tissues from aborted fetuses be used in transplantation?. John C. Fletcher, James F. Childress, Rebecca W. West, John A. Owen, Jr. 11/16/88. WO 690 S5592 1988   Setting limits: should age be used as a criterion in the allocation of health care?. Daniel Callahan, Joseph Fletcher, Richard Lindsay, James Childress. 11/30/88. WT 30 S495 1988   Medical liability reform: the range of considerations. Kenneth S. Abraham, Robert E. Reynolds, James F. Childress, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr., moderator. 1/18/89. W 44 M4885 1989   Illicit drugs: reducing the demand. Robert DuPont, Randolph Canterbury, Richard Bonnie, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr., moderator. 2/8/89. WM 270 I29 1989   The New hospital: how it got here and what it means. John T. Ashley, Don E. Detmer, Peter L Munger, William H. Muller, Jr. 2/15/89. WX 28 AV8 N532 1989   Medical informatics: strategic weapon for health care, education and research. Robert Beck, Don Kaiser, Robert Darnall, Jr. Judy Ozbolt, Robert Reynolds. 2/22/89. Z 699.5.M39 M489 1989   Medical school: stresses and successes. Randy Comerford, Janet Jeffries, Steve McNamara, John Martin. 3/8/89. W 18 M489 1989   Increasing incidence of sexually transmitted diseases: risk taking and sexual behavior. Michael Rein, William Gardner, Christine Peterson; moderator, Oscar Thorup, Jr. 3/15/89. WC 140 I37 1989   Cholesterol screening and education: from research to community action. Charles Olech, Robert Douglas Abbott, Rebecca Reeve; moderator, Richard Prindle. 4/19/89. WB 425 C547 1989   Graduate medical education: financing and structure. Ruth Hanft, Cecil Samuelson, Peter Munger, Oscar A. Thorup. 9/20/89. W 20 G733 1989   Substance abuse in pregnancy: examining the options. JoAnn Pinkerton, Sidney Callahan, Willis Spaulding. 9/27/89. WM 280 S941 1989   Who are the homeless: where did they come from? What can be done if they refuse help?. David Hilfiker, Carl Yank, James F. Childress. 11/8/89. HV 4505 W628 1989   Update on AIDS: testing and treatment. Willard Cates, Brian Wispelwey, James F. Childress, Oscar A. Thorup. 11/15/89. WD 308 U662 1989 ","Event poster advertising a visiting exhibit at the Claude Moore Health Sciences Library, held in conjunction with a Medical Center Hour lecture featuring Michael Sappol.","Event poster advertising two events at UVA related to Theater of War, held in conjunction with a Medical Center Hour lecture.","This accession consists of a digital file of the Vivian Pinn portrait created by Jonathan Linton that currently hangs in Pinn Hall of the UVA School of Medicine (as of 4/2/2025), as well as a description card with an image of the photograph on one side and an image of artist Jonathan Linton painting the image on the other."],"userestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eUnless otherwise noted, the University of Virginia owns the copyright to the materials in this collection that have not yet entered the public domain. You are free to use collection materials in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use. For other uses you need to obtain permission from the rights-holder(s).\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCopyright restrictions may apply.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe University of Virginia owns the copyrights to the annual and biennial reports.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCopyright restrictions may apply.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCopyright restrictions may apply.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCopyright restrcitions may apply.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCopyright restrictions may apply.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCopyright restrictions may apply.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eHistorical Collections and Services must restrict reproduction and redistribution of these materials according to copyright law because the creator of the film is unknown.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCopyright restrictions may apply.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe University of Virginia owns the copyrights to the publications of the School of Medicine.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe University of Virginia owns the copyrights to the journals and magazines in this subseries.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe University of Virginia owns the copyrights to the newsletter in this subseries.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCopyright restrictions may apply.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCopyright restrictions may apply.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCopyright restrictions may apply.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCopyright restrictions may apply.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCopyright restrictions may apply.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eUse restrictions may apply.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eUse restrictions may apply.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe University of Virginia owns the copyrights to the course schedules and catalogs.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eUse restrictions may apply.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe University of Virginia owns the copyrights to the admissions publications.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCopyright restrictions may apply.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCopyright restrictions may apply.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe content collected in this series may be subject to copyright restrictions. The copyright of some content may be owned by the University of Virginia. The rights to non-UVA publications are likely held by other entities.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCopyright restrictions may apply.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCopyright restrictions may apply.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCopyright restrictions may apply.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCopyright restrictions may apply.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCopyright restrictions may apply.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCopyright restrictions may apply.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCopyright restrictions may apply.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSome materials may be subject to copyright restrictions.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCopyright restrictions may apply.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCopyright restrictions may apply.\u003c/p\u003e"],"userestrict_heading_ssm":["Conditions Governing Use","Conditions Governing Use","Conditions Governing Use","Conditions Governing Use","Conditions Governing Use","Conditions Governing Use","Conditions Governing Use","Conditions Governing Use","Conditions Governing Use","Conditions Governing Use","Conditions Governing Use","Conditions Governing Use","Conditions Governing Use","Conditions Governing Use","Conditions Governing Use","Conditions Governing Use","Conditions Governing Use","Conditions Governing Use","Conditions Governing Use","Conditions Governing Use","Conditions Governing Use","Conditions Governing Use","Conditions Governing Use","Conditions Governing Use","Conditions Governing Use","Conditions Governing Use","Conditions Governing Use","Conditions Governing Use","Conditions Governing Use","Conditions Governing Use","Conditions Governing Use","Conditions Governing Use","Conditions Governing Use","Conditions Governing Use","Conditions Governing Use","Conditions Governing Use"],"userestrict_tesim":["Unless otherwise noted, the University of Virginia owns the copyright to the materials in this collection that have not yet entered the public domain. You are free to use collection materials in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use. For other uses you need to obtain permission from the rights-holder(s).","Copyright restrictions may apply.","The University of Virginia owns the copyrights to the annual and biennial reports.","Copyright restrictions may apply.","Copyright restrictions may apply.","Copyright restrcitions may apply.","Copyright restrictions may apply.","Copyright restrictions may apply.","Historical Collections and Services must restrict reproduction and redistribution of these materials according to copyright law because the creator of the film is unknown.","Copyright restrictions may apply.","The University of Virginia owns the copyrights to the publications of the School of Medicine.","The University of Virginia owns the copyrights to the journals and magazines in this subseries.","The University of Virginia owns the copyrights to the newsletter in this subseries.","Copyright restrictions may apply.","Copyright restrictions may apply.","Copyright restrictions may apply.","Copyright restrictions may apply.","Copyright restrictions may apply.","Use restrictions may apply.","Use restrictions may apply.","The University of Virginia owns the copyrights to the course schedules and catalogs.","Use restrictions may apply.","The University of Virginia owns the copyrights to the admissions publications.","Copyright restrictions may apply.","Copyright restrictions may apply.","The content collected in this series may be subject to copyright restrictions. The copyright of some content may be owned by the University of Virginia. The rights to non-UVA publications are likely held by other entities.","Copyright restrictions may apply.","Copyright restrictions may apply.","Copyright restrictions may apply.","Copyright restrictions may apply.","Copyright restrictions may apply.","Copyright restrictions may apply.","Copyright restrictions may apply.","Some materials may be subject to copyright restrictions.","Copyright restrictions may apply.","Copyright restrictions may apply."],"physloc_html_tesm":["\u003cphysloc id=\"aspace_b76629f2a96d875f29b35869f044ff5b\"\u003eNote: Oversize materials are located on Row 19, located behind Row 1.\u003c/physloc\u003e"],"physloc_tesim":["Note: Oversize materials are located on Row 19, located behind Row 1."],"names_ssim":["Claude Moore Health Sciences Library"],"corpname_ssim":["Claude Moore Health Sciences Library"],"language_ssim":["English"],"descrules_ssm":["Describing Archives: A Content Standard"],"total_component_count_is":3419,"online_item_count_is":3,"component_level_isim":[0],"sort_isi":0,"timestamp":"2026-05-30T07:04:56.149Z","scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe UVA School of Medicine records primarily document the history of the School at all levels of the organization during the 20th and 21st centuries.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAdministrative records, including annual reports, meeting minutes, planning documents policies, and other materials, document operations, strategic initiatives, and decision making.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCommunications records, including newsletters, blogs, websites, pamphlets, publications, and recordings, document events and public relations work.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMedical education and research records, including accreditation files, student records, syllabi, course catalogs, student organization records, commencement records, lectures, and conference reports, document the School's primary missions.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\nThe collection includes a number of records previously described elsewhere (e.g. as part of a former archival collection or as an indiviudal item described in the Library catalog). Among these are a large group of bound items. \n\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\nThe UVA School of Medicine continues to transfer analog and digital records to the Claude Moore Health Sciences Library for inclusion in this collection.\n\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePrior to the establishment of the records classification scheme outlined in this document, institutional archives were often organized by their office of creation. Rather than dividing these legacy collections, they are being kept intact and filed under this series.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThis small legacy collection contains information related to awards given to faculty and students of the School of Medicine. Materials include descriptions of awards and the names of award recipients. The first folder, containing award information by year, concerns current and discontinued awards. Information on current awards given by the School of Medicine can be accessed at https://med.virginia.edu/student-affairs/student-resources/awards-and-honors/\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\nThis series consists of annual and biennial reports produced by the School of Medicine and its constituent departments and units. This does not include individual faculty annual reports used for evaluation or review.\n\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\nIn addition to annual reports produced by the School of Medicine, this series also contains several annual reports produced by the University of Virginia's Office of the President.\n\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eDepartment of Pediatrics Biennial Evaluation for 1984-1986 and Planning Report for 1988-1998\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe annual report contains reports from individual departments or divisions: Anatomy, Anesthesiology, Biochemistry, Biomedical Engineering, Clinical Pathology, Dermatology, Internal Medicine, Microbiology, Neurological Surgery, Neurology, Obstetrics and Gynecology, Orthopedics, Otolaryngology, Pathology, Pediatrics, Pharmacology, Physiology, Psychiatry, Radiology, Surgery, and Urology. Internal Medicine was formally organized during the course of the year with the establishment of 12 divisions: Biometrics, Cardiology, Clinical Pharmacology, Endocrinology and Metabolism, Epidemiology and Virology, Gastroenterology, Hematology, Infectious Diseases, Nephrology, Oncology, Pulmonary-Allergy, and Rheumatology. Ten medical students were dropped for academic deficiencies during 1969-1970.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe annual report contains reports from individual departments or divisions: Anatomy, Anesthesiology, Biochemistry, Biomedical Engineering, Dermatology, Internal Medicine, Medical Library, Microbiology, Neurology, Neurological Surgery, Obstetrics and Gynecology, Ophthalmology, Orthopedics, Otolaryngology, Pathology, Pediatrics, Pharmacology, Physiology, Plastic Surgery, Psychiatry, Radiology, Surgery, Urology, and Vivarium. No students were dropped for academic deficiencies. Special recruitment was done by the Admissions Committee and faculty who visited 13 colleges with predominantly black enrollment.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe annual report contains reports from individual departments or divisions: Anatomy, Anesthesiology, Biochemistry, Biomedical Engineering, Dermatology, Internal Medicine, Medical Library, Microbiology, Neurosurgery, Neurology, Obstetrics and Gynecology, Ophthalmology, Orthopedics, Otolaryngology, Pathology, Pediatrics, Pharmacology, Physiology, Plastic Surgery, Psychiatry, Radiology, Student Health, Surgery, Urology, Vivarium, and Equal Opportunity Program. The report from the Equal Opportunity Program includes selection of new faculty and non-academic personnel of those underrepresented in the school. Specifically mentioned are women, black, Chicanos, Orientals, and Chinese.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePart I: The annual report contains reports from individual departments or divisions: Anatomy, Anesthesiology, Biochemistry, Biomedical Engineering, Dentistry, Dermatology, Family Medicine, Internal Medicine, Health Sciences Library, and Microbiology. At the front of the report is the School of Medicine Annual Report, 1973-74 and 1974-75, Part II Academic Affairs , Section III Dean's Summary and Recommendations. It states that due to new pressures and the need for better organization in the School of Medicine, and in response to University–wide programs, several tasks were completed by faculty. Some of these are included in the report including the identification and adoption of institutional goals, a report on plans and projections, a financial report to the President, and a preliminary policy report on promotions and tenure. The dean's summary gives information on a variety of topics, but of note is the formation of the Department of Family Practice on July 1, 1975 and a Division of Dentistry in 1974, the completion of the new Health Sciences Library, an award toward the construction of a Primary Care Building, and an experimental or alternative curriculum for the School of Medicine.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003ePart II: The annual report continues the reports from individual departments or divisions: Neurosurgery, Neurology, Obstetrics and Gynecology, Ophthalmology, Orthopedics, Otolaryngology, Pathology, Pediatrics, Pharmacology, Physiology, Plastic Surgery, Psychiatry, Radiology, Student Health, Surgery, and Urology.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe departments filled out reports addressing the selection of new faculty, the selection and promotion of non-academic personnel, and special efforts.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSection A, Part I: The annual report contains reports from individual departments or divisions: Anatomy, Anesthesiology, Biochemistry, Biomedical Engineering, Dentistry, Dermatology, Family Practice, Internal Medicine, Health Sciences Library, and Microbiology.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eSection A, Part II: The annual report continues the reports from individual departments or divisions: Neurosurgery, Neurology, Obstetrics and Gynecology, Ophthalmology, Orthopedics, Otolaryngology, Pathology, Pediatrics, Pharmacology, Physiology, Plastic Surgery, Psychiatry, Radiology, Student Health, Surgery, and Urology.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003ePart C: Academic Planning, 1975 September 1 - 1976 September 1\nThe annual report includes a letter of request, summary of requests for faculty and space, and a one year extension of academic plan for the Departments of: Anatomy, Anesthesiology, Biochemistry, Biomedical Engineering, Dentistry, Dermatology, Family Practice, Internal Medicine, Microbiology, Neurology, Neurosurgery, Obstetrics and Gynecology, Ophthalmology, Orthopedics, Otolaryngology, Pathology, Pediatrics, Pharmacology, Physiology, Plastic Surgery, Psychiatry, Radiology, Surgery, Urology, and Western State Hospital.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe Dean's Summary includes Medical School Administration; Improving the Academic Environment for Students; Summary of Major Accomplishments in Instruction, Research, and Public Service; Summary of Major Modifications in Academic Programs, 1978-79; Major space considerations, 1978-79; Memorandum to Departments regarding Annual Report. Norman J. Knorr is the School of Medicine Dean. \u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003ePart III, Book 1:The annual report contains reports from individual departments or divisions: Anatomy, Anesthesiology, Biochemistry, Biomedical Engineering, Dermatology, Dentistry, Family Practice, Internal Medicine, Microbiology, Neurology, and Neurosurgery.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003ePart III, Book 2: The annual report continues the reports from individual departments or divisions: Obstetrics and Gynecology, Orthopedics, Otolaryngology, Pathology, Pediatrics, Pharmacology, Physiology, Plastic Surgery, Psychiatry, Radiology, Surgery, Urology, and Roanoke.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe annual report includes a \"Summary of Major Accomplishments in Instruction, Research, and Public Service\" which highlights a few of the major accomplishments of the individual departments. Dean Norman Knorr mentions a major revision of the preclinical curriculum by the council on Medical Education and a new Division of Geriatrics under the leadership of Richard Lindsay with the anticipation of a special geriatric unit to be established at the Blue Ridge Sanatorium in the future. Currently there are established programs in epilepsy and outpatient Psychiatry at Blue Ridge. Another new Division is Geographic Medicine under the direction of Richard Guerrant. There is a report from the Office of Student Affairs and a break-down of SOM admissions.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eThe annual report contains the reports from individual departments or divisions: Anatomy, Anesthesiology, Biochemistry, Biomedical Engineering, Dentistry, Dermatology, Family Practice, Internal Medicine, Microbiology, Neurology, Neurosurgery, Obstetrics and Gynecology, Ophthalmology, Orthopedics, Otolaryngology, Pathology, Pediatrics, Pharmacology, Physiology, Plastic Surgery, Psychiatry, Radiology, Surgery, Urology, Roanoke Program.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eA memo inserted in front of the 1978-1979 Annual Report from Dean Norman Knorr, dated September 14, 1981, indicates that the School of Medicine Biennial Report (formerly Annual Report) is waived this year as the plan is to submit the Self-Study Report in its place. The 1978-1979 annual report includes a \"Summary of Major Accomplishments in Teaching Programs, Research Programs, and Public Service Activities\" and a report from the Office of Student Affairs.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eThe annual report contains the reports from individual departments or divisions: Anatomy, Anesthesiology, Behavioral Medicine and Psychiatry, Biochemistry,  Biomedical Engineering, Dermatology, Dentistry, Family Practice, Internal Medicine, Microbiology, Neurology, Neurosurgery, Obstetrics and Gynecology, Ophthalmology, Orthopedics, Otolaryngology, Pathology, Pharmacology, Physiology, Plastic Surgery, Radiology, Surgery, Urology, Roanoke Program, Pediatrics.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThis summary of the biennial report highlights a few of the accomplishments in teaching programs, training programs, clinical service programs, research programs, and public service activities. The School of Medicine did a self-study in preparation for the LCME accreditation site visit held in February 1982. The LCME conferred full accreditation of the program for 10 years. A new graduate program in Cell and Molecular Biology was established in 1982 and a number of new divisions were formed. New units opened at Blue Ridge Hospital and a Travelers Clinic and the Blue Ridge Poison Control Center were established at the University Hospital. UVa Medcial Center was designated a Level I Trauma Center in 1982. James W. Craig submitted a report from the Office of Student Affairs.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eThe annual report contains the reports from individual departments or divisions: Anatomy, Anesthesiology, Biochemistry,  Biomedical Engineering, Comparative Medicine, Dermatology, Family Medicine, Internal Medicine, Microbiology, Neurology, Neurosurgery, Obstetrics and Gynecology, Ophthalmology, Orthopedics, Otolaryngology, Pathology, Pediatrics, Pharmacology, Physiology, Plastic Surgery, Behavior Medicine and Psychiatry, Radiology, Surgery, Urology.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe annual report contains the reports from individual departments or divisions: Anatomy, Anesthesiology, Behavior Medicine and Psychiatry, Biochemistry,  Biomedical Engineering, Comparative Medicine, Dentistry, Family Medicine, Internal Medicine, Microbiology, Neurology, Neurosurgery, Obstetrics and Gynecology, Ophthalmology, Orthopedics, Otolaryngology, Pathology, Pediatrics, Pharmacology, Physiology, Plastic Surgery, Radiology, Surgery, Urology.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eReports from: Robert M. Epstein, Chair of the Department of Anesthesiology; W.W. Spradlin, Chair of the Department of Behavioral Medicine and Psychiatry; Charles J. Flickinger, Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology; Department of Biochemistry; Department of Biomedical Engineering; Department of Comparative Medicine; Byard S. Deputy, Chair of the Department of Dentistry; Department of Dermatology; John C. Herr, Lymphocyte Culture Center; Edward W. Hook, Chair of the Department of Medicine; Department of Microbiology; John A. Jane, the Department of Neurosurgery; T. J. Johns, Chair of the Department of Neurology; Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology; Brian P. Conway, Chair of the Department of Ophthalmology; Department of Otolaryngology; Thomas W. Tillack, Chair of the Department of Pathology; Robert M. Blizzard, Chair of the Department of Pediatrics; Department of Pharmacology; Department of Physiology; Gaylord S. Williams, the Department of Plastic and Maxillofacial Surgery; T. E. Keats, Chair of the Department of Radiology; Department of Surgery; Department of Urology.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eTitled \"The University Report\"; likely a precursor to the University of Virginia President's Report publications.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCorrespondence and subject files of selected deans and department heads and other significant leaders in the School of Medicine.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\nContent in this subseries documents the history of the University of Virginia Medical Center from 1972 to 1977. In this period, the University Medical Center was taking steps toward not only the enlargement of its resources - facilities, personnel, and finance - but also its major programs - education, research, and patient care. The beginning of the Family Practice Primary Care Curriculum in 1975 and the projects for the expansion of existing hospital buildings and purchase of the Towers Hospital were remarkable developments in this period. All these projects were planned based on the UVA Medical Center's wide-ranging self-surveys and implemented under the guidance of William R. Drucker, Dean of the School of Medicine and James W. Craig, Associate Dean of the School of Medicine.\n\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\nIncluded are reports on the University of Virginia Medical Center from 1972 to 1977 which detail extensive information on the Medical Center in this period, its organization, administration, educational programs, faculty, student, library system, finances, medical center facilities, major activities, graduate program, clinical activities, admission data, etc. Of Particular interest are documents on the Family Practice Primary Care Curriculum that was planned and organized by James W. Craig in 1975. Also present are materials on the Medical Center's expansion project including the purchase of the Towers Hospital.\n\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e[Final] Report of the President's ad hoc Committee on Faculty Staffing Policy of the University of Virginia, submitted to University President Edgar F. Shannon Jr.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe records in this series document commencement and graduation events for the School of Medicine. They include, but are not limited to programs and schedules of events.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe records in this series document the planning of historically significant administrative changes or projects, major purchases, and significant events which are historically significant at the School of Medicine.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThis series documents the formal accreditation of the School of Medicine by educational accreditation organizations. Materials in this series may include, but is not limited to: self study reports, final reports, and questions and responses.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\"University of Virginia School of Medicine Summary of the Findings and Recommendations of the Institutional Self-Study Task Force.\" The Chair of the Steering Committee was Fritz E. Dreifuss. Also included is a Synopsis of Student Opinion.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003e\"Report of the Survey of the University of Virginia School of Medicine By the Liaison Committee on Medical Education Representing the American Medical Association and the Association of American Medical Colleges.\" The Ad Hoc Survey Team recommended that the School of Medicine continue in full accreditation for a period of ten years and that a report be submitted to the Liaison committee on Medical Education (LCME) in five years to address issues of concern noted in the summary of this report.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\"University of Virginia School of Medicine, Summary of the Findings and Recommendations of the Institutional Self-Study Task Force\"\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eReport of the University of Virginia School of Medicine, Charlottesville, Virginia, Prepared by an Ad Hoc Survey Team for the Liaison Committee on Medical Education (LCME) representing the Association of American Medical Colleges and the American Medical Association.\nThe report is the final report for 1998, and includes a prior accreditation survey and progress reports.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eUniversity of Virginia School of Medicine LCME Institutional Self Study Summary Report\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMedical Education Database Sections I-V, and Appendix of Supporting Documents. The sections are: I. Institutional Setting, II. Educational Program for the M.D. Degree, III. Medical Students, IV. Faculty, V. Educational Resources\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eRequired Course and Clerkship Forms (Years One through Four), University of Virginia School of Medicine\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMedical Student Analysis and Graduation Questionnaire Results University of Virginia School of Medicine for the Liaison Committee on Medical Education\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eUniversity of Virginia School of Medicine LCME Self-Study Summary Report\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eRequired Course and Clerkship forms (Years One through Four) University of Virginia School of Medicine\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMedical Student Analysis and Graduation Questionnaire Results for the Liaison Committee on Medical Education\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMedical Education Database Sections I-V University of Virginia School of Medicine. LCME Data Collection Instrument for Full Accreditation Academic Year 2014-2015; Section I. Institutional Setting, II. Educational Program for the M.D. Degree, III. Medical Students, IV. Faculty, V. Educational Resources.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eUniversity of Virginia Self-Study Summary Report, Edited by Elaine M. Hadden, 1974 August 21\nThe report is part of the reaccreditation process that is required every ten years by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools. This report covers the entire university with only a part devoted to the School of Medicine.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eUniversity of Virginia Self-Study Report, 1984-1986, the executive summary of Continuing Education, Institutes, and other outreach activities. A letter from Oscar A. Thorup to William H. Muller discusses the summary that is included.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eNorman J. Knorr from the School of Medicine is sent the report and asked to review the Draft. This report states that UVa as a \"predominately white, southern institution has been trying for several years to achieve genuine heterogeneity by encouraging the admission of minority students, and particularly black students to every school of the University. Partly under the pressure of a 1978 court order, substantial steps have been taken towards meeting this goal and it is the purpose of this section of our report to evaluate our achievements to date.\" There are two copies of the draft, one with changes written in.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eArticle titled \"Self-study moves to review phase\"\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThis series consists of digital and analog images showing the people and activities of the School of Medicine. Image formats in this series include, but are not limited to, photographic prints, film negatives, glass plate negatives, jpeg files, tiff files, and 35mm film slides. The series does not include official identification photographs for faculty, students, and staff.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLeft to right: Richard E. Katholi, Edward W. Hook (Department Chair), John F. Kiraly III\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLeft to right: George B. Craddock, Edward W. Hook (Department Chair), L. Dwight Wooster\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLeft to right: James E. Sipes, Edward W. Hook (Department Chair), Robert L. Thompson\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLeft to right: John W. Zirkle, Edward W. Hook (Department Chair), Richard P. Keeling\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLeft to right: Sandra C. Foote, Edward W. Hook (Department Chair)\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLeft to right: Robert S. Gibson, Merle A. Sande, Oksanna M. Korzeniowski\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLeft to right: Edward W. Hook (Department Chair), John T. Bowers, Michael J. Oblinger\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLeft to right: Richard J. Gualtieri, Gary C. Murray, Edward W. Hook (Department Chair)\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLeft to right: Carl D. Malchoff, Robert E. Boyd, Edward W. Hook (Department Chair)\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLeft to right: Michael S. Collins, Edward W. Hook (Department Chair), Michael E. Williams\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLeft to right: Edward W. Hook (Department Chair), John B. Schorling, Donald R. Lilly, Munsey S. Wheby\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLeft to right: Christopher D. Lind, Munsey S. Wheby, Edward W. Hook (Department Chair), R.M. Fulchiero\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLeft to right: Munsey S. Wheby, Shalendra K. Varma, C. Foster Jennings, Edward W. Hook (Department Chair)\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLeft to right: Ali T. Afrookteh, Edward W. Hook (Department Chair), Munsey S. Wheby, Herbet E. Cushing\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLeft to right: Edward W. Hook (Department Chair), Raymond P. Smith, Brian E. Robinson, Munsey S. Wheby\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLeft to right: Munsey S. Wheby, Walter E. Smalley Jr., Nicholas W. Gemma, Edward W. Hook (Department Chair)\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLeft to right: Munsey S. Wheby, Kevin P. High, Colleen A. McNamara, Edward W. Hook (Department Chair)\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLeft to right: John C. Marshall (Department Chair), Raymond Brig, Munsey S. Wheby, William V. Burgess\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLeft to right: John C. Marshall (Department Chair), Matthew T. Goodman, Brian G. Bachhuber, Munsey S. Wheby\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLeft to right: Paul V. DeMarco, John C. Marshall (Department Chair), Glen L. Portwood\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLeft to right: April C. Sempien, John C. Marshall (Department Chair), Paul S. Buckley\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLeft to right: Gregory R. Weidner, John C. Marshall (Department Chair), Anthony Marano\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLeft to right: Christina W. Prillaman, John C. Marshall (Department Chair), William H. Maynard\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLeft to right: Scott A. Robinson, Munsey S. Wheby (Department Chair), Margaret R. Reitmeyer\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLeft to right: Christopher A. Klipstein, Michael O. Thorner (Department Chair), Thomas R. Gehrig\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLeft to right: J. Murray Estess, Michael O. Thorner (Department Chair), Richard M. Ingram\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLeft to right: Mitchell H. Rosner, Michael O. Thorner (Department Chair), Maria O. Masedo\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLeft to right: Christopher S. Reid, Michael O. Thorner (Department Chair), [unidentified]\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLeft to right: Andrew E. Lazar, Michael O. Thorner (Department Chair), [unidentified]\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLeft to right: [unidentified], Michael O. Thorner (Department Chair; seated), Aalya H. Crowl\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLeft to right: [unidentified], Robert M. Strieter (Department Chair), [unidentified], [unidentified]\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eFirst row, left to right: Jennifer L. Kirby, [unidentified]; Second row, left to right: Robert M. Strieter (Department Chair), Jason J. Lewis\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLeft to right: Jonathan Bleeker, Clay A. Cauthen, Robert M. Strieter (Department Chair), Adam Helms, [unidentified]\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLeft to right: Adam Zivony, Luther Bartelt, Robert M. Strieter (Department Chair), Joshua King, Danielle M. Rottkamp\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLeft to right: [unidentified], [unidentified], Mitchell H. Rosner (Department Chair), [unidentified], [unidentified]\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLeft to right: Mitchell H. Rosner (Department Chair), Heather Y. Hughes, Christopher J. Arnold, Amanda Russell-Kleiner\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eInternal Medicine, Third year residents: First row, left to right: Catherine Staropoli, April Stempien, Joyce Geilker, Shannon Story, Janine Maenza, Cherly Quigley, Carolyn Apple; Second row, left to right: Zach Dameron, Rodney Sepich, Alex Fenton, Charlie Duckworth, David Balaban; Third row, left to right: Andy Lazris, Steve Stephenson, Ralph Buckley, Mo Nadkarni\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLeft to right: John C. Marshall (1991-1996), William Parson (1949-1966), Edward W. Hook (1969-1990)\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eFirst row, left to right: William Parson (1949-1966), Michael O. Thorner (1997-2006), Munsey S. Wheby (1996-1997); Second row, left to right: John C. Marshall (1991-1996), Edward W. Hook (1969-1990)\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eInternal Medicine group photographs\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eFirst row: Daniel Mohler, Julian Beckwith, Thomas Hunter, Andrew Hart, unidentified, Edward Hook, Richard Guerrant, Bryd Leavell, John Guerrant, unidentified, unidentified\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eBox 81: Folder 38 contains photographs of Susan Gaston, Latha Shivaram, Meg Keeley, Kathy Smith, Mark Mendelsohn, Margaret Mohrman, and one unidentified. Box 92: Folder 18 contains photographs of 15 identified persons.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMost individuals identified. Photograph includes faculty members, assistant residents, and interns. Surgery faculty pictured: William Roberts Sandusky, Elton Meredith Alrich, Charles Bruce Morton II, George Ridgeway Minor, and Duncan Parham. (Not pictured: Everett Cato Drash.)\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePhotograph of a portrait of Barringer, includes several negatives.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eStudents with Harvey E. Jordan (first row, eighth from left)\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePossibly members of the Class of 1925. Theodore Hough: first row, fifth from left. Harvey E. Jordan: first row, sixth from left.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePossibly members of the Class of 1926. Harvey E. Jordan is in the first row, fifth from left. Photograph by Holsinger.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThese items consist of two (2) 16mm silent black and white film reels with a total amount of around 15 minutes of footage. The films seem to depict people exiting a building on the University of Virginia grounds after the 1946 School of Medicine commencement ceremonies.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eDocuments information that the School of Medicine provides to the public and business or government communities. Includes statements, visual aids, press releases and news clippings regarding historically significant events.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThis series consists of publications produced by the School of Medicine for public distribution or general internal distribution. Publications include, but are not limited to, magazines, journals, monographs, newsletters, weblogs, weekly announcements, online publications, marketing materials, and patient education resources. This series contains both print and digital publications. This series does not include student publications or admissions materials.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThis subseries consists of both digital and print magazines and journals published by the School of Medicine.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePublication subtitle: \"A journal of reflective practice in word and image\". Published by the University of Virginia School of Medicine. Features art, photography, fiction, and poetry by medical student authors. Some issues of the publication were also published online: http://hospitaldrive.org/\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eA journal published by the Center for the Study of Mind and Human Interaction at the University of Virginia. The Center was founded by psychiatrist Dr. Vamik Volkan. Subjects covered in the journal include psychiatry and psychoanalysis. Intended as a quarterly publication; some issues may be missing from the Library's collections. Publication discontinued September 2005. Description of the journal from Volume 4, No. 3: Mind \u0026amp; Human Interaction \"explores the unconscious and conscious interplay between the internal and external worlds of human beings. It analyzes current events by drawing on the expertise of an international and interdisciplinary pool of scholars and statesmen, primarily from a psychoanalytic frame of reference\".\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePublished by the University of Virginia School of Medicine. Periodical highlights research and news pertaining to medical education and clinical care.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eBiannual journal published by the University of Virginia Health System. Content includes \"clinical vignettes,\" medical grand rounds, clinical reviews and commentaries, and editorial pieces. Discontinued in October 2011. Some issues were also published online: https://med.virginia.edu/dom/education/professional-education/journal-of-medicine-archive/\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePublication includes a collection of creative works by medical students; publication organized by the Program of Humanities in Medicine and the Center for Biomedical Ethics and Humanities at the School of Medicine. Co-directors include Marcia Day Childress and Julia E. Connelly. \"Veritas is the University of Virginia School of Medicine's literary arts magazine. Published annually since 1994 and student-edited since 2000. Veritas showcases original writing, art, and photography by UVA medical students.\" (Description from Veritas Volume 33)\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eVolumes 28-31, and 33.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThis subseries consists of digital and print newsletters that provide information about the activities of the School of Medicine and its units and departments.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eNewsletter of the University of Virginia Department of Biomedical Engineering. \"[The Newsletter] will provide a vehicle for informing the UVA community of activities within the Department of Biomedical Engineering and... establish a continuous link with... BME alumni who have graduated over the last twenty-five years.\" (From the Spring 1990 issue)\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePublished by the University of Virginia Hospital for the staff of the departments of ophthalmology and otolaryngology.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePeriodical published by the University of Virginia School of Medicine, Office of the Dean. Includes topics pertaining to the history of the Department of Medicine and University Hospital. Available issues: Vol. 1, No. 1 - Vol. 3, No. 2 (Fall 1941-Spring 1947).\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eProduced by the Beirne B. Carter Center for Immunology Research at the University of Virginia. Alternate title: \"BCC News\". Print newletter transitioned to a publication in electronic form (no longer available). Publication discontinued.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePublished by the University of Virginia School of Medicine, Office of the Dean. Authored by Dr. William R. Drucker. Issues published irregularly during 1974-1977;  topics covered relate to medical education news, medical faculty, and internship assignments.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSubtitle: \"A Newsletter from the Heart Center\". May 2002, Issue 76 is the only issue present in the collection. Issue 76 is a National Hospital Week 80th anniversary edition, featuring \"then and now\" sections comparing cardiovascular care in the 1980s and early 2000s.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eNewsletter of the University of Virginia Department of Biomedical Engineering. Includes departmental news, remarks from the Chair, and student and faculty highlights.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePublished by the University of Virginia Medical Center. Alternate title \"House Staff Newsletter\".\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePublication produced by University Communications. The 2017 issue (Volume 5) is the Bicentennial edition of the publication. Also published online at https://illimitable.virginia.edu/ Appears to have been discontinued in 2019.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eInstitute for Substance Abuse Studies (I.S.A.S.) Update, a University of Virginia Health Sciences Center newsletter from the Institute for Substance Abuse Studies. 2 issues present in the collection: April 1992, Number 1 and August 1992, Number 2.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePublished by the University of Virginia Medical School, Pediatrics Department.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePublished by the University of Virginia School of Medicine, Division of Clinical Pharmacology. Variant title: \"Pharmacy and the physician\".\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eA newsletter from the School of Medicine, published as an online blog on http://www.healthsystem.virginia.edu and later on http://www.medicine.virginia.edu. Issues in the collection are print-outs from these websites. Topics include School of Medicine news and events, faculty spotlights, information on grants and accreditation processes, and written remarks from the Dean.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePublished by the University of Virginia Department of Radiology as a quarterly departmental newsletter. Publication discontinued.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePublished by the University of Virginia Medical Center, Department of Psychiatry. Some volumes are missing from the series.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eProduced by the University of Virginia School of Medicine; includes lists of administrators and departmental leaders; faculty, housestaff, and student statistics; highlights of faculty achievements; description of academic programs; description of teaching hospital and patient care facilities; selected research highlights; brief overview of financial affairs and School of Medicine budget. Contents may vary by year.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eBrochure featuring seven women chosen for a photographic portrait project on women faculty in the School of Medicine. Brochure includes small reproductions of the seven portraits. Project participants: Tracy Hoke, MD; Victoria Norwood, MD; Elayne Phillips, RN, MPH, PhD, FAAN; Myla Goldman, MD, MSc; Veronica Michaelsen, MD, MSc; Mary Ropka, PhD; and Lori Cronkin, MD.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePediatric research promotional brochure\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eFinal reports for research projects conducted by students, faculty, and staff of the School of Medicine where the results are not published. Does not include research data.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThis series consists of the records of student organizations sponsored by the School of Medicine. These records include, but are not limited to charters, bylaws, membership lists, leadership information, significant photographs, web pages, meeting minutes, and audiovisual recordings. This series also includes student publications including, but not limited to, student-produced newsletters, weblogs, and yearbooks.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe book includes minutes of meetings, lists of new members, and peakers and topics of the talks given at the meetings for inducted members. Also included are news clippings of an event in November 1947 in which Dr. Philip S. Hench gave a presentation about Walter Reed and yellow fever, one clipping about the March 1950 AOA elections at UVA, and one about the 1945 elections.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe book includes minutes of meetings, lists of new members, and speakers and topics of the talks given at the meetings for inducted members.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe book includes expenses and income from dues, banquets, printing, lecture costs, etc.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eNewsletter of the Mulholland Society, a UVA medical student organization. Published by the University of Virginia School of Medicine. Variant title: \"M.D.\" Collection contains an incomplete run of the publication.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eUVA Chapter of  Phi Beta Pi, a professional fraternity for medical students that dates back to the 1890s. This fraternal organization is no longer active.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\n\"Founded in 1964 at Meharry Medical College and Howard University College of Medicine, the Student National Medical Association is the oldest and largest independent, student-run organization focused on the needs and concerns of medical students of color. SNMA has grown to over 5000 members throughout the United States and the Caribbean. Our mission is to address community health issues impacting underserved Americans and to increase minority representation in health professional fields. Through our signature MAPS, HPREP, and YSEP programs, SNMA members work with students from elementary school through college to introduce them to science and serve as mentors. In this way, SNMA strengths the educational pipeline that leads from elementary school to medical school.\"\n\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\nDescription from the SNMA website: https://med.virginia.edu/snma/about/ (2022 January)\n\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eNewsletter of the University of Virginia Chapter of the Student National Medical Association. Collection contains: Vol. 1, No. 1 April 1994. Variant title: University of Virginia SNMA medical newsletter. Publication discontinued (date of discontinuation unknown).\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\nAnnual programs produced by the University of Virginia School of Medicine fourth year class. Video recordings of the program are available for most years listed below (original video format varies). Printed programs and scripts are available for some years only. Variant titles include: Medical show, School of Medicine student class play, Medical school class play, 4th year class play, Fourth year class play, 4th year class movie, Fourth year class movie, University of Virginia School of Medicine class video.\n\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\nProgram titles:\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cul\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eAmoritis (love bug fever) (The medical show - 1937)\u003c/li\u003e\n\n\u003cli\u003e\"Holza-poppin\" (The medical show - 1940)\u003c/li\u003e\n\n\u003cli\u003e\"Men in tattle-tale gray\" (The medical school show - 1947)\u003c/li\u003e\n\n\u003cli\u003ePost mortem class of 1950 (Medical school class film 1950)\u003c/li\u003e\n\n\u003cli\u003eLast class play (Medical school class play - 1972)\u003c/li\u003e\n\n\u003cli\u003eGuiding light (Medical school class play - 1974)\u003c/li\u003e\n\n\u003cli\u003eDoctor in the house (Medical school class play - 1976)\u003c/li\u003e\n\n\u003cli\u003eTonight show, with Johny Carcinoma (Medical school class play - 1980)\u003c/li\u003e\n\n\u003cli\u003eHospital box office journal of medicine (Medical school class play - 1981)\u003c/li\u003e\n\n\u003cli\u003eIleus and the oddity of gomer (Medical school class play - 1983)\u003c/li\u003e\n\n\u003cli\u003eMDTV guide: the new wave (Medical school class play - 1984)\u003c/li\u003e\n\n\u003cli\u003eTrivial pursuit: tales of the scutbusters (Medical school cass play - 1985)\u003c/li\u003e\n\n\u003cli\u003eReal to reel (Medical school class play - 1986)\u003c/li\u003e\n\n\u003cli\u003e60 beats: ectopic focus on the medical world (Medical school class play - 1987)\u003c/li\u003e\n\n\u003cli\u003eFrom the far side: late night with Dr. Letterman (Medical school class play - 1988)\u003c/li\u003e\n\n\u003cli\u003eOn the road to wizdom (Medical school class play - 1989)\u003c/li\u003e\n\n\u003cli\u003eLost in the link (Medical school class play - 1990)\u003c/li\u003e\n\n\u003cli\u003eMDTV guide: [skits, songs, etc.] (Medical school class play - 1991)\u003c/li\u003e\n\n\u003cli\u003eWonder years (Medical school class play - 1992)\u003c/li\u003e\n\n\u003cli\u003eQuantum beep (Medical school class play - 1993)\u003c/li\u003e\n\n\u003cli\u003eHealth care reform school (Medical school class play - 1994)\u003c/li\u003e\n\n\u003cli\u003eClass play skits program (Medical school class play - 1999)\u003c/li\u003e\n\n\u003cli\u003eMust see M.D. (Medical school class play - 2000)\u003c/li\u003e\n\n\u003cli\u003eRolling stone (Carey's Angels, Matchless and the Crocodile Hunter) Saturday night live (Medical school class play - 2001)\u003c/li\u003e\n\n\u003cli\u003eSurgical snack mask and survivor intro (Medical school class movie? - 2001)\u003c/li\u003e\n\n\u003cli\u003eCarey's angels footage (Medical school class movie? - 2001)\u003c/li\u003e\n\n\u003cli\u003eDirectMD: a multimedia experience in two acts (Medical school class play - 2002)\u003c/li\u003e\n\n\u003cli\u003eA day in the life of a med student (Medical school class play - 2003)\u003c/li\u003e\n\n\u003cli\u003eThe greatest show on earth (Medical school class play - 2004)\u003c/li\u003e\n\n\u003cli\u003e\"True confessions\" (Medical school class play - 2007)\u003c/li\u003e\n\n\u003cli\u003eMed school movie 2008 (Medical school class play - 2008)\u003c/li\u003e\n\n\u003cli\u003eUniversity of Virginia School of Medicine class of 2009 video (Medical school class play - 2009)\u003c/li\u003e\n\n\u003cli\u003e4th year movie, SMD 2010 (Medical school class movie - 2010)\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003c/ul\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThis item is a program from the May 7-9, 1981 play entitled \"The Hospital Box Office Journal of Medicine.\"\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThis item is a program for the play \"Candida Camera,\" a Class of 1982 production running May 6-8, 1982.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eYearbooks for the School of Medicine have been produced inconsistently over the years. For some early years, medical students can be found in the University-wide Corks \u0026amp; Curls publications (not available in this collection except for 1941-1942; see the Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections Library for additional items). For a short time between 1947-1970, a yearbook for the medical school titled \"Biopsy\" was produced. During the 1980s, a medical school edition of Corks \u0026amp; Curls was produced. From 1989-2017, a School of Medicine-specific yearbook was produced by the medical students. The medical school yearbook was discontinued after 2017.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eOnly four volumes of the University of Virginia School of Medicine yearbook titled \"Biopsy\" were published, for the years: 1947, 1948, 1949, and 1970. The yearbook also incorporated content featuring students from the University of Virginia School of Nursing. Variant title: Medical School student yearbook.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCorks \u0026amp; Curls Medical School Edition. Volumes from 1982-1988 include a special section pertaining to the activities and students of the University of Virginia School of Medicine. Corks \u0026amp; Curls is the student yearbook of the University of Virginia, started in 1888 and produced by students until 2008. Student yearbooks have been produced inconsistently since 2008. See the Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections Library for all available volumes.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eStudent yearbooks produced annually by the students of the School of Medicine from 1989-2017. Design and content varies by year; some years have individual titles. Variant titles: Vitruvius, Just In Time, At Last, Medical School Yearbook.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\"Prepared and funded under the auspices for the Student Council of the University of Virginia.\" Section on legal aspects (p. 13-22) includes information on drug control laws of Virginia, U.S., Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and New York.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eProduced by the University of Virginia School of Medicine Class of 1899 as a biographical and historical record of the Class.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eProduced by the University of Virginia School of Medicine Class of 1899. Includes faculty listing, class resolution and history, a poem titled \"Reveries of a young practitioner\" by Charles Bickly Fox, and a list of graduates. 16 pages. Variant titles: Ninety nine, Medical class of 1899 of the University of Virginia.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eContains biographical letters written in 1910 by members of the University of Virginia School of Medicine Class of 1899 to the Class Secretary, David Russell Lyman. 47 pages.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePublished by the University of Virginia Medical Center. Caption reads: \"A student journal of opinion and debate, U.VA. School of Medicine.\" Vol. 1, No. 1 dated January 1969. Incomplete run of publication in collection.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eNews of the Students and Faculty of the Univeristy of Virginia School of Medicine. Newsletter produced by a UVA medical student editorial board. Journal issued bimonthly during the academic year. Incomplete run of publication in collection.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe records in this series document the organizational structure of the School of Medicine. It also contains records that document administrative reorganizations of the School of Medicine. These materials include, but are not limited to, organizational charts and reports.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCopyright restrictions may apply.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThis series contains policies, procedures, and handbooks produced by the School of Medicine to direct and guide the conduct of its faculty, staff, and students. These records may also formally describe and define the relationship between the School of Medicine and its faculty, staff, and students.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePublished by the University of Virginia. \"The purpose of the handbook is ... to provide a guide to the organization, governance, and administration of the School of Medicine ... to bring together the major policies of the School of Medicine ... [and] to alert the faculty to other sources of information and services.\" Description from 1997 Handbook, page iii. Variant title: School of Medicine faculty handbook.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eA resource guide for graduate and professional students at the University of Virginia produced by the Office of the Dean of Students. Includes content on the history of UVA, information on student services and student government, guide to local activities and entertainment, and short essays by faculty on the subject of \"Perspectives on the Educational Experience\".\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eStudent handbook or manual produced for matriculating students at the University of Virginia School of Medicine. Title and contents vary by year. Variant titles: Information for Entering Students, Student Handbook. Later available in electronic form titled \"The Student Source\".\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\"Prepared by Virginia Delta Chapter, Alpha Epsilon Delta and Thomas L. Pearce, Assistant Dean, College of Arts and Sciences, Preprofessional Advisor, Office of Career Planning and Placement.\" Published by the Office of Career Planning \u0026amp; Placement. Variant title: University of Virginia Premedical handbook\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eProduced by ClubMed of the University of Virginia. ClubMed is \"a student run organization whose purpose is to foster interest in Internal Medicine.\" Guide is intended \"to provide orientation for 3rd year medical students embarking on their Internal Medicine clerkships\" and \"to answer most of the questions which arise at the beginning of third year, while providing advice, suggestions, and practical approaches for the medicine wards.\" (Description from Preface.) Item cover reads \"Fifth Edition\". Fifth Edition Editor: Neil Zakai.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe series contains historically significant syllabi and other educational materials (e.g. laboratory notebooks, course notes) used in courses offerred by the School of Medicine. The majority of the items in this series are single instances of syllabi from a particular course or professor.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMateria Medica Notes: Published for the Use of the Class in the University of Virginia, by Anderson Bros., Publishers and Bookseller, Copyrighted by Anderson Bros., University of Virginia. 1892.\nCopy 1: Owned by Dr. William Levi Old, Class of 1894, and donated to the Health Sciences Library by his grandson, Dr. William Levi Old, III, Class of 1976. Copy is signed: \"W. Levi Old, Univ. of Va., 1893-4, 2nd year Med.\"; with extensive handwritten notes throughout.\nCopy 2: Signed \"Paul B. Barringer, Univ. of Va.\"; some handwritten notes; \"P.B.B.\" and \"B\" printed in pen on edge of pages; damaged binding and spine.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMateria Medica: Drug Lists and Laboratory Exercises, Foreward by James Alexander Waddell.\nSigned and donated by Fred E. Cleveland, School of Medicine Class of 1941; handwritten notes throughout.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSyllabus of the Lectures on Medical Jurisprudence and on the Treatment of Poisoning \u0026amp; Suspended Animation,\ndelivered in the University of Virginia, by Professor [Robley] Dunglison. Printed for the use of the students. [Charlottesville] University of Virginia, Printed by C. P. M'Kennie, 1827.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePostgraduate course in Obstetrics and Gynecology conducted by The Department of Clinical and Medical Education of the Medical Society of Virginia, in cooperation with the University of Virginia Medical School, the Medical College of Virginia, the Virginia State Department of Health, the Children's Bureau, United States Department of Labor. Issued by the University of Virginia Extension Division.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePostgraduate course in Obstetrics and Gynecology conducted by The Department of Clinical and Medical Education of the Medical Society of Virginia, in cooperation with the University of Virginia Medical School, the Medical College of Virginia, the Virginia State Department of Health, the Children's Bureau, United States Department of Labor. Issued by the University of Virginia Extension Division.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLaboratory Manual for Experimental Pharmacology, published by Department of Pharmacology, Univeristy of Virginia School of Medicine, [1965], for use in an introductory laboratory course in pharmacology; exercises designed for 3 hour laboratory periods.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThis series consists of the records of the development and creation of fundraising campaigns and reporting of campaign status. Includes financial information, theme and branding information, and master plans.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eUniversity of Virginia Advancement publication; Contains an article on Randolph Pillow, an alumnus who donated artifacts to the School of Medicine that now reside at the Claude Moore Health Sciences Library.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThis series consists of records of trusts or endowments to the School of Medicine, including history of trustees and investments. Includes agreements, stipulations, stock accounts, and end of year reports.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThis series documents the classes offered in the School of Medicine each semester. This series may include, but is not limited to: course descriptions and faculty course assignments.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe University of Virginia record, published by the University of Virginia. Includes a catalogue of the officers (faculty, instructors, administrators, and other staff) and students of the University of Virginia, descriptions of individual schools and departments, rules and regulations related to admissions and graduation, and information on curricula and textbooks used. Contents may vary by year.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIssues of the University of Virginia record pertaining to the School of Medicine, published by the University of Virginia; in some places referred to as the \"School of Medicine Announcements\" or \"Catalogs\". Includes listings of faculty, instructors, administrators, other personnel, and students of the University of Virginia School of Medicine, rules and regulations related to admissions and graduation, description of medical education and clinical facilities, and information on the medical curriculum. Each issue also includes a list of graduates with an M.D. from the previous year. Contents may vary by year.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAlternate title: \"Electives at the University of Virginia\". Includes material related to the medical curriculm. Transferred to the archives from the School of Medicine Office of Student Affairs.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIssues of the University of Virginia record (graduate edition), also known as the course catalog, published by the University of Virginia.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIssues of the University of Virginia record (undergraduate edition), also known as the course catalog, published by the University of Virginia.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eItem published in 1979 by the Claude Moore Health Sciences Library. Lists the University of Virginia medical faculty from 1825-1826 to 1944-1945 and the position(s) they held. 50 pages.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThis series documents the addition of donated items, including artwork, into the collections of the School of Medicine. This series may include receipts, agreements, logs, and any other records documenting custody or ownership.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThis series consists of publications that were produced in order to recruit students to apply and attend educational programs at the School of Medicine. May include information on programs, majors, schools, and other academic and community activities.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe Biomedical Sciences Graduate Program (BIMS) is an interdisciplinary graduate program at the University of Virginia. It provides training and research opportunities for PhD candidates in partnership with the School of Medicine, Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, and School of Engineering and Applied Sciences.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePUblished by the Office of University Publications at the University of Virginia. Contains entrance requirements and admissions information for admitted students to the University of Virginia Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. Variant title: Admissions catalog\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eInformational publication for students in Biochemistry and Molecular Genetics. Also includes admission policies and procedures and faculty profiles. Variant title: The Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Genetics graduate program information\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePromotional brochure prepared for students entering the University of Virginia School of Medicine. 20 pages.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThis series consists of programs and reports that document the history of conferences and symposia hosted by the [major administrative unit]. Programs and reports often contain the following information: lists of speakers, presentation titles, schedules of events, and lecture abstracts. The following coneference records are not included in this series:\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eregistration records\nfinancial records\norganization records\nattendance lists\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMaterials include programs and flyers for the University of Virginia Department of Medicine's annual research day. Variant titles: Annual Research Day in Internal Medicine, Internal Medicine Research Day\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThis series consists of significant material that conveys the history of the School of Medicine, its administration, its accomplishments, its officials or employees. Includes, but is not limited to, scrapbooks, photographs, articles, program notes and documentation of events sponsored or funded by the agency. Also included are narratives; printed, audio, or audiovisual histories; or matters of significant historical importance.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThis subseries consists of biographies and files that contain biographical information for significant faculty, staff, and students associated with the School of Medicine. Materials in the biographical files include, but are not limited to, resumes, currciculum vitaes, clippings, obituaries, articles, and photographs. Some of the biographical files have been assembled by archivists others by various departments in the School of Medicine.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\"A Celebration of Lifetime Achievements in Honor of Robert M. Carey, MD, MACP, FAHA, FRCPI\", by University of Virginia School of Medicine, Division of Endocrinology and Metabolism, 2015 [?].\nContains numerous photographs and remembrances of Dr. Carey written by colleagues and friends, including Zhenqi Liu, Nancy Dunlap, Mitchell Rosner, Carlos Ayers, Gene Barrett, Paula Barrett, George A. Beller, Sarah Creef Baugher, Eric Davis, Don D. Detmer...\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eReprinted from the Bulletin of the New York Academy of Medicine, Second Series, Vol. 48, No. 5, pp. 791-798, June 1972.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eManuscript of a history of Robley Dunglison written by Jack Owen Tannett, the great-great-grandson of Dunglison, in honor of the 200th anniversary of Dunglison's birth. Also contains correspondence from Tannett regarding his research.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\"Edwin Partridge Lehman, Professor of Surgery: An Appreciation of Twenty Years as a Teacher of Surgery at the University of Virginia, School of Medicine\".\nProceedings of a dinner held November 19, 1948, at Farmington in honor of Dr. Edwin P. Lehman. Speakers included Colgate Darden, Harvey E. Jordan, I.A. Bigger, Daniel Elkin, Edwin Shearburn. Program includes a list of Dr. Lehman's publications, 1914-1948.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eContained within the Alumni Bulletin of the University of Virginia, Third Series, Vol. I, No. 1. January 1908.\n\"John J. Moran,\" 3 excerpts, p. 67-69.\nTable of Contents for this issue also lists: \"The growth of public education in America\", \"The University of Virginia in 1829\", \"History of the Ph.D. degree of the University of Virginia\", \"The University and Virginia\", \"Class organization\", \"Training in public speaking\", \"The colonnade club\", \"Jefferson bust\", \"Professor Francis H. Smith honored\", \"Professor Noah K. Davis honored\", \"New members of the teaching staff\", \"Goings and doings of the faculty\", \"Items of interest\" and \"Literary notices\".\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\"Lawrence Thomas Royster, MD\"Article by Armistead Page Booker. In \"Pediatric Newsletter\", Vol. 9, No. 2, Spring 1985. Publication of the Department of Pediatrics, Children's Medical Center of the University of Virginia. p. 2-4\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eContained within the Alumni Bulletin of the University of Virginia, Third Series, Vol. IX, No. 3. July 1916.\n3 pieces on Richard Henry Whitehead, and 1 piece written by Richard Henry Whitehead.\n\"Richard Henry Whitehead--An Appreciation\", by Edwin A. Alderman, p. 379-380. Reprinted from Corks and Curls, 1916.\n\"Richard Henry Whitehead--Early Years and Life at the University of North Carolina\", by William de B. MacNider, p. 380-384.\n\"Richard Henry Whitehead and the University of Virginia\", by Theodore Hough, p. 385-399.\n\"University Atmosphere\", by R.H. (Richard Henry) Whitehead, p. 400-405. Presidential address delivered before the Philosophical Society of the University of Virginia, May 6, 1915. Reprinted from the Proceedings of the Philosophical Society, 1912-1915.\nTable of Contents for this issue also lists: \"Finals\", \"President Alderman's last word\", \"The graduates\", \"Apppointments by the Board of Visitors\", \"Rector Gordon's welcome to the alumni\", \"Alumni present at finals\", \"Business meeting of the general alumni association\", \"The old University in the new\", \"Democracy and education\", \"A great night\", \"Resolutions of the general faculty\", \"Theodore Sandford Garnett, Jr., 1844-1915\", \"The department of education\", \"News of the University and faculty\".\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThis subseries consists of narrative essays, articles, and monographs that tell the story of discrete units and departments in the School of Medicine. Note that some histories may be the product of informal projects or research and may contain inconsistencies or inaccuracies.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\n\"A History of the Department of Dermatology, University of Virginia\", by Edward P. Cawley and William H. Kaufman. Published in 1987. Foreword by Peyton E. Weary, graduate of the University of Virginia School of Medicine Class of 1955, and former Chair of the Department of Dermatology. The book covers the period from 1902 to 1985. The first section largely focuses on the formation of the Department of Dermatology (originally known as the Department of Syphilology and Dermatology) and the department's growth under its first Chair: Dudley C. Smith, M.D., whose tenure lasted from 1924-1950. The second half of the book follows the redirection of the department under two Chairs: Edward Phillip Cawley, M.D., whose tenure lasted from 1950-1976, and Peyton E. Weary, M.D., whose tenure lasted from 1976-1993. Much of the book's contents relate to faculty biographies. Also included are lists of Dermatology Residents.\n\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eDivision of Infectious Diseases 50th Anniversary Celebration: Early Infectious Disease Activities associated with the University of Virginia: A Personal History by Jack Gwaltney; The Start of Hospital Epidemiology at UVA by Richard Wenzel; Reflections on Emerging Infectious Diseases by James Hughes; Reminiscences of the First Fellow by Michael Rein; Discovery with Microbes \u0026amp; Infectious Diseases Society of American Strategic Priorities; From Mouse to Man: Lessons about Infectious Diseases in Transplant Patients by Michael Ison; Chasing a Gene: Lessons Learned on Antimicrobial Resistance Dissemination; and Brief Reflections on UVA Division of Infectious Diseases by Gerald Mandell, Richard Guerrant, Richard Pearson, Gerlad Donowitz, William Petri, Brian Wispelwey, Carlene Muto, Rebecca Dillingham and Eric Houpt. Includes program and written talk, Reminiscences of the First Fellow, by Michael Rein.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\n\"Early History of the Department of Neurology at the University of Virginia School of Medicine\" by James Q. Miller, Professor of Neurology, Charlottesville VA, July 1998. Includes chronological lists of faculty, fellows, and residents.\n\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\n\"Obstetrics and Gynecology at the University of Virginia, 1825-1999, A Chronical [sic],\" by Guy M. Harbert.\nIncludes chronology of the department, listings of department chairmen and residents, publication lists, biographies, and photographs (in a separate folder).\n\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\nContents: \"Obstetrics and Gynecology: The Early Years, 1825-1924\", \n\"Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology: The First 75 Years, 1925-1999\", \n\"Chronology\", \n\"Chairmen\", \n\"Faculty\", \n\"Chief Residents\", \n\"Fellowship Trainees\", \n\"Publications from the Department\", \n\"Statics [sic]\", \n\"John M. Nokes Lectureship\", \n\"W. Norman Thornton Symposia\", \n\"Ellen Newman-Half Century of Service\", \n\"Tiffany J Williams, 1897-1947\", \n\"John M. Nokes, 1903-1990\", \n\"William Norman Thornton, Jr., 1912-1999\".\n\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\"Department of Otolaryngology and Maxillofacial Surgery, University of Virginia: History and Notes, 1896-1977\", bound manuscript by G. Slaughter Fitz-Hugh. Dr. Fitz-Hugh chronicles the development of the specialty of otolaryngology in the UVa School of Medicine and Hospital from 1896-1977 with special emphasis on personnel. Photographic portraits of some faculty members in the department from 1896-1951 are inserted. Includes some references and footnotes.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\n\"Pharmacology at the University of Virginia School of Medicine,\" by Chalmers L. Gemmill and Mary Jeanne Jones. Published by University of Virginia Printing Office, 1966. The book primarily consists of a series of biographical sketches of the professors in the Department of Pharmacology (early professors of Materia Medica and Pharmacy are included).\n\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\nContents:\nRobley Dunglison, M.D., L.L.D., 1825-1827, \nJohn Patten Emmet, M.D., 1827-1842, \nRobert Empie Rogers, M.D., L.L.D., 1842-1852, \nJohn Lawrence Smith, M.D., 1852-1853, \nJohn Staige Davis, M.A., M.D., 1853-1885, \nWilliam Beverley Towles, M.D., 1885-1893, \nPaul Brandon Barringer, M.D., L.L.D., 1893-1907, \nWilliam Alexander Lambeth, M.D., Ph.D., 1902-1907, \nJohn Augustine English Eyster, M.D., 1908-1910, \nJames Alexander Waddell, M.D., 1911-1945, \nChalmers Laughlin Gemmill, M.D., 1945- . \nSome copies inscribed and signed by the author.\n\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\"Department of Radiology, University of Virginia Health Sciences Center: Genesis and Growth,\" November 1994. By John F. Harlan, Jr. and C. David Teates. One version is reprinted from the American Journal of Roentgenology, the other is a manuscript copy.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\n\"History of the Department of Surgery, School of Medicine, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia, 1824-1971\", by Charles Bruce Morton II.\nPublished by the Division of Medical Art and Photography, University of Virginia Medical Center.\n\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\nContents: \n\"Procuring a Faculty\", \n\"The Piedmont Hospital\", \n\"The University of Virginia Hospital\", \n\"The Department of Surgery and Gynecology\", \n\"Geographic Full-time Faculty\", \n\"Departmental Expansion and Development\", \n\"Todays Department of Surgery (1970-71)\".\n\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eDepartment of Urology historical overview: a chronological list of Chairmen of the Department from 1928 to 2016. Compiled by M.C. Wilhelm, M.D., in 2016.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThis subseries consists of files containing materials that document significant events, moments, and turning points in the history of the School of Medicine.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThis file contains articles, reports, and other collected writings focused on the proposed relocation of the University of Virginia School of Medicine to Richmond, VA. In 1921, a state-appointed commission recommended that the UVA School of Medicine be moved to Richmond. This recommendation was prompted by a debate over the best setting for a medical school--a small town like Charlottesville, or a larger city like Richmond. Before the Virginia General Assembly met to vote on the recommendation, UVA waged a fierce campaign to preserve the medical program as it was. The University mobilized alumni, recruited powerful political allies, and printed persuasive literature, such as that found in this file. The campaign ultimately succeeded, and the General Assembly decided in favor of leaving the School of Medicine at UVA.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe Response of the Board of Visitors of the Medical College of Virginia to the Invitation of the Commission on Medical Education in Virginia \"To make any contribution of facts or considerations pertinent to the subject of investigation by the Commission: Namely, the best organization of medical education in Virginia.\"\nFrom the Bulletin of the Medical College of Virginia, Vol. XVII, No. 3, September 1920. Caption title: \"Richmond as the location of the state supported medical school,\" A brief prepared by William R. Miller, on behalf of the Board of Vistiors of the Medical College of Virginia; and \"Addresses delivered at a meeting of the Commission on Medical Education in Virginia\". Of note, a section titled: \"Some objections which have been suggested by anxious friends of the University of Virginia\", p. 34-36.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eContained within the Alumni Bulletin of the University of Virginia, Third Series, Vol. XIV, No. 1, January 1921. Cover notes: \"Centennial Celebration May 31-June 3, 1921\".\nContents include: \"The Proper Location of the State-Supported Medical School in Virginia\", By Theodore Hough, p. 1-70. \"A Summary of the Argument for University Location of the Single State-Supported Medical School\", p. 71-80.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSupplement to Bulletin of the Medical College of Virginia, Vol. XVIII, No. 1, March 1921. Published by Medical College of Virginia, Richmond VA.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eWritten by Abraham Flexner. Reprinted from the report of the Commission on Medical Education in Virginia.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\"Report of the Commission on Medical Education in Virginia: To His Excellency, the Governor of Virginia, the Rector and Board of Visitors of the University of Virginia, the Chairman and Board of Visitors of the Medical College of Virginia\". Commission on Medical Education in Virginia personnel: Wilbur C. Hall, Chairman; Theodore Hough, Secretary.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\"Minority Report of the Commission on Medical Education in Virginia: Submitted to His Excellency, the Governor of Virginia, the Rector and Board of Visitors of the University of Virginia, the Chairman and Board of Visitors of the Medical College of Virginia\".\nCommission on Medical Education in Virginia. Wilbur C. Hall, Theodore Hough, William D. Prince, J. Belmont Woodson, members of the commission. \nText issued also as Virginia General Assembly, 1922. Senate. Doc. 9.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSupplement to University of Virginia Alumni News, Vol. 9, No. 10, May 1921.\nVarious authors. \nContents:\n\"The Virginia commission on medical education\",\n\"The minority report by Dr. Theodore Hough\",\n\"A statement by President Alderman\",\n\"Authorities who aided the commission with advice\",\n\"Opinions of the national leaders in medical education\",\n\"Opinion of the medical faculty\",\n\"A criticism of the majority report\".\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSupplement to the Bulletin of the Medical College of Virginia, Vol. XVIII, No. 2, June 1921.\nPublished by the Medical College of Virginia, Richmond, VA.\nAuthors include Dr. Henry S. Pritchett, Dr. Arthur D. Bevan, Dr. A.L. Gray, Dr. Ennion G. Williams, Rev. Edward N. Galisch, J. Hoge Tyler, William Hodges Mann, H.C. Stuart.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePrepared for the General Alumni Association of the University of Virginia by M.C. Elliot, Chairman Executive Committee.\nDistributed by the Association for Retention of the Medical School and Hospital at the University of Virginia.\nDr. Hugh Young and G.M. McNutt, Joint Chairmen. McLane Tilton, Secretary-Treasurer.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePublished by the Association to Retain the Medical School and Hospital at the University of Virginia.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIssue of the University of Virginia Alumni News, Vol. 10, No. 1, July 1921.\nCover reads \"Keep the Medical School at the University of Virginia\".\nContents: \n\"The Future of the Endowment Fund\",\n\"Richmond Paper favors University as Place for Medical School\",\n\"Departmental Meetings Great Success. Lawyers and Engineers Form Their Own Associations\",\n\"Removal of Medical School Would be a Breach of Faith Declares Virginia Historian\" [with excerpts from Philip Alexander Bruce],\n\"The New York Sun Comments on the Proposed Removal of the Medical School\",\n\"Rending Jefferson's University\",\n\"Roanoke, Norfolk and Lynchburg Alumni Protest Against Removal\".\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePublished by the Association to Retain the Medical School and Hospital at the University of Virginia [?].\nIncludes statistics of patients admitted to the University Hospital for two years, July 1, 1919 to July 1, 1921.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eA Bulletin from the Virginia State Dental Association to the Taxpayers of Virginia, Vol 1. No. 1.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAppears in the Bulletin of the Medical College of Virginia, Vol. 18, No. 3. September 1921.\nPublished by the Medical College of Virginia, Richmond, VA.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eBy Theodore Hough, with a Foreword by Edwin A. Alderman.\nReprinted from the Alumni Bulletin of the University of Virginia, Vol. XIV, No. 4, October 1921.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePublished by Committee of the Alumni Association for the Expansion of the University of Virginia [?].\nWritten by Milton C. Elliott, Julien H. Hill, Branch Johnson, Fred E. Nolting, Allan J. Saville.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIn University of Virginia Alumni News, Vol. 10, No. 6, December 1921 - January 1922, pp. 387-406.\nContents:\n\"The Crisis at Richmond: Life of the Medical School at Stake\",\n\"Dean W.M. Thornton Writes Letter on the Medical School Issue, Gets Down to Brass Tacks\" by William M. Thornton,\n\"Letter to the Alumni of the University of Virginia\" by Hugh H. Young,\n\"Shall the University Hospital Be Destroyed?\",\n\"Eminent American Jurist Opposes Removal of the University Medical School\",\n\"Executive Committee's Christmas Letter to Alumni Chapters\" [includes section on \"Attempt to Remove Medical School to Richmond\"].\nAlso:\nComment by University President Edwin A. Alderman on front cover,\nLetter by McLane Tilton, Alumni Secretary, General Alumni Association of the University of Virginia, on the back cover.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eContained within the Alumni Bulletin of the University of Virginia, Third series, Vol. 15, No. 1. January 1922.\n\"The Medical Department of the University of Virginia--Its Proposed Removal--A Bit of History\" by John Staige Davis. Address delivered before the Norfolk Chapter of the Alumni, 29 December 1921. p. 29-45.\nTable of Contents for this issue also lists: \"President Alderman's Budget Statement\", \"The George Rogers Clark Statue, Presentation Address and Address of Acceptance\", \"George Rogers Clark and the Conquest of the Northeast\", \"The University of Virginia in the World War\".\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIn University of Virginia Alumni News, Vol. 10, No. 8, March 1922.\nContents:\n\"University Wins Victory as Senate Votes Down Medical Merger Bill: Final Count is 24-16\",\n\"St. Louis Alumni Send Congratulatory Telegram\",\n\"Students Welcome President Alderman and Dean Hough\",\n\"The President's Page\" by Edwin A. Alderman,\n[Letter by McLane Tilton, Alumni Secretary],\n\"Washington and Lee Has School of Journalism Again\",\n\"New Medical Fraternity\",\n\"Endowment Fund Given Added Stimulus by Victory at Richmond and Retention of Medical School\",\n\"The Honor Men\" by James Hay, Jr.,\n\"In the Service of the University: Letter from the Executive Committee of the General Alumni Association\",\n\"Woodrow Wilson Gratified\",\n\"'Dismemberment' up to Date\" [Passage related to medical schools' use of African American bodies in Anatomy classes],\n\"Athletics\",\n\"With the Alumni\".\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eContained within the Alumni Bulletin of the University of Virginia, Third Series, Vol. 15, No. 3. April 1922.\nThis article addresses Senate Bill No. 1, presented by Senator Marshall B. Booker, January 11, 1922 to the General Assembly of Virginia. The same bill was later introduced to the House of Delegates by Hon. J. M. Hurt and became known as the Booker-Hurt bill. See also pages 237-242 for \"Miscellanies Relating to the Medical School Question\" for three statements given by opponents of the Booker-Hurt bill and its proposed amendments.\nTable of Contents for this issue also lists: \"Statement of the Recotor of the Board of Visitors\", \"Address of the Presdient of the University\", \"Financial Aspects of the Location of a Single State-Supported Medical School\", \"Clinical Aspects of the Location of a Single State-Supported Medical School\", \"The Attitude of the Medical Profession in Virginia\", \"The Attitude of the Alumni to the Removal of the Medical School\", \"Address Prepared for Delivery before the Senate of Virginia\", \"Miscellanies Relating to the Medical School Question\", \"The University the Natural Home of the Medical School\".\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIncludes papers which appeared during the discussion of the loaction of the Medical Department of the University of Virginia, collected for historic value and for their contributions to the literature of medical education. 18 excerpts from 8 publications; By various authors.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCompiled responses to a letter sent by Theodore Hough containing a statement of the postion of the medical faculty of the Univeristy of Virginia on the proper location of a single state-supported medical school. Replies from Harvard University: David L. Edsall, Dean of the Medical School at Harvard; W.B. Cannon; Harvey Cushing; M.J. Roseman; Henry A. Christian. Replies from Johns Hopkins: President Goodnow; Lewis H. Weed; J.M.T. Finney; Joseph C. Bloodgood. Replies from Washington University at St. Louis: P.A. Shaffer; George Dock; Joseph Erlanger. Replies from California: Frederick P. Gay; H.M. Evans; W.R. Bloor. Replies from Stanford: President Wilbur; A.W. Hewlett; E.G. Martin. Replies from the University of Chicago: President Judson; Frank Billings; Edwin O. Jordon; Chas. J. Herrick; H. Gideon Wells. Replies from Western Reserve (Ohio): C.F. Hoover; T. Wingate Todd; Torold Sollmann; Paul J. Hanzlik. Replies from the University of Pennsylvania: William Pepper, Dean; Edward Martin. Replies from Cornell University: Charles R. Stockard; John A. Hartwell; Howard Lilienthal. Replies from the University of Minnesota: E.P. Lyon, Dean; Jennings C. Litzenberg; H.E. Robertson. Replies from the University of Missouri: Guy L. Noyes, Dean; Mazyck P. Ravenel. Replies from the University of Nebraska: Irving S. Cutter, Dean; Harold E. Eggers. Replies from the University and Bellevue Hospital Medical College: Warren Coleman; Harlow Brooks. Replies from Yale University: Yandell Henderson; Oliver T. Osborne. Reply from Georgetown University: George T. Vaughan. Reply from Kansas: George E. Coghill. Reply from Colorado: Henry Sewall. Replies from Michigan: V.C. Vaughan; Hugh Cabot; Udo J. Wile; L.H. Newburgh; Marcus L. Ward. Replies from Iowa: President Jessup; Elbert W. Rockwood; Albert H. Byfield; Henry Albert. Replies from Wisconsin: C.R. Bardeen; P.M. Dawson. Reply from Albany: Thomas Ordway. Reply from Cincinnati: Henry Mc.E. Knower. Reply from Oregon: Richard B. Dillehunt. Reply from Texas: William C. Rose.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eProduced by the University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA. Includes \"History of Medical School\" by Harvey E. Jordan, \"Address of Presentation\" by Edwin A. Alderman, \"A Statement\" by James C. Flippin, and other addresses by Ray Lyman Wilbur, William Holland Wilmer, John Shelton Horsley, David Russell Lyman, J. Bolling Jones, Hugh S. Cumming, and Chas. A. Stockard.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\nThis subseries consists of essays, articles, monographs that convey narratives about discrete aspects of the history of the School of Medicine. The subjects of these works include, but are not limited to, the history of the following: the medical curriculum, Thomas Jefferson and medical education, the anatomical theatre, medical facilities, the foundation and early history of the School of Medicine, accomplishments of the School of Medicine.\n\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\nBiographies and histories of the various departments and units of the School of Medicine are not included in this subseries.\n\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eBy Paul B. Barringer. \n\"An address delivered before the students and alumni of the Medical department of the University of Virginia, October 25th, 1887.\"\nReprint from the Virginia medical monthly, January, 1888.\n\"A History of the Medical Department of the University of Virginia: Its System of Education, and Its Results\"\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eContained within The Alumni Bulletin of the University of Virginia, Vol. II, No. 4. February 1896.\n\"The three years' medical course\", uncredited, p. 141.\nTable of Contents for this issue also lists: \"John B. Minor\", \"James A. Harrison, LL.D.\", \"The work of restoration\", \"Report of the architects to the building committee\", Book review, and editorials.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eContained within the Alumni Bulletin of the University of Virginia, New Series, Vol. 3, No. 2. April 1903.\n\"How the Army Yellow Fever Board Conducted Its Experiments Upon Human Beings\" by A.N. Stark, p. 23-29.\nTable of Contents for this issue also lists: \"The proposed athletic club house\", \"The academic department\", \"The beginnings of our museum of culture history\", \"The relation of consolidation of public schools to higher institutions\", \"Bible study at the University\", \"Gymnastic tourney\", \"Fraternity houses at the University\", \"The new calculus of Professor Echols\", \"James B. Baker\", \"Invitaiton to the President\", \"University of Virginia alumni in the Medical Corps of the Army\", \"University of Virginia alumni in the Medical Corps of the Navy\", \"The Maryland assocation of the alumni of the University\", \"The Jefferson Memorial Road\", \"Act incorporating the general alumni association\", \"Constitution of the general alumni association\", \"Items of interest\".\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eContained within The Alumni Bulletin of the University of Virginia, New Series, Vol. 3, No. 4. October 1903.\n\"Clinical Teaching of the University of Virginia Hospital\", W.G. (William Gray) Christian, p. 175-176.\nTable of Contents for this issue also lists: \"Requiem--Thomas Randolph Price\", \"The higher education as a factor in political life\", \"Harvard University and the University of Virginia\", \"The founder of the University\", \"The atmosphere of the University\", \"Lewis Littlepage Holladay, B.S.\", \"W.H. Faulkner, M.A., PhD.\", \"On double reversal\", \"The serum precipation test for the identification of blood stains\", \"An unappreciated source of typhoid infection\", \"Neuritis\", \"Use of pig skin graphs on extensive granulating surface in case of superficial gangrene\", \"Religious work of the session\", \"The John B. Cary bible lectureship\", \"Football\", \"The school of methods\", \"The student riot of 1836\", \"University of Virginia alumni in the U.S. Public Health and Marine Hospital Serivce\", \"University of Virginia alumni who have pursued the medical profession in civil life\", \"Thomas Randolph Pierce\", \"Vivit Post Funera Virtus\", \"Memorial of Professors J.A.G. and J.S. Davis\", \"Col. Thos. Lewis Preston\", \"Presentation of a portrait of Wm. Gordon McCabe\", \"The head master\", \"Presentation of a portrait of Matthew Fontaine Maury\", \"Items of interest.\"\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eBy Dr. John Staige Davis. \nReprinted from the Alumni bulletin for July, 1914.\n\"History of the Medical Department of the University of Virginia, 1825-1914\"\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eContained within Alumni Bulletin of the University of Virginia, Third Series, Vol. X, No. 1. January 1917.\n\"Medical education at the University\", by Theodore Hough, p. 56-59.\nTable of Contents for this issue also lists: \"The causes of the European war\", \"The school of athens\", \"The letters of George Long\", \"What students owe to the University\", \"A Virginian schoolmaster\", \"The history of the Williams Building Act\", \"Abstract of the report of the bursar\", \"Digest of academic legislation\", notes of the University and Faculty.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\"The University of Virginia in Medicine\", By John Staige Davis, MA, MD, Professor of Practice of Medicine, and Theodore Hough, BA, PhD, Dean of the Department of Medicine. \nProduced by the Executive Committee of the University of Virginia Centennial Endowment Fund, as one of five brief historical sketches on the five departments of the University.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eContained within The Alumni Bulletin of the University of Virginia, Third Series, Vol. XV, No. 3. July-August, 1922.\n\"Research at the University of Virginia\", Compiled by the Faculty Committee on Research, p. 275-320.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003e\"Research at the Univeristy of Virginia\" includes sections on:\nMcIntire School of Fine Arts, \nAstronomy,\nMiller School of Biology,\nSchool of Chemistry,\nSchool of Economics,\nDepartment of Education,\nSchools of English Literature and Literature,\nSchool of Forestry,\nThe Corcoran and Rogers Schools of Geology,\nSchool of Latin,\nSchool of Mathematics,\nDepartment of Medicine,\nCorcoran School of Philosophy,\nSchool of Physics,\nSchool of Romance Languages.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eTable of Contents for this issue also lists: \"Address to graduating class\", \"Founder's Day address\", \"The breadth of an education\", \"Recent resolutions of the faculty\".\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eBy. W.S. (Waller Smith) Leathers, M.D., University of Mississippi. \nReprinted from the July 1923 University of Virginia Alumni Bulletin\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eBound photocopy from The University of Virginia Alumni Bulletin, Third Series, Vol. XVI, No. 3, July 1923. Section II, [Department of Medicine Bibliography], p. 276-334. A summary of faculty members of the School of Medicine between 1824 and 1921, with brief biographical statements for each individual and a list of their published works. Alumni Bulletin Editorial Committee: James Southall Wilson, Albert G.A. Balz, Herman Patrick Johnson, James Cook Bardin, John Shelton Patton.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eContained within the Alumni bulletin of the University of Virginia, Third Series, Vol. 17, No. 4, October 1924.\nBy Lawrence T. Royster. p. 471-486. Third annual address before the Alpha Omega Alpha Society of the University of Virginia, April 11, 1914.\nTable of Contents for this issue also lists: \"Liberty and slavery in universities\", \"Convocation address, 1924\", \"Culture at the cross-roads\", \"Virginia men (class poem)\", \"The task of the American scholar\", \"Commencement address, 1924\", \"Founder's day address, 1924\", \"George Long in his old age\", \"Address accepting Shrady's statue of Lee\", \"Research in the University\", \"A new history of Virginia\", \"Wayland's ethics and citizenship\", \"Bibliography\", \"Editor's Note on discontinuing the bulletin\".\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\"The Foundation and Early History of the Medical School of the University of Virginia (to 1840)\". \nBy Elise Anderson Rodgers, A Thesis presented to the academic faculty of the University of Virginia in candidacy for the degree of Master of Science, 1930.\"\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eBy Andrew DeJarnette Hart, Jr. \nReprinted from Annals of Medical History, New Series, Vol. 10, No. 1, January 1938. p. 47-60.\nOne copy is addressed to \"Doctor Nuzhet Atuk\" and signed with the author's initials: \"A.D.H.\"\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eBy. H.E. (Harvey Ernest) Jordan. \nManuscript; Typewritten copy.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eBy Wilhelm Moll.\nReprinted from Virginia Medical Monthly, Vol. 95, March 1968, p. 158-161.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eBy Clifton Waller Barrett, Chairman of the Education Policy Committee of the Board of Visitors of the University of Virginia. \nAddress of the American Surgical Association, 18 January 1975. William H. Muller, Jr., President.\nOne copy signed by the author; also includes (brief) marginalia.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eBy G. Slaughter Fitz-Hugh. \nManuscript; Typewritten document.\nIncludes photographs of the Anatomical Laboratory and a student dissecting club.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eBy Grover C. Pitts. \nReprinted from \"The Physiologist\", Historical Section, Vol. 28, No. 5, 1985. p. 402-406.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePublished by University of Virginia School of Medicine. \nPhotographs by Robert Llewellyn, Introduction by Robert M. Carey.\nSigned by Robert M. Carey.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eBy Charles D. Cheek and Dana B. Heck. \nPrepared for Hartman-Cox Architects and Office of the Curator and Architect for the Academical Village [University of Virginia].\nBound with Appendix II: \"Analysis of Human Remains from the Former Anatomical Theatre Charnel at the University of Virginia Campus, Charlottesville, Virginia. By Thomas A. J. Crist.\"\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eBy Thomas A. J. Crist. 3 p.\nBound as Appendix II of \"Archeological Investigations at the Site of the Anatomical Theatre (44AB443) University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia\"\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eBrochure prepared by Garth Anderson, (Office of UVA Architect); photocopies by Mark Wenger, (Contractor for UVA, Report \u0026amp; Survey of Post T.J. Building).\nIncludes floor plans for the West Complex Second Floor variations for 1901-1936. Representations done in 1997.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThis series consists of scrapbooks of historical significance that portray the School of Medicine, its students, administration, officials, or employees, and related accomplishments or events.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThis series contains historically significant reports documenting the internal control or management of a specific function of the School of Medicine. These reports include, but are not limited to operating reports and financial reports.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThis series consists of reports, of a historically significant nature, that do not belong to any other series of the School of Medicine records.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eReprinted in part from \"The University of Virginia in the life of the nation,\" 1905. Published by The University of Virginia, Chalottesville, VA. Contents: I. Accomplishment, II. A Statement of recent growth, [III.] Officers of Instruction and Administration.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eWritten by J.A. Waddell, Advisor to pre-medical students at the University of Virginia. Published by University of Virginia Press in the Alumni Bulletin of the University of Virginia, Third Series, October 1921, Vol. XIV No. 4.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eWritten by Theodore Hough, Dean of the Department of Medicine, University of Virginia; with a Foreword by UVA President Alderman. Published by University of Virginia Press in the Alumni Bulletin of the University of Virginia, Third Series, October 1921, Vol. XIV No. 4. Contents: I. Introductory - Historical, II. The Transition from Proprietary and Avocational to University and Vocational Control, III. Can an Adequate Teaching Clinic Be Secured at the University of Virginia, IV. The Cost of Dental Education at the University is No Greater Than in Richmond, V. The Burden of Proof: The Advantages of University Location Overwhelming in the Case of Professional Schools Giving Instruction on a University Basis.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAuthored by Fiske Kimball; published in the Alumni Bulletin of the University of Virginia. Includes four black and white drawings of buildings.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eReport authored by the Committee of Medical Alumni, Beverly C. Smith (School of Medicine Class of 1915), Chairman.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAuthored by Kenneth R. Crispell and Thomas H. Hunter.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe report is primarily concerned with the growth of student enrollment and the development of University facilities to meet student population needs. The report includes recommendations of the committee, historical background, rationale for the recommendations, and appendicies with supporting data and related reports. It is a University-wide report (not limited to the School of Medicine). Membership of the Committee on the Future of the University: David A. Shannon (Chairman), Ralph Eisenberg, Jay L. Chronister, David B. Harned, Eugene C. Paige Jr., Robert M. Berne, Theodore Caplow, Edwin M. Crawford, Brian H. Siegel, Neil H. Borden Jr., Earl M. Gerguson, Norman A. Graebner, Kenneth C. Jacobs, James J. Kauzlarich, Phil Kimball, Larry J. Sabato, Joseph R. Washington, James L. Camp, Irby B. Cauthen Jr., Robert V. Coleman, Robert J. Harris, Thomas H. Hunter, Josephine Ludewig, Jacquelin I. Mason, Frederick D. Nichols, Ken E. Ross, Donald E. Wilson.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\"Selected activities 1974-1975, The University of Virginia School of Medicine,\" by University of Virginia, School of Medicine. \nContents: Pt. I: Administration and finances School of Medicine University of Virginia -- Pt. II: Health care programs in Virginia School of Medicine University of Virginia -- Pt. III: Admissions data: 1959-1974 School of Medicine University of Virginia.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\"Alumni of the University of Virginia School of Medicine: what are they doing where, and with whom,\" by Jules I. Levine and David W. Sheatsley. Published by Division of Health Services Research, University of Virginia. An analysis of 2,802 \"active alumni\" during a study undertaken to determine the status of graduates of the School of Medicine with respect to current location of practice, type of practice, type of employment, and specialty area.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\"Staffing plan 1975 to 1980. Department of Medicine, University of Virginia, School of Medicine. Edward W. Hook, MD, Chairman.\"\nContents: Staffing plan of divisions (Allergy and Respiratory Diseases, Ambulatory Medicine, Biometrics, Cardiology, Clinical Pharmacology, Endocrinology and Metabolism, Epidemiology and Virology, Gastroenterology, Hematology, Infectious Diseases, Oncology, Renal Diseases, Rheumatology) -- Sources of funds supporting present faculty -- New programs needed by 1980 -- Summary of personnel and space needs to 1980.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe previous report was prepared by Jules I. Levine, the director of the division of Health Services Research at the Medical Center. It proposed that a portion of the Pratt funds be used to improve capabilities in the fields of biostatistics and epidemiology.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eProduced by the UVA Department of Internal Medicine. Contents include: Self-study [statistics and faculty listing]; Scholarly accomplishments of the faculty of the Department of Medicine, 1975-1980; Publications of the Department of Medicine, 1 September 1979 to 31 August 1980; Publications of the Department of Medicine, 1 September 1976 to 31 August 1977; Publications of the Department of Medicine, 1 September 1977 to 31 August 1978; Publications of the Department of Medicine, 1 September 1978 to 31 August 1979; List of sections of the department; Self-study report part II : evaluation of resources and programs of the Department of Internal Medicine.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe Residency Review Committee for Family Practice approved the program with John H. Danby serving as the Program Director with Virginia Baptist Hospital being the parent hospital. The program had an affiliation agreement wiht the University of Virginia School of Medicine.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe documents mainly focus on increasing the number of minorities in medical school. One of the reports is university wide in its coverage. This file of reports was originally processed as part of the School of Medicine Reports collection, MS-66.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe Final Report was prepared by Wei Li Fang and Maurice Apprey. The course is a six-week program designed to provide minority students with the opportunity to experience the content, volume, and pace of the medical school curriculum.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe Final Report was prepared by Wei Li Fang. The course is a program designed to provide minority and disadvantaged students with the opportunity to experience the content, volume, and pace of the medical school curriculum.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMaurey Apprey from the School of Medicine served on the task force which considered black students, faculty and staff at the University. A letter dated September 28, 1987, from President Robert M. O'Neil is included.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eProgram Director: Moses K. Woode, Program Evaluator: Kathleen B. Lynch, Assistant Dean of Student Affairs: Maurice Apprey.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAssistant Dean for Student Academic Support and Program Director: Moses K. Woode, Program Evaluator: Kathleen B. Lynch, Assistant Dean of Student Affairs: Maurice Apprey.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eStrategies for Increasing Minority Representation in Medicine by Moses K. Woode and Kathleen Bodisch Lynch, Assisting Students Achieve Medical Degrees (ASAMD) Project. \nThis paper was presented at the 16th Annual Meeting of the Sixteen Institutions Health Sciences Consortium in Norfolk, Virginia, February 25-27, 1988.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eUniversity of Virginia School of Medicine Assisting Minorities Pursue Medical Education (AMPMED) Program, Supplemental Information for Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Site Visit\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePrepared by David S. Fedson, M.D., Associate Professor in the UVA Department of Medicine. Submitted to the Health Resources and Services Administration, Department of Health and Human Services. The proposal is for a new Primary Care Internal Medicine Training program to supplement the existing UVA Internal Medicine Residency Training Program, raising the number of primary care residents at UVA by 33%. Supplemental materials include biographical sketches of faculty members, Internal Medicine Residencey Training brochure, University Medical Associates 1982-1983 Housestaff Manual, and a list of basic readings in the primary care training program curriculum.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCompiled by Edward W. Hook and Richard W. Lindsay. Contributions by the Jefferson Area Board for Aging and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. Table of Contents: Annual meeting 1985; Key project personnel; Housing; Subcontracts; Client consent form; Progress report; University of Virginina Center for the Health of the Elderly (UVACHE) committee.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCreated by the University of Virginia Task Force on the Status of Women, a cross-university effort chaired by Prudence M. Thorner, Director of UVA Hospital Supply. The report offers a set of recommendations related to representation, compensation, benefits, professional development, support programs for women, and sexism, sexual harassment, and sexual assault. Tables, surveys, anecdotal evidence, and supporting documentation are included in several appendices.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eA report from the UVA School of Medicine Council on Medical Education. Contains sub-committee reports on: the student perspective, internal medicine, neurology, obstetrics and gynecology, pediatrics, psychiatry and behavioral medicine, and surgey. Includes tabulated results of a survey of medical students and residents. Executive Committee members consist of: Robert S. Gibson (Task Force Chairman), Dearing Johns, Charles G. Durbin, Jerry G. Short, Donald L. Kaiser, John H. Armstrong, and John Martin.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eReport by the School of Medicine Committee on Women, prepared for Robert M. Carey, Dean of the School of Medicine. The report is the result of the Committee's first year of activities. Contents provide recommendations from the Committee on: Representation; Professional Development; Sexism, Sexual Harassment and Safety; Salary Equity; Support; and Culture. Appendices offer survey and questionnaire results, including data gathered from peer institutions. Committee on Women membership: Sharon L. Hostler (Chair), Carolyn M. Brunner, Randolph J. Canterbury, Claudette E. Dalton, Sharon Davie, Wei Li Fang, Howard Kutchai, Carol Lake, Sally A. Moody, Barbara Oettgen, and Christina L. Wells.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe letter from Dr. Robert Carey to Dr. Sharon Hostler acknowledges receipt of First report by the UVA School of Medicine Committee on Women and provides Carey's preliminary responses to the report's recommendations.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eGeorge T. Gillies, Associate professor of engineering physics and biomedical engineering at the University of Virginia co-authored and donated this report. Additional co-authors include Elizabeth Gwinn Quate. Variant title: Torsion Spring Counterbalance for Suspending Large Goniometer-mounted Superconducting Coils. The report covers: Video Tumor Fighter Project; Induced Hyperthermia (instrumentation); Brain Neoplasms (therapy); Stereotaxic Techniques.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eA second report from the UVA School of Medicine Committee on Women which summarizes the progress in the implementation of the 37 recommendations initially set forth in the First Report on the Status of Women (November 1990). The updated report includes bibliographical references and some supporting documentation. School of Medicine Committee on Women was chaired by Sharon L. Hostler.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eReports authored by the Research \u0026amp; Evaluation Division of the Institute for Substance Abuse Studies\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePrepared by Linda Watson on behalf of the Information Sciences Council. The Health Informatice Enhancement Program/Project (HIEP) was initiated by the Information Sciences Council in 1992 to encourage innovative informatics projects and provide grants to faculty seeking to learn and apply new technology skills to benefit their work. An appendix includes a list of projects that received HIEP Awards between 1992 and 1996.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eDocument includes humanities in medicine program purposes, history and highlights, program elements (such as School of Medicine electives, presence in the curriculum, special projects, lectures, awards, and other programs), future directions, challenges, and an attached chart of activities and affiliations.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMulholland Society Clinical Clerkship Report for June 2002-June 2003. Compiled and edited by the School of Medicine, Class of 2004; Sarah Bass, Editor-in-chief. \"This curriculum review is intended to represent student evaluations of all third year clerkship curriculum.\"\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMulholland Society Clinical Clerkship Report for June 2003-June 2004. Compiled and edited by the School of Medicine, Class of 2005; Joshua Hilton, Editor-in-chief. \"The Clinical Clerkship Report is a written review of the third year medical school curriculum at the University of Virginia.\"\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eReport by Melanie A. McCollum and A. Bobby Chhabra. Contents: Conceptual model of medical education -- Introduction -- Charge and deliberations of the Education Task Force -- New learning spaces \u0026amp; opportunities -- Goal statement -- Notes and references -- Executive summary of recommendations. Appendices: ETF subcommittee membership \u0026amp; timeline of ETF activities -- Innovative uses of the new learning spaces -- SOM organizational charts -- Detailed reccomendations and timeline for implementation -- Report of the medical anatomy curriculum work group -- Key resources. Supporting materials: Curriculum 2020 Project plan -- ETF subcommittee reports -- Simulation center business plan -- Report of the Ad Hoc Committee on Resident/Faculty teaching space for \"skill station\" education of operative skills -- ETF site visit reports (John Hopkins University, UNC, Duke, WakeMed, and Stanford University) -- ETF \u0026amp; special session minutes.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThis series consists of the student records for the School of Medicine. This series may include, but is not limited to: applications, photographs, transcripts, and reviews of clinical performance.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e1 certificate for Robert K. Carter, dated 29 June 1859 and signed by J.D. Davis, M.D.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e1 certificate, mounted on cardstock, for John W. Field; dated 29 June 1859 and signed by J.S. Davis, M.D.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e1 certificate, mounted on cardstock, for B.R. Kennon; dated 29 June 1892 and signed by A.H. Tuttle (Professor of Biology).\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e1 report of Mr. Beverly R. Kennon for the session of 1891-1892, dated 1 July 1892. Includes list of schools (subjects) with associated professors and provides \"results of examination\" for Kennon's medical coursework.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThis series is comprised of directories that contain lists of the School of Medicine's faculty, staff, and students. The directories were created for public use and often include the following information: names, telephone numbers, and job titles.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\"University of Virginia Hospitals, Charlottesville, Virginia 22908. July 1, 1993 - June 30, 1994. Housestaff List.\"\nListing of interns and residents.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\"University of Virginia Hospitals, Charlottesville, Virginia 22908. July 1, 1994 - June 30, 1995. Housestaff List.\"\nListing of interns and residents.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\"University of Virginia Hospitals, Charlottesville, Virginia 22908. July 1, 1997 - June 30, 1998. Housestaff List.\"\nListing of interns and residents.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\nListings of faculty and resident physicians, organized by department.\n\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\nOriginal Scope and Contents Note: \"This [file] is composed of lists of physicians who have been appointed by the University of Virginia Hospital from 1951 to 1990. The list of 1953 is not extant. The [file] contains 39 files in two boxes. [Folders] are arranged by chronological order and names of the physicians are listed by department. Some years have more than one version of the list with handwritten corrections and adding explanation on the materials.\"\n\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\nThese materials were originally processed as a separate collection known as MS-25, UVA Hospital Professional Staff Files, 1951-1990\"\n\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCollection of medical student names with short biographies of each student. No student contact information included.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThis series contains correspondence, subject files, online resources, and meeting minutes of committees working within the School of Medicine.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMeeting minutes and reports from the UVA School of Medicine General Faculty meetings.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThis series consists of records that document awards, honors, and commemorations presented by the School of Medicine. These records may include, but are not limited to, event programs, lists of recipients, and recipient biographies.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThis series consists of records that document lectures and presentations sponsored by the School of Medicine. These records include, but are not limited to, audiovisual recordings, transcripts, announcements, handouts, and correspondence between presenters and event organizers.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe Medical Center Hour is a public forum on medical and society at the UVA School of Medicine. The lecture series is run by the Center for Health Humanities and Ethics at the UVA School of Medicine, previously known as the Center for Biomedical Ethics and Humanities, and originally founded as the Program of Humanities in Medicine by Dr. Edward W. Hook, former Professor and Chair of the UVA Department of Medicine. Materials in this sub-series include lecture recordings, handouts, transcripts, program schedules, and posters. Available materials vary by year and lecture. Many of the Medical Center Hour programs were recorded and are available for viewing. Presently the best way to search Medical Center Hour recordings is through Virgo, the UVA Library Catalog:  \u003ca href=\"https://search.lib.virginia.edu/\"\u003esearch.lib.virginia.edu\u003c/a\u003e\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\nThis file consists of recordings of Medical Center Hour lectures during the 1970s. The following is a list of the titles, speakers, dates, and call numbers for each recording:\n\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cul\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eRape: what should we do about it? Miriam Birdwhistell, Ida Hiller, P. Browning Hoffman, and Thomas H. Hunter. 9/10/73. HV 6561 R35 1973\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eCosmetic surgery: is it ethical? Milton T. Edgerton, Joseph Fletcher, and Norman J. Knorr. 11/5/73. WO 600 C695 1973\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eWhat rights do patients have? Joseph Fletcher, Samuel E. Miller, David D. Stone, and Jane B. Zambuto.12/3/73. W 62 W55 1973\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eThe health of public figures: what should be disclosed? James F. Childress, Richard S. Crampton, Thomas H. Hunter, and Henry J. Abraham.. 1/7/74. W 700 H45 1974\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eCruel and usual punishment: solitary confinement. Robert Showalter, Wilfred Abse, Richard J. Bonnie and Browning Hoffman. 3/4/74. HV 8728 C75 1974\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eResearch using live human fetuses: when is it justifiable? Robert M. Blizzard, Joseph Fletcher, Andre E. Hellegers, and Thomas H. Hunter. 4/1/74. W 20.5 R45 1974\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eMan without kidneys: past, present, and future. Leslie E. Rudolf, W. Kline Bolton, Peter Lobo, and Fred Westervelt. 1/21/76. WJ 368 M35 1976\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eMedical therapeutics: drug developments. Charles E. Hamner, William Darro, William M. O'Brien and John A. Owen, Jr. 1/28/76. QV 771 M45 1976\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eFetal research. Thomas H. Hunter, Douglas Clarke, Joseph Fletcher, and Davis W. Louisell. 2/4/76. W 20.5 F44 1976\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eProgress and trends in craniofacial surgery. Milton Edgerton and John Jane. 2/18/76. WE 705 P75 1976\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eIndications for antibiotic prophylaxis. Merle Sande, J. Owen Hendley, Robert Thompson, and William R. Sandusky. 2/25/76. WB 330 I56 1976\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eProblems of black students in medicine. Thomas H. Hunter, Eric Baugh, William R. Drucker, Eugene Foster, and Vivian Pinn. 3/3/76. W 18 P73 1976\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eThe Cancer cell membrane. Thomas E. Thompson, Robert G. Langdon, Jay C. Brown, and J.T. Parsons. 3/24/76. QH 601 C215 1976\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eComprehensive epilepsy program. Fritz E. Dreifuss, Richard H. Gibbs, Linda Harris, and James E. Redenbaugh. 3/31/76. WL 385 C66 1976\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eMarital breakdown in the medical center. Eric Baugh, Juanita Baugh, Barney Hecker, and Walter Wadlington. 4/7/76. HQ 814 M35 1976\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eDisciplinary procedures in the medical profession: can we police ourselves? P. Browning Hoffman, Richard J. Bonnie, Kenneth Redden, and Robert C. Green. 4/14/76. W 44 D55 1976\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eNew radiologic approaches to the diagnosis and treatment for old diseases. Theodore E. Keats, William C. Constable, Richard A. Flom, Charles D. Teates and Charles J. Tegtmeyer. 4/21/76. WN 200 R455 1976\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eClinical use of prostaglandins. Randall T. Curnow, Robert M. Carey, and Peter Ramwell. 4/28/76. QU 90 C65 1976\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eBetween doctor and patient: \"how informed must consent be?\" P. Browning Hoffman, Richard J. Bonnie, Walter Wadlington. 5/5/76. W 62 B46 1976\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eGeneric prescribing: why, when, and how. John A. Owen, Diane L. Ansley, Sam Crickenberger, and Jackie Young. 5/12/76. QV 748 G45 1976\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eThe challenge to widen the therapeutic index of hazardous drugs: the precise quantitative therapeutic decision. Kenneth L. Melmon. 5/19/76. QV 771 C56 1976\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eOral contraceptives. Ferid Murad, Thomas Bithell, Robert C. Haynes, and Siva Thiagarajah. 9/22/76. QV 177 O75 1976\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eResidencies and manpower needs. Daniel Mohler and William Drucker. 9/26/76. W 20 R45 1976\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eDrug use during pregnancy. John Owen, Guy M. Harbert, and Thaddeus E. Kelly. 10/6/76. WQ 240 D78 1976\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eIs behavioral genetics taboo?: the neolysenkoism. Bernard Davis and Joseph Fletcher. 10/13/76. QH 457 I85 1976\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eComputers in health care: success and failure. Ernst Attinger, Barbara Howard, and William O'Brien. 10/20/76. W 26.5 C65 1976\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eWhy do more newborn infants die in Virginia than in 41 other states? John Kattwinkel, Lynn J. Cook, C. Arnold Renschler, and Robert F. Scorgie. 10/27/76. HB 1323.I4 W55 1976\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eEthics of physician advertising. Joseph Fletcher and John C. Jeffries. 11/3/76. W 58 E85 1976\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eFrom students to physicians: a sociological study of medical education at the University of Virginia. Jeffrey Hadden, Theodore Long, Tod Hansen, and Marshall Shumsky. 11/10/76. W 18 F77 1976\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eKepone: what are the lessons? Robert Jackson, Phillip Allen, Joseph Fletcher, and Gerald Baliles. 11/17/76. WA 240 K45 1976\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eSwine influenza. P. Browning Hoffman and Jack M. Gwaltney, Jr. 11/24/76. WC 515 S95 1976\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eHow does one determine acceptable risks? Richard Wenzel and Joseph Fletcher. 12/1/76. WB 141 H65 1976\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eIs there a crisis in medical education?: facts and myths. Kenneth Crispell, Cheves Smythe, Oscar Thorup, and Christian Cimmino. 12/8/76. W 18 I85 1976\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eThe physician as double agent. Thomas Hunter, Richard Bonnie, P. Browning Hoffman and David Little. 1/5/77. W 62 P58 1977\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eEmergency medicine: T. J. planning district. Richard Crampton, Richard Edlich, Robert Jaskiewicz, and Leslie Rudolf. 1/26/77. WX 215 E45 1977\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eHealth and the developing world. Richard Guerrant, Kenneth Warren, and Thomas Hunter. 2/2/77. WA 395 H45 1977\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eThe Cost of medical education: who should pay? Thomas Hunter, Henry Abraham, John A.D. Cooper. 2/9/77. W 18 C63 1977\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eOver the counter drugs. Ferid Murad, John A. Owen, Jr., Melvin Parker, and Daniel Spyker 2/16/77. QV 772 O95 1977\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eViolence on television: a health problem? John deK. Bowen, Ake E. Mattsson, John Mesinger, Thomas Hunter. 2/23/77. WS 105.5.E9 V55 1977\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eHuman needs of the disabled: vocational, social, and sexual. James Q. Miller, Thomas Hunter, Marguerite David. 3/2/77. HV 1553 H84 1977\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eStresses in the Medical Center and who helps us cope. Helen Ripple, Norman Knorr, Judy Wilcox and Lee Crigler. 3/9/77. WM 172 S75 1977\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eMalnutrition in the hospital patient. Munsey S. Wheby, Charles E. Butterworth, and Thomas H. Hunter. 3/23/77. WD 100 M35 1977\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eScience, pseudoscience, and art in the practice of medicine. Eugene Snead. 3/30/77. WB 100 S35 1977\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eWomen in medicine. Elsa Paulsen, Judith Braslow, Charles Hess, and Robert Van de Castle. 4/6/77. W 21 W65 1977\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eUnnecessary surgery. Leslie E. Rudolf. 4/13/77. WO 34 U55 1977\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eDoctors as patients. Richard Keeling, John Zirkle and James Thomson. 4/20/77. W 62 D65 1977\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eDrug abuse. Randall T. Curnow, George Bright, John Buckman, and Joseph Fletcher. 4/27/77. WM 270 D72 1977\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eTranssexualism: an insight into the power of psychologic gender. Oscar Thorup, Milton Edgerton, William M. Sheppe, Jr., and U. G. Turner. 9/7/77. WM 610 T75 1977\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eGenetically transmitted disease. Oscar A. Thorup, Thomas H. Hunter, Joseph Fletcher, and Thaddeus Kelly. 9/21/77. QZ 50 G47 1977\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eLaetrile: the right to choose. Oscar Thorup, Gerald Goldstein, John Owen, and Charles H. Whitebread. 9/28/77. QV 269 L35 1977\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eExpanded roles in nursing. Barbara Brodie. 10/5/77. WY 16 E95 1977\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eExplosive change in the medical center: impact. Edward Hook, Helen Ripple, Darracott Vaughan, and Oscar Thorup. 10/19/77. WX 28 AV8 E95 1977\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eNew drug development: an overdose of FDA. Oscar Thorup, Charles Hamner, Richard Merrill, and Ferid Murad. 10/26/77. WA 697 N45 1977\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eThe family: dynamic dimension in medicine. Oscar A. Thorup, B. Lewis Barnett, David B. Waters, and Henry Willner. 11/2/77. WS 105.5.F2 F37 1977\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eFamily stress and collapse. Oscar A. Thorup, Donna Cowan, Joseph Fletcher, and Ruth B. Weeks.. 11/16/77. WS 105.5.F2 F39 1977\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eThe diabetes center: an exercise in democracy. Oscar A. Thorup, George T. Brooks, Leatrice Ducat, and Joseph Larner. 12/7/77. WK 810 D54 1977\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eIntegration of the medical center with the university: more or less?. Kenneth Crispell, Carleton B. Chapman, Edgar F. Shannon, and Walter J. Wadlington. 1/18/78. W 18 I53 1978\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003ePsychological aspects of persons with difficulties in sexual identity. Oscar A. Thorup, Stanley Berent, James A. Thomson, and Vamik D. Volkan. 1/25/78. WJ 712 P75 1978\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eA mother's response to her wanted child: lifestyles and home delivery. Guy M. Harbert, Walter J. Wadlington, Marion McCartney, and Anthony Shaw. 2/1/78. WS 105.5.F2 M67 1978\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003ePrivacy and the computer: everything you know about yourself, but hoped they'd never find out. Oscar A. Thorup, Brant R. Allen, Richard J. Bonnie, and Browning Hoffman. 2/15/78. W 700 P75 1978\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eViolence in the family: protecting the abused spouse. Walter J. Wadlington, David Fudella, Elizabeth S. Scott, and Andrew Wright. 2/22/78. BF 575.A3 V55 1978\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003ePSRO: quality of practice - federal responsibility or officious meddling? Oscar A. Thorup, Wyndham B. Blanton, Brian J. Donato, and James C. Respess. 3/15/78. W 84.1 P73 1978\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eFederal trade commission: nonmedical accreditation of medical training. Oscar A. Thorup, Howard A. Brody, Jonathan Gaines, and Warren H. Pearse. 3/22/78. W 40.1 F45 1978\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eH.S.A., federal \"guidelines\" for local health planning: cutting costs (?) at whose expense? Oscar A. Thorup. 3/29/78. WA 546.1 H75 1978\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eTo catch a kidney: the who, the how, the hassle. Frederic B. Westervelt, George G. Grattan, John A. Jane, and Leslie E. Rudolf. 4/19/78. WJ 368 T63 1978\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eMale chauvinism and contraception. Thomas H. Hunter, Donna S. Cowan, Joseph Fletcher, and Stuart S. Howards. 9/20/78. WP 630 M35 1978\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eAgeism. Thomas H. Hunter, Richard Lindsey, David C. Wilson, and William Poe. 9/27/78. WT 120 A34 1978\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eThe hospice movement. Carlton Sweetser, Oscar Thorup, and Cicely Saunders. 10/4/78. WX 28.61 H655 1978\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eThe Care and management of the sick and incompetent physician. Thomas H. Hunter, W. Dimmock Buxton, Robert C. Green, and George J. Carroll. 10/18/78. W 62 C35 1978\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eEthical problems in neonatal intensive care. Howard Brody, Hallam Ivey, Haavi Morreim, and Christopher Slobogin. 10/25/78. WS 420 E85 1978\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eThe medical devices explosion: who protects the victim?. Anthony Shaw, Howard Brody, John Kattwinkel, and Richard Merrill. 11/1/78. W 26 M45 1978\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eTerrorism. Conrad Hassle, Browning Hoffman, and John H. Moore. 11/15/78. HV 6431 T45 1978\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eWhy are your hospital costs so high? Oscar Thorup, John Forrest, Robert M. Heisel, and John Harlan. 11/29/78. W 74 W55 1978\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eShould we allow judges to make medical decisions? Dick Howard, Joseph Fletcher, and Roger Dworkie. 12/6/78. W 700 S55 1978\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eIn vitro fertilization. Oscar Thorup, Joseph Schulman, Roger Dworkin, and Joseph Fletcher. 1/17/79. WQ 205 I55 1979\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eTeenage drug, alcohol and cigarette use: some disturbing trends. Oscar A. Thorup. 1/24/79. WS 460 T45 1979\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eHow far should we go?: ethical decisions on the medical wards. James F. Childress. 1/31/79. W 50 .H65 1979\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eThe American diet: best in the world or major cause of disease? Munsey Wheby, John Owen, Judy Thwing, and Martin Albert. 2/7/79. QT 235 A45 1979\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eNurses and doctors: conflict or cooperation? Barbara Brodie, Annette Schwackhawmer, and Carolyn Brunner. 2/21/79. WY 87 N85 1979\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eNational health insurance. William Glazier, Tom Nesbit, John Holloman and Oscar A. Thorup. 2/28/79. WA 540 AA1 N35 1979\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eHome health services: a less expensive alternative to institutional care? Oscar Thorup, Richard Prindle, Linda Pohland, and Steven Rhoads. 3/7/79. WY 115 H65 1979\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eEnvironmental influences on cancer. James C. Dunstan, Oscar Thorup, Richard A. Merill and Joseph K. Wagner. 3/21/79. QZ 202 E55 1979\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eYour medical record just how confidential is it? Lillian BeVier, Oscar A. Thorup, Joseph Fletcher and Jane Rodgers. 3/29/79. W 700 Y65 1979\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eHealth maintenance organizations: do they work? Oscar A. Thorup, Samuel Goldfine, Gary Jessman, and James B. Murray. 4/4/79. W 125 H45 1979\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eHealth manpower. Robert Graham, Allen Tarloff, Clark Havighurst, and Oscar Thorup. 4/18/79. W 76 H43 1979\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eChildren's rights and parental authority. Raymond Duff, T. H. Hunter, Roger Dworkin, and Joseph Fletcher. 4/25/79. WS 105.5.F2 C55 1979\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eHospice in the general hospital. Richard W. Lindsay, M. Caroline Martin, and Cicely Saunders. 9/19/79. WX 28.61 H65 1979\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eParents and children: rights in conflict? Donna L. Cowan, Joseph Fletcher, Walter J. Wadlington and Oscar A. Thorup. 10/3/79. WS 105.5.F2 P35 1979\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eHazards of nuclear power. Roger A. Rydin, Arthur R. Tamplin, Paul T. Raford, and Thomas H. Hunter. 10/17/79. WA 470 H35 1979\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eThe beta adrenergic blocking agents and their clinical uses. Alan S. Nies. 10/24/79. QV 132 B45 1979\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eInvoluntary sterilization. Joseph Fletcher, Thaddeus E. Kelly, U. G. Turner, and Thomas E. Hunter. 10/31/79. HV 4989 I57 1979\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003ePrevention of disease: is life-style change the answer? Samuel E. Miller, Richard J. Bonnie, Lawrence W. Green, and Thomas H. Hunter. 11/28/79. WA 108 P73 1979\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003eThe Impact of institutional review boards on research. Richard A. Merrill, Ferid Murad, John A. Owen, and Thomas H. Hunter. 12/5/79. WB 21 I43 1979\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003c/ul\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\nThis file consists of recordings of Medical Center Hour lectures during the 1980s. The following is a list of the titles, speakers, dates, and call numbers for each recording:\n\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cul\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e A pious fraud: ethical issues in the use of placebos. Howard Brody, Joseph Fletcher, Wilford W. Spradlin, Oscar A. Thorup. 1/16/80 WB 330 P57 1980 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e The Nestle boycott: what are the social responsibilities of corporations?. Judith Gussler, Thomas H. Hunter, Louis T. Rader, Artemis Simopoulous. 1/23/80 HD 60 N46 1980 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Team health care: its promises and problems (the Diabetes unit at Blue Ridge Hospital). Susan McLeod, Thomas H. Hunter, Stephen L. Pohl, Joan L. Weinbaum. 2/6/80 W 84.8 T44 1980 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e The Relationship between medicine and the press. Daniel S. Greenberg, Arnold S. Relman, Lewis Wolfson, Oscar A. Thorup. 2/27/80 HM 263 R44 1980 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Medical school admissions: can overzealous protection of the applicant harm the public?. Robert L. Beran, Mark N. Ozer, Edwin W. Pullen, Oscar A. Thorup. 3/5/80 W 18 M43 1980 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e The Pursuit of justice: is the adversary system destroying us?. James F. Childress, John C. McCoid, E. Gerald Tremblay, Oscar A. Thorup. 3/19/80 BJ 1533.J9 P83 1980 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Who runs the health center: the government or the university?. Kenneth R. Crispell, Robert Heyssel, John Hogness, Thomas H. Hunter. 4/2/80 W 19 W58 1980 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Rights, benefits and the cost of medical care. Peter Alterman, Harvey V. Fineberg, Joseph Fletcher, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr. 4/16/80 W 74 R54 1980 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Occupational illness: investigations, compensation and controversy. Lucian W. Heiner, Robert B. Stroube, Paul M. Suratt, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr. 4/23/80 WA 400 O24 1980 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Research on heretical subjects. Richard A. Bonnie, Thomas H. Hunter, Ian P. Stevenson, Peter A. Sturrock. 4/30/80 Q 180.A1 R45 1980 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Should you choose your baby's sex?: Amniocentesis for sex selection. Haavi Morreim, Thomas H. Hunter, Anthony Shaw, U.G. Turner. 9/10/80 WQ 209 S56 1980 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Authority and obedience: the eternal dilemma. James F. Childress, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr., Stephen Worchel. 9/17/80 BJ 1459 A95 1980 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Recombinant DNA and the world of business. Martha D. Ballenger, Thomas H. Hunter, Hugh O. McDevitt, Louis T. Rader. 10/8/80 QH 438.7 R46 1980 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Where is nursing going? Does anyone know?. Rose M. Chioni, Norman J. Knorr, Sara J. Mapstone, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr. 10/15/80 WY 9 W58 1980 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Hospital cost containment: update on a continuing problem. Ronald Bargatze, John F. Harlan, Jr., Oscar A. Thorup, Jr., Andrew Weinberg. 10/22/80 WX 157 H66 1980 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Human sperm banks. Joseph Fletcher, Thomas H. Hunter, James D. Kitchin III, Walter J. Wadlington. 10/29/80 HQ 751 H86 1980 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e OSHA, benzene and the Supreme Court. Richard A. Merrill, Allen Feldman, A.E. Dick Howard, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr. 11/12/80 WA 465 O84 1980 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e The new anti-vivisectionism: implications of the \"animal rights\" movement. Thomas Beauchamp, Andrew N. Rowan, Nicholas J. Sojka, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr. 11/19/80 HV 4915 N45 1980 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Barriers to the handicapped: how many can and should we remove?. Michael J. Bednar, Richard J. Bonnie, Brian R. Hunt, Thomas H. Hunter. 12/10/80 WA 799 B36 1980 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e H.M.O. in the academic medical center: asset or liability?. Ronald P. Kaufman, Carl J. Schram, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr., Peyton E. Weary. 1/14/81. W 125 H65 1981 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Ethical problems in clinical training: who looks after the patient?. James F. Childress, Henry Aranow, Thomas H. Hunter, W. Dean Warren. 1/21/81. W 84.8 E87 1981 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Dual career marriages: so you think you want to marry another professional?. James C. Ballenger, Carol G. Johnson Johns, Ann R. Shamaskin, Barbara Strudler Wallston, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr. 1/28/81. HQ 728 D83 1981 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Health in the third world: the role of health in foreign policy. Norman J. Knorr, Thomas H. Hunter, Richard D. Pearson, John Ravenhill. 2/11/81. WA 395 H455 1981 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Problems of surrogate parenting. James F. Childress, Donna L. Cowan, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr., Walter J. Wadlington. 2/18/81. WS 105.5.F2 P73 1981 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Changing sexual mores: new problems in venereal disease. Howard Bahr, Joseph Fletcher, Thomas H. Hunter, Michael F. Rein, Brigham Young. 2/25/81. WC 140 C54 1981 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e The impact of the coming physician surplus. Daniel S. Greenberg, August G. Swanson, Alvin R. Tarlov, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr. 3/11/81. W 76 I43 1981 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Communication between doctors and patients: why don't we do more listening?. Edward W. Hook, Thomas H. Hunter, Haavi Morreim, Wilford W. Spradlin. 3/25/81. W 62 C64 1981 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Off-site teaching: an essential ingredient in clinical education. Robert E. Berry, Leighton E. Cluff, Thomas H. Hunter, Robert Wood Johnson, Latham B. Murray. 4/8/81. W 18 O34 1981 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e The pleasures and hazards of retirement. Richard W. Lindsay, Jean Bigger, Arthur Hess, Walter J. Hurd. 4/15/81. HQ 1062 P65 1981 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Competing in the eighties: academic health center under stress. Truman Esmond, Jeff Goldsmith, Robert Heyssel, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr. 4/22/81. W 19 C65 1981 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Is access to health care the answer?: The British experience. James F. Childress, John Glasson, John Lister, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr. 4/29/81. WA 540 FA1 I82 1981 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Folk medicine: lessons and insights from Brazil, implications and applications in the U.S. Marilyn Nations-Shields, Thomas H. Hunter, David S. Shields, Loudell F. Snow. 9/16/81. WB 50 DB8 F64 1981 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Defective newborns: What can be done? What should be done? Who should decide?. Bradley Rogers, James F. Childress, Cora Diamond, Walter J. Wadlington. 9/23/81. QS 675 D44 1981 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Psychiatry and the law: the impasse and beyond?. Joseph Fletcher, James C. Ballenger, Richard J. Bonnie, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr. 9/30/81. WM 33.1 P75 1981 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Abortion update: controversy continues. Martha D. Ballenger, Willard D. Cates, James F. Childress, David Little. 10/14/81. WQ 440 A26 1981 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Nuclear war: can it be stopped?. Joseph Fletcher, Lt. Col. David R. Carlsen, Howard Hiatt, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr. 10/21/81. UF 767 N85 1981 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Elements of malpractice: experts on a collision course. David C. Landin, Richard Gladding, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr., E. Gerald Tremblay. 10/28/81. W 44 E45 1981 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Principles and problems of clinical drug trials. Frederick A. Clark, James F. Childress, Lawrence Friedman, John A. Owen, Jr. 11/11/81. QV 771 P75 1981 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Victims of violence: should they be compensated? If so, how and by whom?. John Buckman, F. Guthrie Gordon, III, John T. Monahan, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr. 11/18/81. W 910 V55 1981 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Medicine: high risk profession. Thomas L. Gorsuch, Kenneth R. Crispell, Betty Mawardi, Raymond Pruitt. 12/9/81. W 21 M45 1981 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e D.E.S. daughters: infertility, neoplasia and compensation?. Saul X. Levmore, Wallace C. Nunley, Peyton T. Taylor, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr. 1/13/82. WP 522 D45 1982 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Control of pain: abstract concepts and reality. Albert B. Butler, James F. Childress, Joseph Fletcher, John C. Rowlingson. 1/20/82. WL 704 C65 1982 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Problems with the gift of life? Obtaining organs for transplantation. James F. Childress, George R. Hanna, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr., Frederic B. Westervelt. 1/27/82. WO 690 P75 1982 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Triage: who will get the last bed in the ICU?. John W. Hoyt, Carl D. Malchoff, Sara J. Mapstone, James F. Childress. 2/10/82. WX 218 T75 1982 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Diagnostic computers: will they replace us? Randolph Miller, Jack D. Myers, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr. 2/17/82. WB 141 D55 1982 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e The training of residents: relations with each other, staff, attendings and patients. Charles L. Bosk, R. Scott Jones, Mark Siegler, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr. 2/24/82. W 20 T75 1982 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Informed consent: is it desirable? Is it possible?. James F. Childress, John A. Owen, Leslie E. Rudolf, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr. 3/10/82. W 62 I555 1982 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e The physician-patient relationship: how has it changed?. B. Lewis Barnett, Jr., Mark Siegler, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr. 3/17/82. W 62 P585 1982 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Fetal surgery: medical, ethical and social implications. Haavi Morreim, James F. Childress, Bradley M. Rogers, James B. Sidbury. 3/24/82. WO 925 F45 1982 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Orders not to resuscitate. Joanne Lynn, David D. Stone, Walter J. Wadlington, James F. Childress. 4/14/82. W 50 O75 1982 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Traditional endocrinology: due for a shakeup?. Richard M. Bergland, Derek LeRoith, Alan D. Rogol, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr. 4/21/82. WK 21 T75 1982 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e The herpes syndrome: by-product of the sexual revolution. Jack M. Gwaltney, Richard P. Keeling, Cherie L. Kitchell, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr. 4/28/82. WC 140 H44 1982 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e The Hinckley decision: demands for legal reform. Richard J. Bonnie, Oscar A. Thorup, John Monahan, Park E. Dietz. 9/8/82. W 740 H5 1982 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Medical school and beyond: the Black experience. Lester W. Brown, Vivian W. Pinn, Calvin H. Thigpen, William M. Womack, Dudley F. Rochester. 9/15/82. W 18 M45 1982 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Prenatal child abuse: behavior restrictions on expectant mothers. F. John Bourgeois, Karen J. Jacobs, Elizabeth G. Taylor, Oscar A. Thorup. 9/29/82. WQ 175 P7 1982 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e De-institutionalization of the mentally ill: economics or therapeutic?. Robert Lassiter, William Burns, Wilfred Spradlin, Joseph Fletcher, Oscar A. Thorup. 10/13/82. W 84.7 D4 1982 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Near-death experiences: what do they hear?. Raymond A. Moody, William Evans, James F. Childress, Oscar A. Thorup. 10/20/82. BF 1040 N4 1982 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Hospital medicine: are medical technology and \"caring\" incompatible?. Kenneth R. Crispell, Thomas A. Massaro, Ingelborg G. Mauksch, James F. Childress. 10/27/82. W 85 H6 1982 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Promotion of pharmaceutical products: pro-competition or contra-competition?. John A. Owen, B. Blair Garnett, Locke Boyer, James Childress. 12/8/82. WB 330 P7 1982 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Aging, role reversal: when your parents become your children. Oscar A. Thorup. 12/15/82. WT 30 A38 1982 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Foreign medical school graduates: the status today. Samuel P. Asper, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr., August G. Swanson, Kenneth Crispell. 1/13/83. W 21 F6 1983 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e The Role of religion in medical care. Julian N. Hartt, James F. Childress; Robert W. Cantrell; Clyde M. Watson, Jr. 1/19/83. WM 61 R6 1983 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Nursing homes: past, present and future. Rosemary Hayes. 1/26/83. WT 27 N8 1983 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Psychoanalysis: is it really an impossible profession?. James A. Bakhtiar, C. Knight Aldrich, Seymour Rabinowitz, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr. 2/9/83. WM 460 P8 1983 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Medicaid: its successes, its failures, its prospects. James Childress, Oscar Thorup, John T. Ashley, Thomas Moloney. 2/16/83. W 275 AA1 M43 1983 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Reverse discrimination or affirmative action: Bakke and beyond. A.E. Dick Howard, Arlene P. Nichols, Kelly M. Darden, Jr., Oscar A. Thorup, Jr. 2/23/83. BF 575.P9 R45 1983 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Pregnant children: the increasing problem of teen pregnancy. Paula J. Hillard, Catherine Bodkin, Susan McLeod, James F. Childress. 3/9/83. WS 462 P73 1983 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome: current status and concerns. Oscar A. Thorup, Dick P. Wenzel, Michael F. Rein, Eliot R. Pearl. 3/16/83. WD 308 A25 1983 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Abortion: do men have rights?. Martha D. Ballenger, et al. 3/23/83. HQ 767 A154 1983 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e The Cocaine epidemic: fallacies and facts. Robert L. Dupont, et al. 3/30/83. WM 280 C659 1983 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Hospital ownership: does it make any difference?. William B. Deal, et al. 4/13/83. WX 100 H828 1983 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Should physicians and hospitals prepare for war?. Podge M. Reed, et al. 4/27/83. WX 185 S559 1983 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Update on AIDS: social and clinical significance. Oscar A. Thorup, Michael F. Rein, Richard P. Wenzel, James F. Childress. 9/14/83. WD 308 U66 1983 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Fraud in science. Bernard B. Davis, John A. Owen, Jr., Thomas H. Hunter. 9/21/83. Q 172.5.F7 F845 1983 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e The Baby Doe rule: necessity or intrusion?. John Kattwinkel, Paul Marschand, Haavi Morreim, James F. Childress. 9/28/83. W 50 B115 1983 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Medical school admissions: how do we select the best?. Edwin W. Pullen, Robert L. Kellogg, Thomas L. Pearce, Oscar A. Thorup. 10/12/83. W 19 M489 1983 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Feeding: is it morally required for everyone?. David D. Stone, Joanne Lynn, Priscilla K. Ludy, James F. Childress. 10/26/83. W 50 F295 1983 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Impaired physicians: what are we doing for them?. William J. Farley, William Barney, Lisabeth Kopp, John A. Owen. 11/16/83. W 21 I34 1983 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Medical confidentiality: is it possible in the modern hospital?. Mark Siegler, Sara T. Fry, Kenneth Abraham, James F. Childress. 11/30/83. W 700 M489 1983 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Diagnosis related groups (DRGs) and discharge planning. Miriam Birdwhistell, James Bentley, Haavi Morreim, Oscar A. Thorup. 12/14/83. WX 157 D536 1983 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e The Day after: another look at its implications. Thomas Doran, Matthew Lambert, Cal Thomas, James F. Childress. 1/18/84. UF 767 D273 1984 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Athletes and androgens: what's wrong with steroids. Alan D. Rogol, Ernst H. Soudek, James Reardon, Oscar A. Thorup. 1/25/84. WK 150 A871 1984 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Hospital ethics committees: what is their role?. Robert M. Veatch, Irving L. Kron, Robert A. Darnall, Jr., James F. Childress. 2/8/84. W 50 H644 1984 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e PPOs, HMOs, and IPAs: new and developing access and cost programs in medicine. James Gore, Robert Williams, Hilton Almond, Oscar A. Thorup. 2/15/84. W 74 P894 1984 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Thin bones. osteoporosis, calcium and estrogen: is there an answer?. Paul B. Underwood, Michael R. Wills, John A. Owen, Kenneth R. Crispell. 2/22/84. WB 250 T443 1984 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Head injury care: immediate and long term. Rebecca W. Rimel, Thomas R. Johns, John A. Jane, Oscar A. Thorup. 2/29/84. WE 706 H433 1984 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Coronary artery bypass surgery: is it needed?. Eugene Passamani, Ivan K. Crosby, George B. Craddock, Jr., Oscar A. Thorup. 3/14/84. WG 169 C8225 1984 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Ethics questions on professional examinations: is it possible to test ethical judgments and virtues on board and bar examinations?. Edward W. Hook, Julia E. Connelly, Kent Sinclair, James F. Childress. 3/21/84. W 50 E84 1984 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e The Sick citadel: tensions and conflicts within and without. James D. Bentley, Cecil G. Sheps, Kenneth R. Crispell, 0scar A. Thorup. 4/11/84. WX 27 AA1 S566 1984 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Childhood and adult immunization: priorities in public policy and their implementation in clinical practice. Gregory F. Hayden, Richard A. Prindle, Jack M. Gwaltney, David S. Fedson. 4/25/84. QW 806 C536 1984 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Debris of divorce: the effect on children. Andre P. Derdeyn, Robert E. Emery, Jr., Elizabeth S. Scott, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr. 9/19/84. WS 105.5.A8 D288 1984 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e What's to become of hospice?. Rev. Dinah L. Ansley, David M. Synder, Christopher P. Zazakos, Jr., Oscar A. Thorup. 9/26/84. WX 28.6 AA1 W555 1984 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Mercy and compassion: are we insensitive to the needs of patients?. John T. Ashley, Sara J. Mapstone, Ian P. Stevenson, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr. 10/10/84. WX 162 M557 1984 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Medical education: do we need a new Flexner Report?. Robert L. Kellogg, William D. Mattern, Benjamin Sturgill, Oscar A. Thorup. 10/17/84. W 18 M42 1984 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Childhood depression: infancy and beyond. Andre P. Derdeyn, James Duffee, Charles H. Gleason, Oscar A. Thorup. 10/24/84. WM 171 C536 1984 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Women in medicine: what progress are we making?. Ruth B. Weeks, Marguerite C. Lippert, Elizabeth S. Higgs, John A. Owen, Jr. 10/31/84. W 21 W872 1984 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e \"Birthing in America\": options and problems. Paula Hilard, Hallum Hurt, Paul B. Underwood. 11/28/84. WQ 415 B621 1984 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Child abuse: sexual abuse of children. Park E. Dietz, Kenneth Lanning, Frank T. Saulsbury, Oscar Thorup Jr., moderator. 12/12/84. WA 320 C536 1984 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e The Crisis at Tampa General: the issues of hospital survival. James Bentley, Phil Birnbaum, Julian Rice, Oscar A. Thorup. 3/20/85. WX 157 C932 1985 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e DRGs: are they working?. Peter Munger, Robert A. Reid, Tim Keating, Oscar A. Thorup. 3/27/85. WX 157 D778 1985 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Nuclear arms: whose responsibility?. Sidney Alexander, Joseph Fletcher, John Rhinelander, Oscar A. Thorup, moderator. 4/10/85. JX 1974 N8 1985 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Informed consent: is it really possible?. Jay Katz, Leslie Rudolf, Walter J. Wadlington, Oscar A. Thorup, moderator. 4/24/85. W 33 I43 1985 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Alzheimer's disease: public perception and medical facts. H. Robert Brashear, Eric W. Lothman, James Q. Miller, Oscar A. Thorup. 10/9/85. WM 220 A47815 1985 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e AIDS: public health and private rights. Michael Rein, Jeffrey O'Connell, James F. Childress, Richard Keeling, moderator. 10/23/85. WD 308 A28813 1985 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e When does child abuse start?: Fetal alcohol syndrome. W. Allen Hogge, Thomas J. Czelusta, James F. Childress, Leslie Rudolf, moderator. 10/30/85. WQ 211 W567 1985 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Uncompensated care: which patients and what can be done?. Robert Tell, Carter Melton, Louis Rossiter, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr., moderator. 11/20/85. WX 157 U54 1985 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Cocaine, illicit drugs and public policy. Robert DuPont; Richard Bonnie; Joseph Fletcher; Oscar Thorup, Jr., moderator. 12/11/85. WM 280 C6595 1985 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e The death penalty: dilemmas for physicians and society. Park Dietz, Paul Applebaum, Richard Bonnie, Oscar J. Thorup, moderator. 2/19/86. HV 8699.U5 D2855 1986 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Surrogate parenting: should the contract be enforced?. Angela Holder, Walter J. Wadlington, JoAnn Pinkerton, James F. Childress. 4/15/87. HQ 759.5 S962 1987 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Should foreign nationals have access to U.S. cadaver organs for transplantation?. Frederic B. Westervelt, Gene Pierce, James F. Childress, Oscar A. Thorup Jr., moderator. 4/29/87. WO 660 S559 1987 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Screening for AIDS: what should we do?. James F. Childress, Jack M. Gwaltney, Richard P. Keeling, Oscar A. Thorup. 9/9/87. WD 308 S433 1987 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Court-ordered obstetrical interventions: fetal and maternal rights. Medical Television Services, University of Virginia Medical Center. 9/16/87. R11.M4 9/16/87. \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Report of University of Virginia's Drug task force: what now?. Randolph J. Canterbury, John A. Owen, Jr., Sybil Todd, Oscar A. Thorup. 9/23/87. HV 4999.4.C48 R425 1987 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Future of nursing: what must be done?. Rose M. Chioni, Ann Minnick, Jean Sorrells-Jones, John F. Harlan. 9/30/87. WY 16 F996 1987 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Alzheimer's disease in a family member: frustrations and coping strategies. Ann Brushwood, Richard W. Lindsay, Sue Winslow, Oscar A. Thorup. 10/14/87. WM 220 A4783 1987 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Mapping and sequencing the human genome: scientific, social, and ethical issues. Robert Cook-Deegan, John C. Fletcher, Thaddeus E. Kelly, James F. Childress. 10/21/87. QH 447 M297 1987 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Lying and its detection: recent empirical and ethical studies. Bella M. DePaulo, James F. Childress, Kenneth Crispell. 10/28/87. BJ 1421 L985 1987 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Use of fetal tissues in transplantation: promising therapy and/or dangerous practice. Lynn A. Baker, James P. Bennett, James F. Childress, John A. Owen. 11/11/87. WO 690 U84 1987 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Crisis at Tampa General Hospital revisited: resolution?. Newell France, James Bentley, Philip Birnbaum, Oscar A. Thorup. 12/9/87. WX 157 C9323 1987 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Impaired providers: prevention, identification and sanctions. Gerald J. Bechamps, Jacob A. Lohr, John A. Owen, Jr., Oscar A. Thorup, Jr., moderator. 1/13/88. HV 5825 I34 1988 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e When the menses cease: the latest on menopause. Paul B. Underwood, Jr., JoAnn V. Pinkerton, Diane Snustad, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr., moderator. 1/20/88. WP 580 W567 1988 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e How do we learn?: why do we forget?. James E. Deese, H. Robert Brashear, Paul E. Gold, Oscar A. Thorup. 1/27/88. BF 378.F7 H847 1988 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Should the parents be allowed to donate the organs of anencephalic new borns?. John C. Fletcher, Bradley M. Rodgers, Nicholas J. Lenn, James F. Childress. 2/24/88. WO 690 S559 1988 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Legal problems in emergency rooms, other than malpractice. Rebecca W. West, Joseph F. Chance, Robert D. Powers, Oscar A. Thorup. 3/9/88. WX 215 L496 1988 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e The Case of a court-ordered cesarean section for a terminally ill woman: What are the facts? What should have been done?. Barbara Mishkin, JoAnn V. Pinkerton, John C. Fletcher, James F. Childress. 3/23/88. WQ 33.1 C337 1988 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Management of chronic pain: Can we do better?. Phoebe M. Orebaugh, Gerald Goldstein, John C. Rowlingson, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr., moderator. 4/13/88. WL 704 M2665 1988 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e AIDS, children and hemophiliacs. Louis M. Aledort, Jack M. Gwaltney, Karen A. Bringelsen, Oscar A. Thorup. 4/20/88. WD 308 A28818 1988 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Sick building syndrome: an expensive headache. Thomas A. Platts-Mills, Allen H. Neims, David N. Easton, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr., moderator. 4/27/88. QT 230 S566 1988 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e AIDS in 1988: medical, legal and ethical developments. Michael F. Rein, Richard J. Bonnie, John C. Fletcher, Richard P. Keeling. 9/14/88. WD 308 A28822 1988 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Fraud and misrepresentation in science: what can be done?. Franklyn N. Arnhoff, Dennis Barnes, Paul R. Gross, James F. Childress, moderator. 9/21/88. Q 180 U5 F845 1988 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Residency training: Problems and possible reforms. Amy Tucker, Brent Williams, Patricia Porterfield, Munsey Wheby. 10/26/88. W 20 R433 1988 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e The resource-based relative value scale for physician reimbursement: What are its implications. James Nuckols, Robert Epstein, Brian Conway, Edward Hook. 11/9/88. W 275 AA1 R434 1988 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Should tissues from aborted fetuses be used in transplantation?. John C. Fletcher, James F. Childress, Rebecca W. West, John A. Owen, Jr. 11/16/88. WO 690 S5592 1988 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Setting limits: should age be used as a criterion in the allocation of health care?. Daniel Callahan, Joseph Fletcher, Richard Lindsay, James Childress. 11/30/88. WT 30 S495 1988 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Medical liability reform: the range of considerations. Kenneth S. Abraham, Robert E. Reynolds, James F. Childress, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr., moderator. 1/18/89. W 44 M4885 1989 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Illicit drugs: reducing the demand. Robert DuPont, Randolph Canterbury, Richard Bonnie, Oscar A. Thorup, Jr., moderator. 2/8/89. WM 270 I29 1989 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e The New hospital: how it got here and what it means. John T. Ashley, Don E. Detmer, Peter L Munger, William H. Muller, Jr. 2/15/89. WX 28 AV8 N532 1989 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Medical informatics: strategic weapon for health care, education and research. Robert Beck, Don Kaiser, Robert Darnall, Jr. Judy Ozbolt, Robert Reynolds. 2/22/89. Z 699.5.M39 M489 1989 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Medical school: stresses and successes. Randy Comerford, Janet Jeffries, Steve McNamara, John Martin. 3/8/89. W 18 M489 1989 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Increasing incidence of sexually transmitted diseases: risk taking and sexual behavior. Michael Rein, William Gardner, Christine Peterson; moderator, Oscar Thorup, Jr. 3/15/89. WC 140 I37 1989 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Cholesterol screening and education: from research to community action. Charles Olech, Robert Douglas Abbott, Rebecca Reeve; moderator, Richard Prindle. 4/19/89. WB 425 C547 1989 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Graduate medical education: financing and structure. Ruth Hanft, Cecil Samuelson, Peter Munger, Oscar A. Thorup. 9/20/89. W 20 G733 1989 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Substance abuse in pregnancy: examining the options. JoAnn Pinkerton, Sidney Callahan, Willis Spaulding. 9/27/89. WM 280 S941 1989 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Who are the homeless: where did they come from? What can be done if they refuse help?. David Hilfiker, Carl Yank, James F. Childress. 11/8/89. HV 4505 W628 1989 \u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e Update on AIDS: testing and treatment. Willard Cates, Brian Wispelwey, James F. Childress, Oscar A. Thorup. 11/15/89. WD 308 U662 1989 \u003c/li\u003e\n\n\u003c/ul\u003e","\u003cp\u003eEvent poster advertising a visiting exhibit at the Claude Moore Health Sciences Library, held in conjunction with a Medical Center Hour lecture featuring Michael Sappol.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eEvent poster advertising two events at UVA related to Theater of War, held in conjunction with a Medical Center Hour lecture.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThis accession consists of a digital file of the Vivian Pinn portrait created by Jonathan Linton that currently hangs in Pinn Hall of the UVA School of Medicine (as of 4/2/2025), as well as a description card with an image of the photograph on one side and an image of artist Jonathan Linton painting the image on the other.\u003c/p\u003e"]}]}},"label":"Breadcrumbs"}}},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_repositories_7_resources_212_c12_c01"}},{"id":"viu_repositories_3_resources_206_c01_c01","type":"Subseries","attributes":{"title":"Banking correspondence","abstract_or_scope":{"id":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_repositories_3_resources_206_c01_c01#abstract_or_scope","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":"\u003cp\u003eBox summaries Box 1: The Federal Reserve Bank Act and Federal Reserve system; the Federal Farm Loan Act; Panic of 1912; The Aldrich Bill; branch banks; central banking board; gold reserves; Currency [reform] Bill of 1913; Emergency Banking Act, 1933; the Banking Act of 1933 (Glass-Steagall Act; the Bank Bill of 1935; opposition to the National Industrial Recovery Act; the National Labor Relations Act; the Bank Holding Company Bill; and the Office of Price Administration.\u003c/p\u003e","label":"Abstract Or Scope"}},"breadcrumbs":{"id":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_repositories_3_resources_206_c01_c01#breadcrumbs","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":{"ref_ssi":"viu_repositories_3_resources_206_c01_c01","ref_ssm":["viu_repositories_3_resources_206_c01_c01"],"id":"viu_repositories_3_resources_206_c01_c01","ead_ssi":"viu_repositories_3_resources_206","_root_":"viu_repositories_3_resources_206","_nest_parent_":"viu_repositories_3_resources_206_c01","parent_ssi":"viu_repositories_3_resources_206_c01","parent_ssim":["viu_repositories_3_resources_206","viu_repositories_3_resources_206_c01"],"parent_ids_ssim":["viu_repositories_3_resources_206","viu_repositories_3_resources_206_c01"],"parent_unittitles_ssm":["Carter Glass Papers","Series 1. Banking"],"parent_unittitles_tesim":["Carter Glass Papers","Series 1. Banking"],"text":["Carter Glass Papers","Series 1. Banking","Banking correspondence","English","Box summaries\nBox 1: The Federal Reserve Bank Act and Federal Reserve system; the Federal Farm Loan Act; Panic of 1912; The Aldrich Bill; branch banks; central banking board; gold reserves; Currency [reform] Bill of 1913; Emergency Banking Act, 1933; the Banking Act of 1933 (Glass-Steagall Act; the Bank Bill of 1935; opposition to the National Industrial Recovery Act; the National Labor Relations Act; the Bank Holding Company Bill; and the Office of Price Administration.","Box 2: Federal Reserve Act (Glass-Owen Bill)6454, 2639, 7837;Aldrich-Vreeland Law;Federal Farm Loan Act Rural Credits Bill;and Clayton Anti-Trust Bill","Box 3: Federal Reserve Act; Federal Reserve Banks; Federal Farm Loan Act; Land Mortgage Bank Bill; Branch banking; Kern Bill; Hollis Buckley Bill; Usury laws; Charles S. Hamlin; Edmund D. Hulbert; William Gibbs McAdoo; J. H. Tregoe; Woodrow Wilson; John Skelton Williams; Henry A. Moehlenpah; Frederic A. Delano; and Carter Glass","Box 4: Federal Farm Loan Act;Rural credits;Federal Reserve Amendments and responses; McFadden Bill; Hollis Buckley Bill; and gold certificates","Box 5: Federal Reserve Amendments and responses (Kitchin and Hardwick Bill);and Pomerene Bill. Charles S. Hamlin,William Gibbs McAdoo,Woodrow Wilson,Clayton Act,George M. Reynolds,Paul M. Warburg,John Skelton Williams,and Carter Glass","Box 6: Federal Reserve Amendments and responses (Kitchin and Hardwick Bill); Federal Reserve Act authorship; Capital Issues Committee; Federal Land Bank of Baltimore; and the Revenue Act of 1918.George Norris,Edmund Platt, Frederic A. Delano, William P. G. Harding,Paul M. Warburg,Charles S. Hamlin, John Skelton Williams,Henry Parker Willis,Eugene Meyer,and Carter Glass","Box 7: Federal Reserve Act authorship; Federal Farm Loan Amendments; Federal Land Banks; currency shortage; check collection; Smoot Bill; Liberty loans; Federal Reserve Bank of New York; railroad and shipping costs; War Finance Corporation; and Second Pan American Conference. William P. G. Harding,George W. Norris,Robert L. Owen,Russell C. Leffingwell,Benjamin Strong,John Skelton Williams renomination,William Gibbs McAdoo,Charles S. Hamlin,and Carter Glass","Box 8: Federal Reserve Act authorship; Clayton Anti-Trust Act; Smoot Bill; check collecting fees; branch banking; Virginia-Carolina Joint StockLandBank; budget bill; excess profits tax; gold; and Liberty bonds. Walter Edward Harris, Charles A. Korbly,Edmund Platt,William Skelton Williams,William P. G. Harding,William Gibbs McAdoo, Hollins N. Randolph,Henry Parker Willis,Russell C. Leffingwell,Arthur Capper,Thomas B. McAdams,and Carter Glass","Box 9: Federal Reserve Act and authorship; Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond; Bank of Haysi; Bank of New York; Open market commercial paper rates; McFadden Bill; discount rates; Overman Resolution; Liberty bonds; Pan American Conference; and Russian trade.William P. G. Harding,John Skelton Williams,Thomas B. McAdams,Russell C. Leffingwell,Edmund Platt,John Thomas Heflin,Hollins N. Randolph,William Gibbs McAdoo,George J. Seay,Henry Parker Willis, George Armstrong,Benjamin Strong,and Carter Glass","Box 10: Federal Reserve System; McFadden Bill H. R. 2; Farm Loan Mortgage; discount rates and eligible paper; Pittman Silver Act; Frank A. Vanderlip banking plan; War Finance Corporation; Bank of New York; bank failure; Anderson Bill; Lenroot Bill; and William P. G. Harding reappointment.John Skelton Williams,Reed Smoot,Hollins N. Randolph,Russell C. Leffingwell,Thomas B. McAdams,Paul M. Warburg,Edmund Platt,Henry Parker Willis,Woodrow Wilson,Benjamin Strong, Daniel C. Roper, William Gibbs McAdoo,Charles S. Hamlin,George W. Norris,and Carter Glass","Box 12:Federal Reserve Act authorship; McNary-Haugen Billand (speech responses); McFadden Bill; Federal Farm Loan Act; and Carter Glass book. Walter Edward Harris,Paul Warburg,Norman Davis,Walter E. Edge,Charles W. Collins,Charles S. Hamlin,Henry Parker Willis,George J. Seay,Benjamin Strong,and Edmund Platt","Box 13: Pascagoula case; Federal Reserve Act authorship; McFadden Bill; \"Committee of One Hundred\"; Carter Glass book; and the McNary-Haugen Bill. Henry Parker Willis,William P. G. Harding,George J. Seay,Harry Flood Byrd,Bernard M. Baruch,Russell C. Leffingwell,Charles S. Hamlin,Charles W. Collins,Walter Edward Harris,Thomas B. McAdams,George W. Norris,and Edmund Platt","Box 14 Federal Reserve Act authorship; McFadden Bill; Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas; Lafollette Resolution; \"Committee of One Hundred\"; Federal Home Loan Bill; misuse of Federal Reserve System; President Roosevelt criticism of Federal Reserve System; Charles E. Mitchell; and bank failures. Eugene Meyer,Edmund Platt,Henry Parker Willis,Bishop James Cannon, Jr., Thomas B. McAdams,Russell C. Plainwell,and Elben C. Folks","Box 15: Federal Reserve Act authorship; responses to Depression and banking crisis; Bank of Kentucky; curb stock speculations; security abuses; Charles E. Mitchell; McFadden Bill; and criticism of Herbert Hoover. Thomas B. McAdams,Walter B. Mahoney,John W. Pole,Edmund Platt,Henry Parker Willis,Bernard M. Baruch,Eugene Meyer,William P. G. Harding,George L. Harrison,George W. Norris,George J. Seay,and Richard C. Whitney","Box 16: Responses to the Depressionand(banking crisis); and Bank of Kentucky.Jouett Shouse,Henry Parker Willis,Henry B. Steagall,Eugene Meyer,Charles S. Hamlin,Milton S. Florsheim,Samuel M. Kaplan,and Elben C. Folkes","Box 17: Responses to the Depression and banking crisis; President Hoover Plan; Federal Land Banks; Wall Street bankers; bank failures; Bank of Kentucky; Federal Reserve Act authorship; Federal Farm Loan Act; Federal Home Loan; and Hoover moratorium. Bernard M. Baruch,Jouett Shouse,Richard C. Whitney,Charles S. Hamlin,Henry A. Moehlenpah,Millard E. Tydings,Henry Parker Willis,Andrew W. Mellon,Edmund Platt,Eugene Meyer,Russell C. Leffingwell,and Thomas B. McAdams","Box 18:Depression and banking crisis; Bank of Kentucky; Senate Committee on Banking and Currency Hearings; Reconstruction Finance Corporation; Nye Report; Pan American Finance Conference; Gold; Silver; and death of E. C. Glass. Elben C. Folkes,Al Kaplan,Herbert Hoover,Jouett Shouse,Charles S. Hamlin,George L. Harrison, Thorwald Siegfried, Eugene Meyer,and Pat H. Drewery","Box 19:Federal Home Loan Bank; Federal Land Bank of Baltimore; foreclosures; Glass-Steagall; and Henry Parker Willis articles in France on gold upsetting to colleagues.Franklin Delano Roosevelt,John W. Pole,Henry B. Steagall,Oliver J. Sands,Russell C. Leffingwell,Charles W. Collins,Charles S. Hamlin,and George L. Harrison","Box 20-24: Glass Steagall responses; and Glass speech on gold","Box 25: Glass-Steagall Act; Goldsborough Bill; gold standard; Reconstruction Finance Corporation; Joint Stock Land Banks;Revenue Act of 1932; responses to Carter Glass speech;praise for Carter Glass; bank failures; Banking study; Holiday proclamation by President Roosevelt; Funding for projects such as the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California, and a bridge across the Potomac River; Herbert Hoover;Newton D. Baker;Russell C. Leffingwell;George L. Harrison; Eugene Meyer; Samuel Untermyer; Chester Morrill; George W. Norris; Richard S. Whaley;Princess Amelie Rives Troubetzkoy;James F. Byrnes;Louis Wiley; Robert J. Bulkley;John W. Owens;HenryParker Willis; and the Dallas Chamber of Commerce","Box 26: Responses to banking crisis and Depressionand criticism of Herbert Hoover","Box 27: Responses to Depression; McNary-Haugen Bill; Home Loan Bill; Emergency Farm Mortgage Act of 1933; Thomas Bill; Federal Reserve Amendment Section 10b; Glass-Steagall Banking Act; and Credit Report U.S. S. R. (George N. Peek).George L. Harrison,Chester Morrill,Russell C. Leffingwell,Louis T. McFadden,Emmanuel Kaplan,Hugh S. Johnson,and the National Recovery Act","Box 28: Glass-Steagall Act responses; Emergency Bank Bill; California banks; and Goldsborough Amendment. Edmund Platt and Frank A. Vanderlip","Box 29: Glass-Steagall Act responses, and Section 19 Statewide branch banking for national banks; Huey Long filibuster; bank guarantees; Charles E. Mitchell investigation; and continued moratorium on closing banks. Duncan U. Fletcher; Ferdinand Pecora; and Virginia Governor John Garland Pollard","Box 30: Gold, Reconstruction Finance Corporation, Senate Banking and Currency Committee investigation of J. P. Morgan; Glass-Steagall Banking Act; National Recovery Act; Emergency Banking Act relief; Morris Plan; and criticism of Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Duncan U. Fletcher; and William Gibbs McAdoo","Box 31: Senate investigation of J. P. Morgan;Gold standard; Expand use of silver; stability of the dollar; praise for Carter Glass radio speech \"Facts about Fiscal Policy of Our Government During the Past Few Years\" and \"Shall We Go Over the Precipice?\" Duncan U. Fletcher; Edmund Platt; and Herbert L. Myrick","Box 32: Rsponses to Glass speech [\"Shall We Go Over the Precipice?\"] against Roosevelt inflation bill; Emergency Bank Bill; Bankruptcy legislation; Banking Act of 1935; Credit Union Act; Marriner S. Eccles as Governor of the Federal Reserve Board; Branchbanking; Bank of the United States; death of Eugerne R. Black; and Philippine currency. Charles S. Hamlin; Edmund Platt; George W. Norris; George L. Harrison; Herny Parker Willis; Paul M. Warburg; Henry B. Steagall; Clifton A. Woodrum; Edward W. Kemmerer;Rudolph Spreckels; Sam M. Kaplan; John Foster Dulles; Milton Friedman; T. F. Wentworth; Dean Acheson; Chester Morrill; Walter Wyatt; Eugene R. Black; James P. Warburg; and James Elliott Heath","Box 33: (Fletcher-Rayburn Bill, Kean Bill; National Securities Exchange Act, McLeod Bill, or the Banking Act of 1935); Federal Reserve Amendment Section 12b; Morris-Sheppard Bill; Chester Morrill; Thomas B. McAdams; William Gibbs McAdoo; Elmer Thomas; Henry Morgenthau, Jr.; Eugene Meyer; Duncan U. Fletcher; Jesse H. Jones; and Richard C. Whitney","Box 34: Banking Act of 1933; National Securities Exchange Act; Kean Bill; Fletcher-Rayburn Bill; misuse of the Federal Reserve System; de-evaluation of the dollar; and Gold Reserve Act","Box 35: Banking Act of 1935; Gold Reserve Act; Gold speech of Russell C. Leffingwell; National Recovery Act; Hugh S. Johnson; Kaplan Plan; Robert L. Owen inquiry; Huey Long; Goldsborough Amendment;Elmer Thomas; Charles S. Hamlin; George Wharton Pepper; Henry H. Heiman; Henry Parker Willis; George W. Norris; Duncan U. Fletcher; J. F. T. O'Connor; Robert D. Kent; Royal S. Copeland; Edward W. Kemmerer; and A. Willis Robertson","Box 36: Responses to the Banking Act of 1935; Harry Flood Byrd; Duncan U. Fletcher; A. Willis Robertson; Leo T. Crowley; Jesse H. Jones; Edmund Platt; Henry Morgenthau, Jr.; J. F. T. O'Connor; Thomas B. McAdams; and Thomas P. Gore","Box 37: Responses to the Banking Act of 1935; Glass concerns about Marriner S. Eccles as Governor of the Federal Reserve Board and criticism of government and political control of banking; Federal Reserve Act authorship; Goldsborough Amendment; Townsend Plan; A. H. Dobson; Frank A. Vanderlip; Irving Fisher; Walter Lichtenstein; Arthur Capper; Duncan U. Fletcher; Bennett Champ Clark; Thomas P. Gore; Henry Heiman; Thomas B. McAdams; Hollins N. Randolph; Hugo L. Black; and Thorwald Siegfried","Box 38: Banking Act of 1935; Gold clause; Comptroller of the Currency; silver; Robert L. Owen inquiry; Reconstruction Finance Corporation; repeal of Thomas Amendment; concern about Marriner S. Eccles as Governor of the Federal Reserve Board; portrait of John Skelton Williams; Edmund Platt; Agnes and Eugene Meyer; Chester Morrill; Robert F. Wagner; Kenneth D. McKellar; George L. Harrison; Harry S. Truman; George W. Norris; Henry Parker Willis; Henry Morgenthau, Jr.; Marriner S. Eccles and Russell C. Leffingwell(Treasury and Nye Report)","Box 39: Repeal Thomas Amendment; Branch banking; Bankhead-Jones Farm Act; Federal Land Bank of Baltimore Bank Holding companies; and Reconstruction Finance Corporation.William Gibbs McAdoo,Edmund Platt,Thomas B. McAdams,Henry Heiman,Jesse H. Jones,Henry Morgenthau, Jr.,Robert L. Owen,and the death of Henry Parker Willis","Box 40: Henry Parker Willis Foundation; Federal Reserve Act anniversary; J. F. T. O'Connor resignation; misuse of the Federal Reserve System; Robert L. Owen and Carter Glass accusations against Marriner S. Eccles; Reconstruction Finance Corporation; Clayton Act; Mead Bill; De-evaluation of the dollar;silver program; Gold Act; Home Owners Loan Corporation Act; Self-liquidating Bill; and Barden Bill.Edmund Platt,Jesse H. Jones, William Gibbs McAdoo,Henry Morgenthau, Jr.,Robert F. Wagner,and Marriner S. Eccles","Box 41: Tribute to Edmund Platt; Embargo Act; Banking and Currency Committee pending legislation; Branch banking; Silver Purchase Act; de-evaluation of the dollar; Trust Indenture Act (Robert F.Wagner); Bank Holding company; Jones Wheeler Bill; Federal Home Loan Bank Act; Clayton Act; Townsend Plan; FDIC; Pittman Amendment; Farm Relief Bill; Reconstruction Finance Corporation; Wagner Lea Bill; and disappointment with Marriner S. Eccles;Harry Flood Byrd,Jesse H. Jones,Henry Heiman,Frederic Delano,and Leo T. Crowley","Box 42: Tribute to Carter Glass; Banking and Currency Committee pending legislation; FDIC and excess profits tax; Federal Reserve Amendment Section 23; medal for Howard Hughes; American Palestine Committee (Robert F. Wagner); Farm credit; Credit Union Act; price control; Bank Holding Company; Reconstruction Finance Corporation; de-evaluation of the dollar Federal Reserve Act authorship; and criticism of Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Cordell Hull; Walter Lichtenstein; Chester Morrill; Robert F. Wagner; and Leo T. Crowley"],"title_filing_ssi":"Banking correspondence","title_ssm":["Banking correspondence"],"title_tesim":["Banking correspondence"],"unitdate_inclusive_ssm":["1908-1946"],"normalized_date_ssm":["1908/1946"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Banking correspondence"],"component_level_isim":[2],"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"collection_ssim":["Carter Glass Papers"],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"child_component_count_isi":836,"level_ssm":["Subseries"],"level_ssim":["Subseries"],"sort_isi":2,"parent_access_restrict_tesm":["This collection is open for research. Restrictions apply to veterans claims."],"parent_access_terms_tesm":["There are no restrictions in this collection except for veterans claims."],"date_range_isim":[1908,1909,1910,1911,1912,1913,1914,1915,1916,1917,1918,1919,1920,1921,1922,1923,1924,1925,1926,1927,1928,1929,1930,1931,1932,1933,1934,1935,1936,1937,1938,1939,1940,1941,1942,1943,1944,1945,1946],"language_ssim":["English"],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eBox summaries\nBox 1: The Federal Reserve Bank Act and Federal Reserve system; the Federal Farm Loan Act; Panic of 1912; The Aldrich Bill; branch banks; central banking board; gold reserves; Currency [reform] Bill of 1913; Emergency Banking Act, 1933; the Banking Act of 1933 (Glass-Steagall Act; the Bank Bill of 1935; opposition to the National Industrial Recovery Act; the National Labor Relations Act; the Bank Holding Company Bill; and the Office of Price Administration.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eBox 2: Federal Reserve Act (Glass-Owen Bill)6454, 2639, 7837;Aldrich-Vreeland Law;Federal Farm Loan Act Rural Credits Bill;and Clayton Anti-Trust Bill\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eBox 3: Federal Reserve Act; Federal Reserve Banks; Federal Farm Loan Act; Land Mortgage Bank Bill; Branch banking; Kern Bill; Hollis Buckley Bill; Usury laws; Charles S. Hamlin; Edmund D. Hulbert; William Gibbs McAdoo; J. H. Tregoe; Woodrow Wilson; John Skelton Williams; Henry A. Moehlenpah; Frederic A. Delano; and Carter Glass\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eBox 4: Federal Farm Loan Act;Rural credits;Federal Reserve Amendments and responses; McFadden Bill; Hollis Buckley Bill; and gold certificates\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eBox 5: Federal Reserve Amendments and responses (Kitchin and Hardwick Bill);and Pomerene Bill. Charles S. Hamlin,William Gibbs McAdoo,Woodrow Wilson,Clayton Act,George M. Reynolds,Paul M. Warburg,John Skelton Williams,and Carter Glass\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eBox 6: Federal Reserve Amendments and responses (Kitchin and Hardwick Bill); Federal Reserve Act authorship; Capital Issues Committee; Federal Land Bank of Baltimore; and the Revenue Act of 1918.George Norris,Edmund Platt, Frederic A. Delano, William P. G. Harding,Paul M. Warburg,Charles S. Hamlin, John Skelton Williams,Henry Parker Willis,Eugene Meyer,and Carter Glass\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eBox 7: Federal Reserve Act authorship; Federal Farm Loan Amendments; Federal Land Banks; currency shortage; check collection; Smoot Bill; Liberty loans; Federal Reserve Bank of New York; railroad and shipping costs; War Finance Corporation; and Second Pan American Conference. William P. G. Harding,George W. Norris,Robert L. Owen,Russell C. Leffingwell,Benjamin Strong,John Skelton Williams renomination,William Gibbs McAdoo,Charles S. Hamlin,and Carter Glass\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eBox 8: Federal Reserve Act authorship; Clayton Anti-Trust Act; Smoot Bill; check collecting fees; branch banking; Virginia-Carolina Joint StockLandBank; budget bill; excess profits tax; gold; and Liberty bonds. Walter Edward Harris, Charles A. Korbly,Edmund Platt,William Skelton Williams,William P. G. Harding,William Gibbs McAdoo, Hollins N. Randolph,Henry Parker Willis,Russell C. Leffingwell,Arthur Capper,Thomas B. McAdams,and Carter Glass\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eBox 9: Federal Reserve Act and authorship; Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond; Bank of Haysi; Bank of New York; Open market commercial paper rates; McFadden Bill; discount rates; Overman Resolution; Liberty bonds; Pan American Conference; and Russian trade.William P. G. Harding,John Skelton Williams,Thomas B. McAdams,Russell C. Leffingwell,Edmund Platt,John Thomas Heflin,Hollins N. Randolph,William Gibbs McAdoo,George J. Seay,Henry Parker Willis, George Armstrong,Benjamin Strong,and Carter Glass\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eBox 10: Federal Reserve System; McFadden Bill H. R. 2; Farm Loan Mortgage; discount rates and eligible paper; Pittman Silver Act; Frank A. Vanderlip banking plan; War Finance Corporation; Bank of New York; bank failure; Anderson Bill; Lenroot Bill; and William P. G. Harding reappointment.John Skelton Williams,Reed Smoot,Hollins N. Randolph,Russell C. Leffingwell,Thomas B. McAdams,Paul M. Warburg,Edmund Platt,Henry Parker Willis,Woodrow Wilson,Benjamin Strong, Daniel C. Roper, William Gibbs McAdoo,Charles S. Hamlin,George W. Norris,and Carter Glass\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eBox 12:Federal Reserve Act authorship; McNary-Haugen Billand (speech responses); McFadden Bill; Federal Farm Loan Act; and Carter Glass book. Walter Edward Harris,Paul Warburg,Norman Davis,Walter E. Edge,Charles W. Collins,Charles S. Hamlin,Henry Parker Willis,George J. Seay,Benjamin Strong,and Edmund Platt\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eBox 13: Pascagoula case; Federal Reserve Act authorship; McFadden Bill; \"Committee of One Hundred\"; Carter Glass book; and the McNary-Haugen Bill. Henry Parker Willis,William P. G. Harding,George J. Seay,Harry Flood Byrd,Bernard M. Baruch,Russell C. Leffingwell,Charles S. Hamlin,Charles W. Collins,Walter Edward Harris,Thomas B. McAdams,George W. Norris,and Edmund Platt\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eBox 14 Federal Reserve Act authorship; McFadden Bill; Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas; Lafollette Resolution; \"Committee of One Hundred\"; Federal Home Loan Bill; misuse of Federal Reserve System; President Roosevelt criticism of Federal Reserve System; Charles E. Mitchell; and bank failures. Eugene Meyer,Edmund Platt,Henry Parker Willis,Bishop James Cannon, Jr., Thomas B. McAdams,Russell C. Plainwell,and Elben C. Folks\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eBox 15: Federal Reserve Act authorship; responses to Depression and banking crisis; Bank of Kentucky; curb stock speculations; security abuses; Charles E. Mitchell; McFadden Bill; and criticism of Herbert Hoover. Thomas B. McAdams,Walter B. Mahoney,John W. Pole,Edmund Platt,Henry Parker Willis,Bernard M. Baruch,Eugene Meyer,William P. G. Harding,George L. Harrison,George W. Norris,George J. Seay,and Richard C. Whitney\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eBox 16: Responses to the Depressionand(banking crisis); and Bank of Kentucky.Jouett Shouse,Henry Parker Willis,Henry B. Steagall,Eugene Meyer,Charles S. Hamlin,Milton S. Florsheim,Samuel M. Kaplan,and Elben C. Folkes\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eBox 17: Responses to the Depression and banking crisis; President Hoover Plan; Federal Land Banks; Wall Street bankers; bank failures; Bank of Kentucky; Federal Reserve Act authorship; Federal Farm Loan Act; Federal Home Loan; and Hoover moratorium. Bernard M. Baruch,Jouett Shouse,Richard C. Whitney,Charles S. Hamlin,Henry A. Moehlenpah,Millard E. Tydings,Henry Parker Willis,Andrew W. Mellon,Edmund Platt,Eugene Meyer,Russell C. Leffingwell,and Thomas B. McAdams\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eBox 18:Depression and banking crisis; Bank of Kentucky; Senate Committee on Banking and Currency Hearings; Reconstruction Finance Corporation; Nye Report; Pan American Finance Conference; Gold; Silver; and death of E. C. Glass. Elben C. Folkes,Al Kaplan,Herbert Hoover,Jouett Shouse,Charles S. Hamlin,George L. Harrison, Thorwald Siegfried, Eugene Meyer,and Pat H. Drewery\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eBox 19:Federal Home Loan Bank; Federal Land Bank of Baltimore; foreclosures; Glass-Steagall; and Henry Parker Willis articles in France on gold upsetting to colleagues.Franklin Delano Roosevelt,John W. Pole,Henry B. Steagall,Oliver J. Sands,Russell C. Leffingwell,Charles W. Collins,Charles S. Hamlin,and George L. Harrison\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eBox 20-24: Glass Steagall responses; and Glass speech on gold\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eBox 25: Glass-Steagall Act; Goldsborough Bill; gold standard; Reconstruction Finance Corporation; Joint Stock Land Banks;Revenue Act of 1932; responses to Carter Glass speech;praise for Carter Glass; bank failures; Banking study; Holiday proclamation by President Roosevelt; Funding for projects such as the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California, and a bridge across the Potomac River; Herbert Hoover;Newton D. Baker;Russell C. Leffingwell;George L. Harrison; Eugene Meyer; Samuel Untermyer; Chester Morrill; George W. Norris; Richard S. Whaley;Princess Amelie Rives Troubetzkoy;James F. Byrnes;Louis Wiley; Robert J. Bulkley;John W. Owens;HenryParker Willis; and the Dallas Chamber of Commerce\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eBox 26: Responses to banking crisis and Depressionand criticism of Herbert Hoover\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eBox 27: Responses to Depression; McNary-Haugen Bill; Home Loan Bill; Emergency Farm Mortgage Act of 1933; Thomas Bill; Federal Reserve Amendment Section 10b; Glass-Steagall Banking Act; and Credit Report U.S. S. R. (George N. Peek).George L. Harrison,Chester Morrill,Russell C. Leffingwell,Louis T. McFadden,Emmanuel Kaplan,Hugh S. Johnson,and the National Recovery Act\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eBox 28: Glass-Steagall Act responses; Emergency Bank Bill; California banks; and Goldsborough Amendment. Edmund Platt and Frank A. Vanderlip\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eBox 29: Glass-Steagall Act responses, and Section 19 Statewide branch banking for national banks; Huey Long filibuster; bank guarantees; Charles E. Mitchell investigation; and continued moratorium on closing banks. Duncan U. Fletcher; Ferdinand Pecora; and Virginia Governor John Garland Pollard\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eBox 30: Gold, Reconstruction Finance Corporation, Senate Banking and Currency Committee investigation of J. P. Morgan; Glass-Steagall Banking Act; National Recovery Act; Emergency Banking Act relief; Morris Plan; and criticism of Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Duncan U. Fletcher; and William Gibbs McAdoo\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eBox 31: Senate investigation of J. P. Morgan;Gold standard; Expand use of silver; stability of the dollar; praise for Carter Glass radio speech \"Facts about Fiscal Policy of Our Government During the Past Few Years\" and \"Shall We Go Over the Precipice?\" Duncan U. Fletcher; Edmund Platt; and Herbert L. Myrick\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eBox 32: Rsponses to Glass speech [\"Shall We Go Over the Precipice?\"] against Roosevelt inflation bill; Emergency Bank Bill; Bankruptcy legislation; Banking Act of 1935; Credit Union Act; Marriner S. Eccles as Governor of the Federal Reserve Board; Branchbanking; Bank of the United States; death of Eugerne R. Black; and Philippine currency. Charles S. Hamlin; Edmund Platt; George W. Norris; George L. Harrison; Herny Parker Willis; Paul M. Warburg; Henry B. Steagall; Clifton A. Woodrum; Edward W. Kemmerer;Rudolph Spreckels; Sam M. Kaplan; John Foster Dulles; Milton Friedman; T. F. Wentworth; Dean Acheson; Chester Morrill; Walter Wyatt; Eugene R. Black; James P. Warburg; and James Elliott Heath\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eBox 33: (Fletcher-Rayburn Bill, Kean Bill; National Securities Exchange Act, McLeod Bill, or the Banking Act of 1935); Federal Reserve Amendment Section 12b; Morris-Sheppard Bill; Chester Morrill; Thomas B. McAdams; William Gibbs McAdoo; Elmer Thomas; Henry Morgenthau, Jr.; Eugene Meyer; Duncan U. Fletcher; Jesse H. Jones; and Richard C. Whitney\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eBox 34: Banking Act of 1933; National Securities Exchange Act; Kean Bill; Fletcher-Rayburn Bill; misuse of the Federal Reserve System; de-evaluation of the dollar; and Gold Reserve Act\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eBox 35: Banking Act of 1935; Gold Reserve Act; Gold speech of Russell C. Leffingwell; National Recovery Act; Hugh S. Johnson; Kaplan Plan; Robert L. Owen inquiry; Huey Long; Goldsborough Amendment;Elmer Thomas; Charles S. Hamlin; George Wharton Pepper; Henry H. Heiman; Henry Parker Willis; George W. Norris; Duncan U. Fletcher; J. F. T. O'Connor; Robert D. Kent; Royal S. Copeland; Edward W. Kemmerer; and A. Willis Robertson\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eBox 36: Responses to the Banking Act of 1935; Harry Flood Byrd; Duncan U. Fletcher; A. Willis Robertson; Leo T. Crowley; Jesse H. Jones; Edmund Platt; Henry Morgenthau, Jr.; J. F. T. O'Connor; Thomas B. McAdams; and Thomas P. Gore\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eBox 37: Responses to the Banking Act of 1935; Glass concerns about Marriner S. Eccles as Governor of the Federal Reserve Board and criticism of government and political control of banking; Federal Reserve Act authorship; Goldsborough Amendment; Townsend Plan; A. H. Dobson; Frank A. Vanderlip; Irving Fisher; Walter Lichtenstein; Arthur Capper; Duncan U. Fletcher; Bennett Champ Clark; Thomas P. Gore; Henry Heiman; Thomas B. McAdams; Hollins N. Randolph; Hugo L. Black; and Thorwald Siegfried\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eBox 38: Banking Act of 1935; Gold clause; Comptroller of the Currency; silver; Robert L. Owen inquiry; Reconstruction Finance Corporation; repeal of Thomas Amendment; concern about Marriner S. Eccles as Governor of the Federal Reserve Board; portrait of John Skelton Williams; Edmund Platt; Agnes and Eugene Meyer; Chester Morrill; Robert F. Wagner; Kenneth D. McKellar; George L. Harrison; Harry S. Truman; George W. Norris; Henry Parker Willis; Henry Morgenthau, Jr.; Marriner S. Eccles and Russell C. Leffingwell(Treasury and Nye Report)\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eBox 39: Repeal Thomas Amendment; Branch banking; Bankhead-Jones Farm Act; Federal Land Bank of Baltimore Bank Holding companies; and Reconstruction Finance Corporation.William Gibbs McAdoo,Edmund Platt,Thomas B. McAdams,Henry Heiman,Jesse H. Jones,Henry Morgenthau, Jr.,Robert L. Owen,and the death of Henry Parker Willis\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eBox 40: Henry Parker Willis Foundation; Federal Reserve Act anniversary; J. F. T. O'Connor resignation; misuse of the Federal Reserve System; Robert L. Owen and Carter Glass accusations against Marriner S. Eccles; Reconstruction Finance Corporation; Clayton Act; Mead Bill; De-evaluation of the dollar;silver program; Gold Act; Home Owners Loan Corporation Act; Self-liquidating Bill; and Barden Bill.Edmund Platt,Jesse H. Jones, William Gibbs McAdoo,Henry Morgenthau, Jr.,Robert F. Wagner,and Marriner S. Eccles\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eBox 41: Tribute to Edmund Platt; Embargo Act; Banking and Currency Committee pending legislation; Branch banking; Silver Purchase Act; de-evaluation of the dollar; Trust Indenture Act (Robert F.Wagner); Bank Holding company; Jones Wheeler Bill; Federal Home Loan Bank Act; Clayton Act; Townsend Plan; FDIC; Pittman Amendment; Farm Relief Bill; Reconstruction Finance Corporation; Wagner Lea Bill; and disappointment with Marriner S. Eccles;Harry Flood Byrd,Jesse H. Jones,Henry Heiman,Frederic Delano,and Leo T. Crowley\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eBox 42: Tribute to Carter Glass; Banking and Currency Committee pending legislation; FDIC and excess profits tax; Federal Reserve Amendment Section 23; medal for Howard Hughes; American Palestine Committee (Robert F. Wagner); Farm credit; Credit Union Act; price control; Bank Holding Company; Reconstruction Finance Corporation; de-evaluation of the dollar Federal Reserve Act authorship; and criticism of Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Cordell Hull; Walter Lichtenstein; Chester Morrill; Robert F. Wagner; and Leo T. Crowley\u003c/p\u003e"],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Scope and Contents"],"scopecontent_tesim":["Box summaries\nBox 1: The Federal Reserve Bank Act and Federal Reserve system; the Federal Farm Loan Act; Panic of 1912; The Aldrich Bill; branch banks; central banking board; gold reserves; Currency [reform] Bill of 1913; Emergency Banking Act, 1933; the Banking Act of 1933 (Glass-Steagall Act; the Bank Bill of 1935; opposition to the National Industrial Recovery Act; the National Labor Relations Act; the Bank Holding Company Bill; and the Office of Price Administration.","Box 2: Federal Reserve Act (Glass-Owen Bill)6454, 2639, 7837;Aldrich-Vreeland Law;Federal Farm Loan Act Rural Credits Bill;and Clayton Anti-Trust Bill","Box 3: Federal Reserve Act; Federal Reserve Banks; Federal Farm Loan Act; Land Mortgage Bank Bill; Branch banking; Kern Bill; Hollis Buckley Bill; Usury laws; Charles S. Hamlin; Edmund D. Hulbert; William Gibbs McAdoo; J. H. Tregoe; Woodrow Wilson; John Skelton Williams; Henry A. Moehlenpah; Frederic A. Delano; and Carter Glass","Box 4: Federal Farm Loan Act;Rural credits;Federal Reserve Amendments and responses; McFadden Bill; Hollis Buckley Bill; and gold certificates","Box 5: Federal Reserve Amendments and responses (Kitchin and Hardwick Bill);and Pomerene Bill. Charles S. Hamlin,William Gibbs McAdoo,Woodrow Wilson,Clayton Act,George M. Reynolds,Paul M. Warburg,John Skelton Williams,and Carter Glass","Box 6: Federal Reserve Amendments and responses (Kitchin and Hardwick Bill); Federal Reserve Act authorship; Capital Issues Committee; Federal Land Bank of Baltimore; and the Revenue Act of 1918.George Norris,Edmund Platt, Frederic A. Delano, William P. G. Harding,Paul M. Warburg,Charles S. Hamlin, John Skelton Williams,Henry Parker Willis,Eugene Meyer,and Carter Glass","Box 7: Federal Reserve Act authorship; Federal Farm Loan Amendments; Federal Land Banks; currency shortage; check collection; Smoot Bill; Liberty loans; Federal Reserve Bank of New York; railroad and shipping costs; War Finance Corporation; and Second Pan American Conference. William P. G. Harding,George W. Norris,Robert L. Owen,Russell C. Leffingwell,Benjamin Strong,John Skelton Williams renomination,William Gibbs McAdoo,Charles S. Hamlin,and Carter Glass","Box 8: Federal Reserve Act authorship; Clayton Anti-Trust Act; Smoot Bill; check collecting fees; branch banking; Virginia-Carolina Joint StockLandBank; budget bill; excess profits tax; gold; and Liberty bonds. Walter Edward Harris, Charles A. Korbly,Edmund Platt,William Skelton Williams,William P. G. Harding,William Gibbs McAdoo, Hollins N. Randolph,Henry Parker Willis,Russell C. Leffingwell,Arthur Capper,Thomas B. McAdams,and Carter Glass","Box 9: Federal Reserve Act and authorship; Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond; Bank of Haysi; Bank of New York; Open market commercial paper rates; McFadden Bill; discount rates; Overman Resolution; Liberty bonds; Pan American Conference; and Russian trade.William P. G. Harding,John Skelton Williams,Thomas B. McAdams,Russell C. Leffingwell,Edmund Platt,John Thomas Heflin,Hollins N. Randolph,William Gibbs McAdoo,George J. Seay,Henry Parker Willis, George Armstrong,Benjamin Strong,and Carter Glass","Box 10: Federal Reserve System; McFadden Bill H. R. 2; Farm Loan Mortgage; discount rates and eligible paper; Pittman Silver Act; Frank A. Vanderlip banking plan; War Finance Corporation; Bank of New York; bank failure; Anderson Bill; Lenroot Bill; and William P. G. Harding reappointment.John Skelton Williams,Reed Smoot,Hollins N. Randolph,Russell C. Leffingwell,Thomas B. McAdams,Paul M. Warburg,Edmund Platt,Henry Parker Willis,Woodrow Wilson,Benjamin Strong, Daniel C. Roper, William Gibbs McAdoo,Charles S. Hamlin,George W. Norris,and Carter Glass","Box 12:Federal Reserve Act authorship; McNary-Haugen Billand (speech responses); McFadden Bill; Federal Farm Loan Act; and Carter Glass book. Walter Edward Harris,Paul Warburg,Norman Davis,Walter E. Edge,Charles W. Collins,Charles S. Hamlin,Henry Parker Willis,George J. Seay,Benjamin Strong,and Edmund Platt","Box 13: Pascagoula case; Federal Reserve Act authorship; McFadden Bill; \"Committee of One Hundred\"; Carter Glass book; and the McNary-Haugen Bill. Henry Parker Willis,William P. G. Harding,George J. Seay,Harry Flood Byrd,Bernard M. Baruch,Russell C. Leffingwell,Charles S. Hamlin,Charles W. Collins,Walter Edward Harris,Thomas B. McAdams,George W. Norris,and Edmund Platt","Box 14 Federal Reserve Act authorship; McFadden Bill; Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas; Lafollette Resolution; \"Committee of One Hundred\"; Federal Home Loan Bill; misuse of Federal Reserve System; President Roosevelt criticism of Federal Reserve System; Charles E. Mitchell; and bank failures. Eugene Meyer,Edmund Platt,Henry Parker Willis,Bishop James Cannon, Jr., Thomas B. McAdams,Russell C. Plainwell,and Elben C. Folks","Box 15: Federal Reserve Act authorship; responses to Depression and banking crisis; Bank of Kentucky; curb stock speculations; security abuses; Charles E. Mitchell; McFadden Bill; and criticism of Herbert Hoover. Thomas B. McAdams,Walter B. Mahoney,John W. Pole,Edmund Platt,Henry Parker Willis,Bernard M. Baruch,Eugene Meyer,William P. G. Harding,George L. Harrison,George W. Norris,George J. Seay,and Richard C. Whitney","Box 16: Responses to the Depressionand(banking crisis); and Bank of Kentucky.Jouett Shouse,Henry Parker Willis,Henry B. Steagall,Eugene Meyer,Charles S. Hamlin,Milton S. Florsheim,Samuel M. Kaplan,and Elben C. Folkes","Box 17: Responses to the Depression and banking crisis; President Hoover Plan; Federal Land Banks; Wall Street bankers; bank failures; Bank of Kentucky; Federal Reserve Act authorship; Federal Farm Loan Act; Federal Home Loan; and Hoover moratorium. Bernard M. Baruch,Jouett Shouse,Richard C. Whitney,Charles S. Hamlin,Henry A. Moehlenpah,Millard E. Tydings,Henry Parker Willis,Andrew W. Mellon,Edmund Platt,Eugene Meyer,Russell C. Leffingwell,and Thomas B. McAdams","Box 18:Depression and banking crisis; Bank of Kentucky; Senate Committee on Banking and Currency Hearings; Reconstruction Finance Corporation; Nye Report; Pan American Finance Conference; Gold; Silver; and death of E. C. Glass. Elben C. Folkes,Al Kaplan,Herbert Hoover,Jouett Shouse,Charles S. Hamlin,George L. Harrison, Thorwald Siegfried, Eugene Meyer,and Pat H. Drewery","Box 19:Federal Home Loan Bank; Federal Land Bank of Baltimore; foreclosures; Glass-Steagall; and Henry Parker Willis articles in France on gold upsetting to colleagues.Franklin Delano Roosevelt,John W. Pole,Henry B. Steagall,Oliver J. Sands,Russell C. Leffingwell,Charles W. Collins,Charles S. Hamlin,and George L. Harrison","Box 20-24: Glass Steagall responses; and Glass speech on gold","Box 25: Glass-Steagall Act; Goldsborough Bill; gold standard; Reconstruction Finance Corporation; Joint Stock Land Banks;Revenue Act of 1932; responses to Carter Glass speech;praise for Carter Glass; bank failures; Banking study; Holiday proclamation by President Roosevelt; Funding for projects such as the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California, and a bridge across the Potomac River; Herbert Hoover;Newton D. Baker;Russell C. Leffingwell;George L. Harrison; Eugene Meyer; Samuel Untermyer; Chester Morrill; George W. Norris; Richard S. Whaley;Princess Amelie Rives Troubetzkoy;James F. Byrnes;Louis Wiley; Robert J. Bulkley;John W. Owens;HenryParker Willis; and the Dallas Chamber of Commerce","Box 26: Responses to banking crisis and Depressionand criticism of Herbert Hoover","Box 27: Responses to Depression; McNary-Haugen Bill; Home Loan Bill; Emergency Farm Mortgage Act of 1933; Thomas Bill; Federal Reserve Amendment Section 10b; Glass-Steagall Banking Act; and Credit Report U.S. S. R. (George N. Peek).George L. Harrison,Chester Morrill,Russell C. Leffingwell,Louis T. McFadden,Emmanuel Kaplan,Hugh S. Johnson,and the National Recovery Act","Box 28: Glass-Steagall Act responses; Emergency Bank Bill; California banks; and Goldsborough Amendment. Edmund Platt and Frank A. Vanderlip","Box 29: Glass-Steagall Act responses, and Section 19 Statewide branch banking for national banks; Huey Long filibuster; bank guarantees; Charles E. Mitchell investigation; and continued moratorium on closing banks. Duncan U. Fletcher; Ferdinand Pecora; and Virginia Governor John Garland Pollard","Box 30: Gold, Reconstruction Finance Corporation, Senate Banking and Currency Committee investigation of J. P. Morgan; Glass-Steagall Banking Act; National Recovery Act; Emergency Banking Act relief; Morris Plan; and criticism of Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Duncan U. Fletcher; and William Gibbs McAdoo","Box 31: Senate investigation of J. P. Morgan;Gold standard; Expand use of silver; stability of the dollar; praise for Carter Glass radio speech \"Facts about Fiscal Policy of Our Government During the Past Few Years\" and \"Shall We Go Over the Precipice?\" Duncan U. Fletcher; Edmund Platt; and Herbert L. Myrick","Box 32: Rsponses to Glass speech [\"Shall We Go Over the Precipice?\"] against Roosevelt inflation bill; Emergency Bank Bill; Bankruptcy legislation; Banking Act of 1935; Credit Union Act; Marriner S. Eccles as Governor of the Federal Reserve Board; Branchbanking; Bank of the United States; death of Eugerne R. Black; and Philippine currency. Charles S. Hamlin; Edmund Platt; George W. Norris; George L. Harrison; Herny Parker Willis; Paul M. Warburg; Henry B. Steagall; Clifton A. Woodrum; Edward W. Kemmerer;Rudolph Spreckels; Sam M. Kaplan; John Foster Dulles; Milton Friedman; T. F. Wentworth; Dean Acheson; Chester Morrill; Walter Wyatt; Eugene R. Black; James P. Warburg; and James Elliott Heath","Box 33: (Fletcher-Rayburn Bill, Kean Bill; National Securities Exchange Act, McLeod Bill, or the Banking Act of 1935); Federal Reserve Amendment Section 12b; Morris-Sheppard Bill; Chester Morrill; Thomas B. McAdams; William Gibbs McAdoo; Elmer Thomas; Henry Morgenthau, Jr.; Eugene Meyer; Duncan U. Fletcher; Jesse H. Jones; and Richard C. Whitney","Box 34: Banking Act of 1933; National Securities Exchange Act; Kean Bill; Fletcher-Rayburn Bill; misuse of the Federal Reserve System; de-evaluation of the dollar; and Gold Reserve Act","Box 35: Banking Act of 1935; Gold Reserve Act; Gold speech of Russell C. Leffingwell; National Recovery Act; Hugh S. Johnson; Kaplan Plan; Robert L. Owen inquiry; Huey Long; Goldsborough Amendment;Elmer Thomas; Charles S. Hamlin; George Wharton Pepper; Henry H. Heiman; Henry Parker Willis; George W. Norris; Duncan U. Fletcher; J. F. T. O'Connor; Robert D. Kent; Royal S. Copeland; Edward W. Kemmerer; and A. Willis Robertson","Box 36: Responses to the Banking Act of 1935; Harry Flood Byrd; Duncan U. Fletcher; A. Willis Robertson; Leo T. Crowley; Jesse H. Jones; Edmund Platt; Henry Morgenthau, Jr.; J. F. T. O'Connor; Thomas B. McAdams; and Thomas P. Gore","Box 37: Responses to the Banking Act of 1935; Glass concerns about Marriner S. Eccles as Governor of the Federal Reserve Board and criticism of government and political control of banking; Federal Reserve Act authorship; Goldsborough Amendment; Townsend Plan; A. H. Dobson; Frank A. Vanderlip; Irving Fisher; Walter Lichtenstein; Arthur Capper; Duncan U. Fletcher; Bennett Champ Clark; Thomas P. Gore; Henry Heiman; Thomas B. McAdams; Hollins N. Randolph; Hugo L. Black; and Thorwald Siegfried","Box 38: Banking Act of 1935; Gold clause; Comptroller of the Currency; silver; Robert L. Owen inquiry; Reconstruction Finance Corporation; repeal of Thomas Amendment; concern about Marriner S. Eccles as Governor of the Federal Reserve Board; portrait of John Skelton Williams; Edmund Platt; Agnes and Eugene Meyer; Chester Morrill; Robert F. Wagner; Kenneth D. McKellar; George L. Harrison; Harry S. Truman; George W. Norris; Henry Parker Willis; Henry Morgenthau, Jr.; Marriner S. Eccles and Russell C. Leffingwell(Treasury and Nye Report)","Box 39: Repeal Thomas Amendment; Branch banking; Bankhead-Jones Farm Act; Federal Land Bank of Baltimore Bank Holding companies; and Reconstruction Finance Corporation.William Gibbs McAdoo,Edmund Platt,Thomas B. McAdams,Henry Heiman,Jesse H. Jones,Henry Morgenthau, Jr.,Robert L. Owen,and the death of Henry Parker Willis","Box 40: Henry Parker Willis Foundation; Federal Reserve Act anniversary; J. F. T. O'Connor resignation; misuse of the Federal Reserve System; Robert L. Owen and Carter Glass accusations against Marriner S. Eccles; Reconstruction Finance Corporation; Clayton Act; Mead Bill; De-evaluation of the dollar;silver program; Gold Act; Home Owners Loan Corporation Act; Self-liquidating Bill; and Barden Bill.Edmund Platt,Jesse H. Jones, William Gibbs McAdoo,Henry Morgenthau, Jr.,Robert F. Wagner,and Marriner S. Eccles","Box 41: Tribute to Edmund Platt; Embargo Act; Banking and Currency Committee pending legislation; Branch banking; Silver Purchase Act; de-evaluation of the dollar; Trust Indenture Act (Robert F.Wagner); Bank Holding company; Jones Wheeler Bill; Federal Home Loan Bank Act; Clayton Act; Townsend Plan; FDIC; Pittman Amendment; Farm Relief Bill; Reconstruction Finance Corporation; Wagner Lea Bill; and disappointment with Marriner S. Eccles;Harry Flood Byrd,Jesse H. Jones,Henry Heiman,Frederic Delano,and Leo T. Crowley","Box 42: Tribute to Carter Glass; Banking and Currency Committee pending legislation; FDIC and excess profits tax; Federal Reserve Amendment Section 23; medal for Howard Hughes; American Palestine Committee (Robert F. Wagner); Farm credit; Credit Union Act; price control; Bank Holding Company; Reconstruction Finance Corporation; de-evaluation of the dollar Federal Reserve Act authorship; and criticism of Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Cordell Hull; Walter Lichtenstein; Chester Morrill; Robert F. Wagner; and Leo T. Crowley"],"_nest_path_":"/components#0/components#0","timestamp":"2026-05-20T23:38:40.572Z","collection":{"numFound":1,"start":0,"numFoundExact":true,"docs":[{"id":"viu_repositories_3_resources_206","ead_ssi":"viu_repositories_3_resources_206","_root_":"viu_repositories_3_resources_206","_nest_parent_":"viu_repositories_3_resources_206","ead_source_url_ssi":"data/oai/UVA/repositories_3_resources_206.xml","aspace_url_ssi":"https://archives.lib.virginia.edu/ark:/59853/146110","title_filing_ssi":"Glass, Carter, papers","title_ssm":["Carter Glass Papers"],"title_tesim":["Carter Glass Papers"],"unitdate_ssm":["1820-1946"],"unitdate_inclusive_ssm":["1820-1946"],"level_ssm":["collection"],"level_ssim":["Collection"],"unitid_ssm":["MSS 2913","Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","/repositories/3/resources/206"],"text":["MSS 2913","Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","/repositories/3/resources/206","Carter Glass Papers","Virginia -- Politics and government -- 20th century","Banks and banking -- United States","Judges -- Selection and appointment","Depressions -- 1929 -- United States","Labor laws and legislation -- United States","World War, 1939-1945","World War, 1914-1918","This collection is open for research. Restrictions apply to veterans claims.","The collection is arranged into four series: Series 1. Banking: Subseries banking correspondence,  banking printed, Series 2. Correspondence: Subseries legislative, military, political, topical, greeting cards, business and related cards, honors, constituent (patronage, praise),veterans claim (restricted), and veterinary (farming), Series 3. Manuscripts and miscellaneous, Series 4. Printed and miscellaneous: Subseries newspaper clippings, articles, bills, reports and photographs, speeches, and election tickets. ","Due to the large size of this collection these categories are meant as general guidelines and some cross over of subjects can be expected throughout the series. Similarly,further searching may be necessary if an area of research is not found in the identified series of the guide, for example military correspondence is located chronologically throughout the collection and as a subseries.","Series 1 Banking Correspondence is in boxes 1-43, 171-177; Banking Printed is in boxes 44-47; Series 2 Correspondence: Legislative Correspondence is in boxes 47-105, 178-180; Military Correspondence is in boxes 105-109; Political Correspondence is in boxes 109-143, 180-183; Topical Correspondence is in boxes 143-169; 183-193; Greeting Cards are in boxes 169-170; Honors are in box 170; Constituent Correspondence is in boxes 194-220; Patronage Correspondence is in boxes 220-249; Praise for Carter Glass is in boxes 250-258; Invitations are in boxes 259-264; Veteran's Claims (restricted) are in boxes 265-268; Veterinarian and farming (cows) are in box 269; Series 3 Manuscripts and Miscellaneous are in box 270; Series 4 Printed(including newspaper articles, photographs, and speeches) are in boxes 271-279; Letterbooks for 1918-1919 are in boxes 281-282."," Carter Glass (January 4, 1858 – May 28, 1946) was born on January 4, 1858, in Lynchburg, Virginia, to Robert Henry Glass and Augusta Elizabeth Christian. He became a newspaper publisher (like his father)and after hearing a speech by William Jenning Bryan in 1896, entered politics in 1902 as a Democrat in the United States House of Representatives and was re-elected to eight terms. He was a United States Senator from Lynchburg, Virginia from 1920 until his death in 1946.  In 1913, he became Chairman of the House Committee on Banking and Currency, where he worked with President Woodrow Wilson to pass the Glass-Owen Federal Reserve Act and he went on to pass the Glass-Steagall Act in 1932 and the Banking Act in 1933 that made banking more stable in the United States. In 1918, President Wilson appointed him Secretary of the Treasury, where he marketed Victory Liberty Loans for World War I debts.  At the 1920 Democratic National Convention Glass was nominated for President of the United States. Many of his supporters have said that at 5'4 inches tall, his speeches and political prowess made him seem larger than life.","Carter Glass became an apprentice printer to his father when he was 13 years old, and continued his education through reading literature in his father's library. At the age of 22, Glass became a reporter, a job he had long sought, for the \"Lynchburg News\". He rose to become the morning newspaper's editor by 1887. After acquiring the afternoon \"Daily Advance\", the competing \"Daily Republican\",  he became Lynchburg's sole newspaper publisher. The \"Lynchburg News and Advance\" is the successor publication to his newspapers. ","  Carter Glass played a major role in the establishment of the U.S. financial regulatory system, helping to establish the Federal Reserve System and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. He co-sponsored the 1933 Banking Act, also known as the Glass–Steagall Act, which created the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation and enforced the separation of investment banking firms and commercial banks. His banking reforms (Banking Act of 1913, Glass Steagall Act 1932, Banking Act of 1933) earned him gratitude across the country, landing him on the cover of Time Magazine twice, and honoring him with many degrees from universities.  Prior to Glass's reforms, the country's banking system was chaotic and regulated by bankers. The Glass-Steagall bill restricted banks from engaging in invesment banking. The country had suffered eight recessions between 1890 and 1914. Portions of the Glass-Steagall bill were repealed in 1999, allowing banks to combine their own investment activity with commercial banking and possibly contributing to the recession in 2008.\n ","Not as well-publicized was Carter Glass's lifelong opposition to voting rights for African Americans. One of Glass's first political exploits was helping craft the revised 1902 Virginia Constitution to bar [African American] citizens from voting. The 1902 Constitution instituted a poll tax and required bulk payment after a voter missed elections, making voting a luxury. The Constitution also required that voters pass a literacy test with their performance graded by the registrar. When questioned as to whether these measures were potentially discriminatory, Glass exclaimed, \"Discrimination! Why that is exactly what we propose. To remove every [African American] voter who can be gotten rid of, legally, without materially impairing the numerical strength of the white electorate.\" Indeed, the number of African Americans qualified to vote dropped from 147,000 to 21,000 immediately. More than 50 years after it was ratified, the Lynchburg senator remained opposed to the 15th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, which granted African Americans the right to vote. He said in the 1920's it \"constituted an attempt to destroy white civilization in nearly one-third of the nation and to erect on its ruins an Ethiopian state ignorant, profligate, corrupt, controlled by manumitted slaves.\" Glass was in step with his white constituents in Virginia, where African Americans did not receive equal voting rights until the 1960s. In 1928, during a debate involving prohibition, Glass said, \"people of the original thirteen Southern States curse and deride and spit upon the Fifteenth Amendment — and have no intention of letting the [African American] vote\" all the while maintaining Virginia was complying with the law.","\nCarter Glass remained one of the strongest advocates of segregation and continued to dedicate much of his political career to the perpetuation of Jim Crow laws in the South. He sponsored massive resistance legislation along with Virginia Senator Harry F. Byrd of Winchester, another Virginia newspaperman who shared many of Glass's political views. Both Glass and Byrd were opposed to Roosevelt's New Deal policies. Each was a strong supporter of fiscal conservatism and states' rights. Carter Glass supported President Roosevelt but later criticized his policies, including the New Deal, attempts to pack the Supreme Court, third term presidency, and nominations for Federal Judgeships.","Glass had suffered from ill health throughout his life, and usually walked on tip toes because he believed that would help with his indigestion. He kept his seat in his final term in the Senate even though he was not able to be in attendance. He died in his hotel apartment in Washington, D.C., on May 28, 1946. His funeral in Lynchburg was attended by the Chief Justice, the Secretary of State, 11 Senators, 11 House members, and other notables. History remembers Carter Glass as the Father of the Federal Reserve Act but today history also considers his role in the 1902 Constitution that disenfranchised virtually every black voter in the state. The reduction in African American votes helped him politically and put him in a postion to create the banking reform legislation. Nationally, Glass might have been the architect of financial reform that stabilized the nation's banking system, but at home, historian J. Douglas Smith calls him, \"the architect of disenfranchisement in the Old Dominion.\" Harvard University named their business school, Glass House, after Carter Glass achievements in banking, but they have now changed the name to Cash House, for James Cash, the first African American tenured professor at Harvard.","Sources: \nWikipedia\nJoe Stinnett, retired editor of The News \u0026 Advance and The Roanoke Times.\nThe Roanoke Times","The Carter Glass papers, 1820-1946, 141 cubic feet, consist of correspondence, manuscripts, newspaper articles, photographs, speeches, and printed materials from his work in the Banking and Currency Committee, the Secretary of the Treasury (1918-1920), and the United States Senate (1920-1946). Subjects include: The Federal Reserve Banking Act of 1913, the Federal Reserve system, and the Banking Act of 1933 (1932 Glass-Steagall Act).  ","Other topics include international, national and state issues reflected in the politics of this time period including opposition to the National Industrial Recovery Act; National Labor Relations Act; Bank Holding Company Bill; Office of Price Administration; World Wars I and II; League of Nations; World Court; Democratic Party platforms and policies; presidential elections of 1912, 1920, 1924, 1928, and 1940; Senator Huey P. Long; Franklin D. Roosevelt and the New Deal; attempted packing of the Supreme Court; neutrality legislation; disarmament; regulation of the coal industry; (business) products and services; child labor; anti-lynching law; immigration restriction (especially Chinese in Hawaii); Muscle Shoals; trade with Russia; diplomatic relations with the Vatican; Four-Power Treaty; soldiers' bonus bill; tariffs and protectionism; and national defense.","Virginia topics of concern to Glass or his constituents include poll tax elimination; African American suffrage; women's suffrage; highways; intrastate commerce; University of Virginia Board of Visitors;  Woodrow Wilson Foundation; national Patrick Henry shrine at \"Red Hill\"; gubernatorial election of 1924; Bishop James Cannon, Jr., prohibition and the Anti-saloon League; Skyline Drive; Spotsylvania Battlefield Park; Virginia Fight For Freedom Committee; operation of the Lynchburg News and Advance; and patronage requests from Lynchburg, Roanoke, and Bedford, Campbell, Floyd, Montgomery, and Roanoke Counties, Va.","Miscellaneous items of interest include a letter describing the early life of Booker T. Washington, election tickets for 1848, a 1906 recipe book, and letters concerning Glass' belief in the Baconian theory of Shakespeare authorship.","Among the many correspondents are Edwin A. Alderman, Newton Baker, Ray Stannard Baker, Alben Barkley, Bernard Baruch, William E. Borah, Chester Bowles, John Stewart Bryan, William Jennings Bryan, Harry F. Byrd, Richard E. Byrd, Calvin Coolidge, John W. Daniel, Josephus Daniels, Colgate W. Darden, Westmoreland Davis, Frederic A. Delano, the Democratic National Committee, Marriner S. Eccles, James A. Farley, Henry Ford, Douglas Southall Freeman, James A. Garfield, Samuel Gompers, Cary T. Grayson, Charles S. Hamlin, William P.G. Harding, Warren G. Harding, George L. Harrison, J. Edgar Hoover,Herbert Hoover, Edwin M. House, Cordell Hull, Harold Ickes, Hugh S. Johnson, Jesse Jones, Joseph P. Kennedy, Russell C. Leffingwell, Walter Lippmann, Huey Long, William Gibbs McAdoo, George Walter Mapp, Andrew Mellon, Eugene and Agnes Meyer, Andrew J. Montague, R. Walton Moore, Henry Morgenthau, Jr., Robert L. Owen, George C. Peery, Edmund Platt, John Garland Pollard, A. Willis Robertson, Eleanor Roosevelt, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Dave E. Satterfield, C. Bascom Slemp, Rixey Smith, Billy Sunday, Claude A. Swanson, Harry S. Truman, Joseph P. Tumulty, Oscar W. Underwood, Samuel Untermeyer, Arthur H. Vandenberg, Robert F. Wagner, Henry A. Wallace, Paul Moritz Warburg, Richard S. Whaley, William Allen White, John Skelton Williams, Henry Parker Willis, , Edith Bolling Wilson, Woodrow Wilson, Clifton A. Woodrum, and Walter Wyatt.","Correspondents include President Woodrow Wilson, Samuel Untermyer, Henry Parker Willis, Charles G. Hamlin, William Gibbs McAdoo, Robert Owen, Victor Morawetz, Harry F. Byrd, John Skelton Williams, Henry Moehlenpah, Paul M. Warburg (under revision)","Box summaries\nBox 1: The Federal Reserve Bank Act and Federal Reserve system; the Federal Farm Loan Act; Panic of 1912; The Aldrich Bill; branch banks; central banking board; gold reserves; Currency [reform] Bill of 1913; Emergency Banking Act, 1933; the Banking Act of 1933 (Glass-Steagall Act; the Bank Bill of 1935; opposition to the National Industrial Recovery Act; the National Labor Relations Act; the Bank Holding Company Bill; and the Office of Price Administration.","Box 2: Federal Reserve Act (Glass-Owen Bill)6454, 2639, 7837;Aldrich-Vreeland Law;Federal Farm Loan Act Rural Credits Bill;and Clayton Anti-Trust Bill","Box 3: Federal Reserve Act; Federal Reserve Banks; Federal Farm Loan Act; Land Mortgage Bank Bill; Branch banking; Kern Bill; Hollis Buckley Bill; Usury laws; Charles S. Hamlin; Edmund D. Hulbert; William Gibbs McAdoo; J. H. Tregoe; Woodrow Wilson; John Skelton Williams; Henry A. Moehlenpah; Frederic A. Delano; and Carter Glass","Box 4: Federal Farm Loan Act;Rural credits;Federal Reserve Amendments and responses; McFadden Bill; Hollis Buckley Bill; and gold certificates","Box 5: Federal Reserve Amendments and responses (Kitchin and Hardwick Bill);and Pomerene Bill. Charles S. Hamlin,William Gibbs McAdoo,Woodrow Wilson,Clayton Act,George M. Reynolds,Paul M. Warburg,John Skelton Williams,and Carter Glass","Box 6: Federal Reserve Amendments and responses (Kitchin and Hardwick Bill); Federal Reserve Act authorship; Capital Issues Committee; Federal Land Bank of Baltimore; and the Revenue Act of 1918.George Norris,Edmund Platt, Frederic A. Delano, William P. G. Harding,Paul M. Warburg,Charles S. Hamlin, John Skelton Williams,Henry Parker Willis,Eugene Meyer,and Carter Glass","Box 7: Federal Reserve Act authorship; Federal Farm Loan Amendments; Federal Land Banks; currency shortage; check collection; Smoot Bill; Liberty loans; Federal Reserve Bank of New York; railroad and shipping costs; War Finance Corporation; and Second Pan American Conference. William P. G. Harding,George W. Norris,Robert L. Owen,Russell C. Leffingwell,Benjamin Strong,John Skelton Williams renomination,William Gibbs McAdoo,Charles S. Hamlin,and Carter Glass","Box 8: Federal Reserve Act authorship; Clayton Anti-Trust Act; Smoot Bill; check collecting fees; branch banking; Virginia-Carolina Joint StockLandBank; budget bill; excess profits tax; gold; and Liberty bonds. Walter Edward Harris, Charles A. Korbly,Edmund Platt,William Skelton Williams,William P. G. Harding,William Gibbs McAdoo, Hollins N. Randolph,Henry Parker Willis,Russell C. Leffingwell,Arthur Capper,Thomas B. McAdams,and Carter Glass","Box 9: Federal Reserve Act and authorship; Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond; Bank of Haysi; Bank of New York; Open market commercial paper rates; McFadden Bill; discount rates; Overman Resolution; Liberty bonds; Pan American Conference; and Russian trade.William P. G. Harding,John Skelton Williams,Thomas B. McAdams,Russell C. Leffingwell,Edmund Platt,John Thomas Heflin,Hollins N. Randolph,William Gibbs McAdoo,George J. Seay,Henry Parker Willis, George Armstrong,Benjamin Strong,and Carter Glass","Box 10: Federal Reserve System; McFadden Bill H. R. 2; Farm Loan Mortgage; discount rates and eligible paper; Pittman Silver Act; Frank A. Vanderlip banking plan; War Finance Corporation; Bank of New York; bank failure; Anderson Bill; Lenroot Bill; and William P. G. Harding reappointment.John Skelton Williams,Reed Smoot,Hollins N. Randolph,Russell C. Leffingwell,Thomas B. McAdams,Paul M. Warburg,Edmund Platt,Henry Parker Willis,Woodrow Wilson,Benjamin Strong, Daniel C. Roper, William Gibbs McAdoo,Charles S. Hamlin,George W. Norris,and Carter Glass","Box 12:Federal Reserve Act authorship; McNary-Haugen Billand (speech responses); McFadden Bill; Federal Farm Loan Act; and Carter Glass book. Walter Edward Harris,Paul Warburg,Norman Davis,Walter E. Edge,Charles W. Collins,Charles S. Hamlin,Henry Parker Willis,George J. Seay,Benjamin Strong,and Edmund Platt","Box 13: Pascagoula case; Federal Reserve Act authorship; McFadden Bill; \"Committee of One Hundred\"; Carter Glass book; and the McNary-Haugen Bill. Henry Parker Willis,William P. G. Harding,George J. Seay,Harry Flood Byrd,Bernard M. Baruch,Russell C. Leffingwell,Charles S. Hamlin,Charles W. Collins,Walter Edward Harris,Thomas B. McAdams,George W. Norris,and Edmund Platt","Box 14 Federal Reserve Act authorship; McFadden Bill; Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas; Lafollette Resolution; \"Committee of One Hundred\"; Federal Home Loan Bill; misuse of Federal Reserve System; President Roosevelt criticism of Federal Reserve System; Charles E. Mitchell; and bank failures. Eugene Meyer,Edmund Platt,Henry Parker Willis,Bishop James Cannon, Jr., Thomas B. McAdams,Russell C. Plainwell,and Elben C. Folks","Box 15: Federal Reserve Act authorship; responses to Depression and banking crisis; Bank of Kentucky; curb stock speculations; security abuses; Charles E. Mitchell; McFadden Bill; and criticism of Herbert Hoover. Thomas B. McAdams,Walter B. Mahoney,John W. Pole,Edmund Platt,Henry Parker Willis,Bernard M. Baruch,Eugene Meyer,William P. G. Harding,George L. Harrison,George W. Norris,George J. Seay,and Richard C. Whitney","Box 16: Responses to the Depressionand(banking crisis); and Bank of Kentucky.Jouett Shouse,Henry Parker Willis,Henry B. Steagall,Eugene Meyer,Charles S. Hamlin,Milton S. Florsheim,Samuel M. Kaplan,and Elben C. Folkes","Box 17: Responses to the Depression and banking crisis; President Hoover Plan; Federal Land Banks; Wall Street bankers; bank failures; Bank of Kentucky; Federal Reserve Act authorship; Federal Farm Loan Act; Federal Home Loan; and Hoover moratorium. Bernard M. Baruch,Jouett Shouse,Richard C. Whitney,Charles S. Hamlin,Henry A. Moehlenpah,Millard E. Tydings,Henry Parker Willis,Andrew W. Mellon,Edmund Platt,Eugene Meyer,Russell C. Leffingwell,and Thomas B. McAdams","Box 18:Depression and banking crisis; Bank of Kentucky; Senate Committee on Banking and Currency Hearings; Reconstruction Finance Corporation; Nye Report; Pan American Finance Conference; Gold; Silver; and death of E. C. Glass. Elben C. Folkes,Al Kaplan,Herbert Hoover,Jouett Shouse,Charles S. Hamlin,George L. Harrison, Thorwald Siegfried, Eugene Meyer,and Pat H. Drewery","Box 19:Federal Home Loan Bank; Federal Land Bank of Baltimore; foreclosures; Glass-Steagall; and Henry Parker Willis articles in France on gold upsetting to colleagues.Franklin Delano Roosevelt,John W. Pole,Henry B. Steagall,Oliver J. Sands,Russell C. Leffingwell,Charles W. Collins,Charles S. Hamlin,and George L. Harrison","Box 20-24: Glass Steagall responses; and Glass speech on gold","Box 25: Glass-Steagall Act; Goldsborough Bill; gold standard; Reconstruction Finance Corporation; Joint Stock Land Banks;Revenue Act of 1932; responses to Carter Glass speech;praise for Carter Glass; bank failures; Banking study; Holiday proclamation by President Roosevelt; Funding for projects such as the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California, and a bridge across the Potomac River; Herbert Hoover;Newton D. Baker;Russell C. Leffingwell;George L. Harrison; Eugene Meyer; Samuel Untermyer; Chester Morrill; George W. Norris; Richard S. Whaley;Princess Amelie Rives Troubetzkoy;James F. Byrnes;Louis Wiley; Robert J. Bulkley;John W. Owens;HenryParker Willis; and the Dallas Chamber of Commerce","Box 26: Responses to banking crisis and Depressionand criticism of Herbert Hoover","Box 27: Responses to Depression; McNary-Haugen Bill; Home Loan Bill; Emergency Farm Mortgage Act of 1933; Thomas Bill; Federal Reserve Amendment Section 10b; Glass-Steagall Banking Act; and Credit Report U.S. S. R. (George N. Peek).George L. Harrison,Chester Morrill,Russell C. Leffingwell,Louis T. McFadden,Emmanuel Kaplan,Hugh S. Johnson,and the National Recovery Act","Box 28: Glass-Steagall Act responses; Emergency Bank Bill; California banks; and Goldsborough Amendment. Edmund Platt and Frank A. Vanderlip","Box 29: Glass-Steagall Act responses, and Section 19 Statewide branch banking for national banks; Huey Long filibuster; bank guarantees; Charles E. Mitchell investigation; and continued moratorium on closing banks. Duncan U. Fletcher; Ferdinand Pecora; and Virginia Governor John Garland Pollard","Box 30: Gold, Reconstruction Finance Corporation, Senate Banking and Currency Committee investigation of J. P. Morgan; Glass-Steagall Banking Act; National Recovery Act; Emergency Banking Act relief; Morris Plan; and criticism of Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Duncan U. Fletcher; and William Gibbs McAdoo","Box 31: Senate investigation of J. P. Morgan;Gold standard; Expand use of silver; stability of the dollar; praise for Carter Glass radio speech \"Facts about Fiscal Policy of Our Government During the Past Few Years\" and \"Shall We Go Over the Precipice?\" Duncan U. Fletcher; Edmund Platt; and Herbert L. Myrick","Box 32: Rsponses to Glass speech [\"Shall We Go Over the Precipice?\"] against Roosevelt inflation bill; Emergency Bank Bill; Bankruptcy legislation; Banking Act of 1935; Credit Union Act; Marriner S. Eccles as Governor of the Federal Reserve Board; Branchbanking; Bank of the United States; death of Eugerne R. Black; and Philippine currency. Charles S. Hamlin; Edmund Platt; George W. Norris; George L. Harrison; Herny Parker Willis; Paul M. Warburg; Henry B. Steagall; Clifton A. Woodrum; Edward W. Kemmerer;Rudolph Spreckels; Sam M. Kaplan; John Foster Dulles; Milton Friedman; T. F. Wentworth; Dean Acheson; Chester Morrill; Walter Wyatt; Eugene R. Black; James P. Warburg; and James Elliott Heath","Box 33: (Fletcher-Rayburn Bill, Kean Bill; National Securities Exchange Act, McLeod Bill, or the Banking Act of 1935); Federal Reserve Amendment Section 12b; Morris-Sheppard Bill; Chester Morrill; Thomas B. McAdams; William Gibbs McAdoo; Elmer Thomas; Henry Morgenthau, Jr.; Eugene Meyer; Duncan U. Fletcher; Jesse H. Jones; and Richard C. Whitney","Box 34: Banking Act of 1933; National Securities Exchange Act; Kean Bill; Fletcher-Rayburn Bill; misuse of the Federal Reserve System; de-evaluation of the dollar; and Gold Reserve Act","Box 35: Banking Act of 1935; Gold Reserve Act; Gold speech of Russell C. Leffingwell; National Recovery Act; Hugh S. Johnson; Kaplan Plan; Robert L. Owen inquiry; Huey Long; Goldsborough Amendment;Elmer Thomas; Charles S. Hamlin; George Wharton Pepper; Henry H. Heiman; Henry Parker Willis; George W. Norris; Duncan U. Fletcher; J. F. T. O'Connor; Robert D. Kent; Royal S. Copeland; Edward W. Kemmerer; and A. Willis Robertson","Box 36: Responses to the Banking Act of 1935; Harry Flood Byrd; Duncan U. Fletcher; A. Willis Robertson; Leo T. Crowley; Jesse H. Jones; Edmund Platt; Henry Morgenthau, Jr.; J. F. T. O'Connor; Thomas B. McAdams; and Thomas P. Gore","Box 37: Responses to the Banking Act of 1935; Glass concerns about Marriner S. Eccles as Governor of the Federal Reserve Board and criticism of government and political control of banking; Federal Reserve Act authorship; Goldsborough Amendment; Townsend Plan; A. H. Dobson; Frank A. Vanderlip; Irving Fisher; Walter Lichtenstein; Arthur Capper; Duncan U. Fletcher; Bennett Champ Clark; Thomas P. Gore; Henry Heiman; Thomas B. McAdams; Hollins N. Randolph; Hugo L. Black; and Thorwald Siegfried","Box 38: Banking Act of 1935; Gold clause; Comptroller of the Currency; silver; Robert L. Owen inquiry; Reconstruction Finance Corporation; repeal of Thomas Amendment; concern about Marriner S. Eccles as Governor of the Federal Reserve Board; portrait of John Skelton Williams; Edmund Platt; Agnes and Eugene Meyer; Chester Morrill; Robert F. Wagner; Kenneth D. McKellar; George L. Harrison; Harry S. Truman; George W. Norris; Henry Parker Willis; Henry Morgenthau, Jr.; Marriner S. Eccles and Russell C. Leffingwell(Treasury and Nye Report)","Box 39: Repeal Thomas Amendment; Branch banking; Bankhead-Jones Farm Act; Federal Land Bank of Baltimore Bank Holding companies; and Reconstruction Finance Corporation.William Gibbs McAdoo,Edmund Platt,Thomas B. McAdams,Henry Heiman,Jesse H. Jones,Henry Morgenthau, Jr.,Robert L. Owen,and the death of Henry Parker Willis","Box 40: Henry Parker Willis Foundation; Federal Reserve Act anniversary; J. F. T. O'Connor resignation; misuse of the Federal Reserve System; Robert L. Owen and Carter Glass accusations against Marriner S. Eccles; Reconstruction Finance Corporation; Clayton Act; Mead Bill; De-evaluation of the dollar;silver program; Gold Act; Home Owners Loan Corporation Act; Self-liquidating Bill; and Barden Bill.Edmund Platt,Jesse H. Jones, William Gibbs McAdoo,Henry Morgenthau, Jr.,Robert F. Wagner,and Marriner S. Eccles","Box 41: Tribute to Edmund Platt; Embargo Act; Banking and Currency Committee pending legislation; Branch banking; Silver Purchase Act; de-evaluation of the dollar; Trust Indenture Act (Robert F.Wagner); Bank Holding company; Jones Wheeler Bill; Federal Home Loan Bank Act; Clayton Act; Townsend Plan; FDIC; Pittman Amendment; Farm Relief Bill; Reconstruction Finance Corporation; Wagner Lea Bill; and disappointment with Marriner S. Eccles;Harry Flood Byrd,Jesse H. Jones,Henry Heiman,Frederic Delano,and Leo T. Crowley","Box 42: Tribute to Carter Glass; Banking and Currency Committee pending legislation; FDIC and excess profits tax; Federal Reserve Amendment Section 23; medal for Howard Hughes; American Palestine Committee (Robert F. Wagner); Farm credit; Credit Union Act; price control; Bank Holding Company; Reconstruction Finance Corporation; de-evaluation of the dollar Federal Reserve Act authorship; and criticism of Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Cordell Hull; Walter Lichtenstein; Chester Morrill; Robert F. Wagner; and Leo T. Crowley","H. S. Trout, president First National Bank, hoping that the bill will be defeated","Glass expressses concern that Untermeyer is trying to push the Aldrich Bill. Other correspondents include William A. Glasgow, A. P. Pujo, Hubert D. Stephens, and Henry Parker Willis","Glasgow to act as counsel to the Banking and Currency Committee of the Senate","Set up a meeting with the President to revise the currency system; Henry Parker Willis; and reference to Aldrich Bill","J. C. Goodloe suggests the need for new banking laws in order to help the farmers","Offering methods to create calmness in banking instead of panic","Banking and Currency Committee of the Senate Banking survey questions about banking","Criticism of S. 4129 and H.R. 13570 to place tax on real estate instead of stocks and bonds to help relieve bankrupt Treasury","Colonel House wants to set up a secret meeting for Samuel Untermeyer with President Wilson in order to promote the Aldrich Bill","Glass apologizes for his reaction to a speech given by Forgan","Charles McCulloch, Andrew J. Montague, and William GibbsMcAdoo","Includes correspondence about the banking bills from January to April 1916. (Carter Glass correspondence with Clement C. Dickinson January 22, 1916 defending the Federal Reserve.)","Bankruptcy laws, World War I","Mentions medal for Howard Hughes","includes correspondence Carter Glass","See also 1933","Woodrow Wilson typed speech to the House of Representatives","Historic moment when Glass takes the first transatlantic flight to Europe with the loan from Treasurer Russell C. Leffingwell","Agriculture Appropriation Bill; Smith-lever funds; and African Americans in Virginia","See also Trade Farmers' and Growers Association Box 52 Folder 1","printed item \"The Aluminum Monopoly\"","Virginia Polytechnic Institute request for captured German cannon","mention of J. G. Ferneyhough and cows also","Edwin Anderson Alderman, Governor E.Lee Trinkle, Jr.","Glass S. 4029 to determine location for engagement of war vessels and memorial; interview with last survivor of the Merrimac, Richard Curtis; and John Stewart Bryan","Sibley lawsuit claim H. B. 3436","Elben C. Folkes requests help for his son; lawsuit J. G. Ferneyhough; Senator Couzens; and Florence Adams nomination for AppleBlossom Princess","Edwin Anderson Alderman letter advocating for a hospital in Charlottesville","Memorial Bridge approach bill; H. R. 796; furlough and shorter work week; claims; capital punishment for kidnappers H. R. 96; transportation of persons or property in commerce by motor carrier S. 2793; opposition to income tax;Montgomery county Civic Federation special meeting; Tariff Act of 1930 to import science books for teaching purposes; stamp tax on bank checks (banking); Public Works Program; equal protection of voters in Puerto Rico S. 4691; unemployment relief bills; Railroad pension bill H. R. 10023 and S. 3892, H. R. 9891; Hatfield Bill; Keller Bill 4646; S. 4161; Boulder Dam; Home Loan Bank S. 2959; Emergency Industries Preservation Act; Stuart Junior High School; Albemarle County Medical Society S. 3090 and H. R. 8077; prohibit experiments on living dogs in District of Columbia S. 2146; night work pay H. R. 11267; District of Columbia appropriation bill H. R. 11361; Brookhart Bill censorship of moving pictures; vocational rehabilitation S. 3818; opposition to abolishment of Army Transports and Panama Railroad Steamship Line; Federal relief for unemployed; Capper-Kelly bill to relief excise taxes on druggist; patenting of original designs of silk patterns; Georgetown Branch Library Building and District of Columbia appropriation bill; radio lottery advertising H. R. 7716; Injunction measure S. 936; strengthen immigration laws H. B. 1967; crime to advocate overthrow of government H. B. 8549; issue two or three billions in bonds of small denominations for soldiers bonus or as currency;intrinsic property values vs market values in depression times; and President Hoover's Bankers-Industrialists Committee of Twelve for Credit Expansion","Ernie Adamson","immigration; Tangiers Island; and Colgate W. Darden, Jr.","Harry Flood Byrd","Frances Perkins","Robert F. Wagner","Kenneth McKellar; and Astor case","See also Political correspondence","See also Political correspondence","See also Legislative correspondence 1921","Colgate Darden Jr.","Schuyler O. Bland","\"Pump Priming Bill\" Harry Flood Byrd; Public Works Administration; Equal Rights Bill; and Industrial Profits Tax","There are no restrictions in this collection except for veterans claims.","Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections Library","English"],"unitid_tesim":["MSS 2913","Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","/repositories/3/resources/206"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Carter Glass Papers"],"collection_title_tesim":["Carter Glass Papers"],"collection_ssim":["Carter Glass Papers"],"repository_ssm":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"geogname_ssm":["Virginia -- Politics and government -- 20th century"],"geogname_ssim":["Virginia -- Politics and government -- 20th century"],"places_ssim":["Virginia -- Politics and government -- 20th century"],"access_terms_ssm":["There are no restrictions in this collection except for veterans claims."],"acqinfo_ssim":["This collection was a gift from the Glass family to the Small Special Collections Library at the University of Virginia in 1948."],"access_subjects_ssim":["Banks and banking -- United States","Judges -- Selection and appointment","Depressions -- 1929 -- United States","Labor laws and legislation -- United States","World War, 1939-1945","World War, 1914-1918"],"access_subjects_ssm":["Banks and banking -- United States","Judges -- Selection and appointment","Depressions -- 1929 -- United States","Labor laws and legislation -- United States","World War, 1939-1945","World War, 1914-1918"],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"extent_ssm":["141 Cubic Feet 285 document boxes, 3 oversize flat boxes"],"extent_tesim":["141 Cubic Feet 285 document boxes, 3 oversize flat boxes"],"date_range_isim":[1820,1821,1822,1823,1824,1825,1826,1827,1828,1829,1830,1831,1832,1833,1834,1835,1836,1837,1838,1839,1840,1841,1842,1843,1844,1845,1846,1847,1848,1849,1850,1851,1852,1853,1854,1855,1856,1857,1858,1859,1860,1861,1862,1863,1864,1865,1866,1867,1868,1869,1870,1871,1872,1873,1874,1875,1876,1877,1878,1879,1880,1881,1882,1883,1884,1885,1886,1887,1888,1889,1890,1891,1892,1893,1894,1895,1896,1897,1898,1899,1900,1901,1902,1903,1904,1905,1906,1907,1908,1909,1910,1911,1912,1913,1914,1915,1916,1917,1918,1919,1920,1921,1922,1923,1924,1925,1926,1927,1928,1929,1930,1931,1932,1933,1934,1935,1936,1937,1938,1939,1940,1941,1942,1943,1944,1945,1946],"accessrestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThis collection is open for research. Restrictions apply to veterans claims.\u003c/p\u003e"],"accessrestrict_heading_ssm":["Conditions Governing Access"],"accessrestrict_tesim":["This collection is open for research. Restrictions apply to veterans claims."],"arrangement_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe collection is arranged into four series: Series 1. Banking: Subseries banking correspondence,  banking printed, Series 2. Correspondence: Subseries legislative, military, political, topical, greeting cards, business and related cards, honors, constituent (patronage, praise),veterans claim (restricted), and veterinary (farming), Series 3. Manuscripts and miscellaneous, Series 4. Printed and miscellaneous: Subseries newspaper clippings, articles, bills, reports and photographs, speeches, and election tickets. \u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eDue to the large size of this collection these categories are meant as general guidelines and some cross over of subjects can be expected throughout the series. Similarly,further searching may be necessary if an area of research is not found in the identified series of the guide, for example military correspondence is located chronologically throughout the collection and as a subseries.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eSeries 1 Banking Correspondence is in boxes 1-43, 171-177; Banking Printed is in boxes 44-47; Series 2 Correspondence: Legislative Correspondence is in boxes 47-105, 178-180; Military Correspondence is in boxes 105-109; Political Correspondence is in boxes 109-143, 180-183; Topical Correspondence is in boxes 143-169; 183-193; Greeting Cards are in boxes 169-170; Honors are in box 170; Constituent Correspondence is in boxes 194-220; Patronage Correspondence is in boxes 220-249; Praise for Carter Glass is in boxes 250-258; Invitations are in boxes 259-264; Veteran's Claims (restricted) are in boxes 265-268; Veterinarian and farming (cows) are in box 269; Series 3 Manuscripts and Miscellaneous are in box 270; Series 4 Printed(including newspaper articles, photographs, and speeches) are in boxes 271-279; Letterbooks for 1918-1919 are in boxes 281-282.\u003c/p\u003e"],"arrangement_heading_ssm":["Arrangement"],"arrangement_tesim":["The collection is arranged into four series: Series 1. Banking: Subseries banking correspondence,  banking printed, Series 2. Correspondence: Subseries legislative, military, political, topical, greeting cards, business and related cards, honors, constituent (patronage, praise),veterans claim (restricted), and veterinary (farming), Series 3. Manuscripts and miscellaneous, Series 4. Printed and miscellaneous: Subseries newspaper clippings, articles, bills, reports and photographs, speeches, and election tickets. ","Due to the large size of this collection these categories are meant as general guidelines and some cross over of subjects can be expected throughout the series. Similarly,further searching may be necessary if an area of research is not found in the identified series of the guide, for example military correspondence is located chronologically throughout the collection and as a subseries.","Series 1 Banking Correspondence is in boxes 1-43, 171-177; Banking Printed is in boxes 44-47; Series 2 Correspondence: Legislative Correspondence is in boxes 47-105, 178-180; Military Correspondence is in boxes 105-109; Political Correspondence is in boxes 109-143, 180-183; Topical Correspondence is in boxes 143-169; 183-193; Greeting Cards are in boxes 169-170; Honors are in box 170; Constituent Correspondence is in boxes 194-220; Patronage Correspondence is in boxes 220-249; Praise for Carter Glass is in boxes 250-258; Invitations are in boxes 259-264; Veteran's Claims (restricted) are in boxes 265-268; Veterinarian and farming (cows) are in box 269; Series 3 Manuscripts and Miscellaneous are in box 270; Series 4 Printed(including newspaper articles, photographs, and speeches) are in boxes 271-279; Letterbooks for 1918-1919 are in boxes 281-282."],"bioghist_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003e Carter Glass (January 4, 1858 – May 28, 1946) was born on January 4, 1858, in Lynchburg, Virginia, to Robert Henry Glass and Augusta Elizabeth Christian. He became a newspaper publisher (like his father)and after hearing a speech by William Jenning Bryan in 1896, entered politics in 1902 as a Democrat in the United States House of Representatives and was re-elected to eight terms. He was a United States Senator from Lynchburg, Virginia from 1920 until his death in 1946.  In 1913, he became Chairman of the House Committee on Banking and Currency, where he worked with President Woodrow Wilson to pass the Glass-Owen Federal Reserve Act and he went on to pass the Glass-Steagall Act in 1932 and the Banking Act in 1933 that made banking more stable in the United States. In 1918, President Wilson appointed him Secretary of the Treasury, where he marketed Victory Liberty Loans for World War I debts.  At the 1920 Democratic National Convention Glass was nominated for President of the United States. Many of his supporters have said that at 5'4 inches tall, his speeches and political prowess made him seem larger than life.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eCarter Glass became an apprentice printer to his father when he was 13 years old, and continued his education through reading literature in his father's library. At the age of 22, Glass became a reporter, a job he had long sought, for the \"Lynchburg News\". He rose to become the morning newspaper's editor by 1887. After acquiring the afternoon \"Daily Advance\", the competing \"Daily Republican\",  he became Lynchburg's sole newspaper publisher. The \"Lynchburg News and Advance\" is the successor publication to his newspapers. \u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003e  Carter Glass played a major role in the establishment of the U.S. financial regulatory system, helping to establish the Federal Reserve System and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. He co-sponsored the 1933 Banking Act, also known as the Glass–Steagall Act, which created the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation and enforced the separation of investment banking firms and commercial banks. His banking reforms (Banking Act of 1913, Glass Steagall Act 1932, Banking Act of 1933) earned him gratitude across the country, landing him on the cover of Time Magazine twice, and honoring him with many degrees from universities.  Prior to Glass's reforms, the country's banking system was chaotic and regulated by bankers. The Glass-Steagall bill restricted banks from engaging in invesment banking. The country had suffered eight recessions between 1890 and 1914. Portions of the Glass-Steagall bill were repealed in 1999, allowing banks to combine their own investment activity with commercial banking and possibly contributing to the recession in 2008.\n \u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eNot as well-publicized was Carter Glass's lifelong opposition to voting rights for African Americans. One of Glass's first political exploits was helping craft the revised 1902 Virginia Constitution to bar [African American] citizens from voting. The 1902 Constitution instituted a poll tax and required bulk payment after a voter missed elections, making voting a luxury. The Constitution also required that voters pass a literacy test with their performance graded by the registrar. When questioned as to whether these measures were potentially discriminatory, Glass exclaimed, \"Discrimination! Why that is exactly what we propose. To remove every [African American] voter who can be gotten rid of, legally, without materially impairing the numerical strength of the white electorate.\" Indeed, the number of African Americans qualified to vote dropped from 147,000 to 21,000 immediately. More than 50 years after it was ratified, the Lynchburg senator remained opposed to the 15th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, which granted African Americans the right to vote. He said in the 1920's it \"constituted an attempt to destroy white civilization in nearly one-third of the nation and to erect on its ruins an Ethiopian state ignorant, profligate, corrupt, controlled by manumitted slaves.\" Glass was in step with his white constituents in Virginia, where African Americans did not receive equal voting rights until the 1960s. In 1928, during a debate involving prohibition, Glass said, \"people of the original thirteen Southern States curse and deride and spit upon the Fifteenth Amendment — and have no intention of letting the [African American] vote\" all the while maintaining Virginia was complying with the law.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003e\nCarter Glass remained one of the strongest advocates of segregation and continued to dedicate much of his political career to the perpetuation of Jim Crow laws in the South. He sponsored massive resistance legislation along with Virginia Senator Harry F. Byrd of Winchester, another Virginia newspaperman who shared many of Glass's political views. Both Glass and Byrd were opposed to Roosevelt's New Deal policies. Each was a strong supporter of fiscal conservatism and states' rights. Carter Glass supported President Roosevelt but later criticized his policies, including the New Deal, attempts to pack the Supreme Court, third term presidency, and nominations for Federal Judgeships.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eGlass had suffered from ill health throughout his life, and usually walked on tip toes because he believed that would help with his indigestion. He kept his seat in his final term in the Senate even though he was not able to be in attendance. He died in his hotel apartment in Washington, D.C., on May 28, 1946. His funeral in Lynchburg was attended by the Chief Justice, the Secretary of State, 11 Senators, 11 House members, and other notables. History remembers Carter Glass as the Father of the Federal Reserve Act but today history also considers his role in the 1902 Constitution that disenfranchised virtually every black voter in the state. The reduction in African American votes helped him politically and put him in a postion to create the banking reform legislation. Nationally, Glass might have been the architect of financial reform that stabilized the nation's banking system, but at home, historian J. Douglas Smith calls him, \"the architect of disenfranchisement in the Old Dominion.\" Harvard University named their business school, Glass House, after Carter Glass achievements in banking, but they have now changed the name to Cash House, for James Cash, the first African American tenured professor at Harvard.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eSources: \nWikipedia\nJoe Stinnett, retired editor of The News \u0026amp; Advance and The Roanoke Times.\nThe Roanoke Times\u003c/p\u003e"],"bioghist_heading_ssm":["Biographical / Historical"],"bioghist_tesim":[" Carter Glass (January 4, 1858 – May 28, 1946) was born on January 4, 1858, in Lynchburg, Virginia, to Robert Henry Glass and Augusta Elizabeth Christian. He became a newspaper publisher (like his father)and after hearing a speech by William Jenning Bryan in 1896, entered politics in 1902 as a Democrat in the United States House of Representatives and was re-elected to eight terms. He was a United States Senator from Lynchburg, Virginia from 1920 until his death in 1946.  In 1913, he became Chairman of the House Committee on Banking and Currency, where he worked with President Woodrow Wilson to pass the Glass-Owen Federal Reserve Act and he went on to pass the Glass-Steagall Act in 1932 and the Banking Act in 1933 that made banking more stable in the United States. In 1918, President Wilson appointed him Secretary of the Treasury, where he marketed Victory Liberty Loans for World War I debts.  At the 1920 Democratic National Convention Glass was nominated for President of the United States. Many of his supporters have said that at 5'4 inches tall, his speeches and political prowess made him seem larger than life.","Carter Glass became an apprentice printer to his father when he was 13 years old, and continued his education through reading literature in his father's library. At the age of 22, Glass became a reporter, a job he had long sought, for the \"Lynchburg News\". He rose to become the morning newspaper's editor by 1887. After acquiring the afternoon \"Daily Advance\", the competing \"Daily Republican\",  he became Lynchburg's sole newspaper publisher. The \"Lynchburg News and Advance\" is the successor publication to his newspapers. ","  Carter Glass played a major role in the establishment of the U.S. financial regulatory system, helping to establish the Federal Reserve System and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. He co-sponsored the 1933 Banking Act, also known as the Glass–Steagall Act, which created the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation and enforced the separation of investment banking firms and commercial banks. His banking reforms (Banking Act of 1913, Glass Steagall Act 1932, Banking Act of 1933) earned him gratitude across the country, landing him on the cover of Time Magazine twice, and honoring him with many degrees from universities.  Prior to Glass's reforms, the country's banking system was chaotic and regulated by bankers. The Glass-Steagall bill restricted banks from engaging in invesment banking. The country had suffered eight recessions between 1890 and 1914. Portions of the Glass-Steagall bill were repealed in 1999, allowing banks to combine their own investment activity with commercial banking and possibly contributing to the recession in 2008.\n ","Not as well-publicized was Carter Glass's lifelong opposition to voting rights for African Americans. One of Glass's first political exploits was helping craft the revised 1902 Virginia Constitution to bar [African American] citizens from voting. The 1902 Constitution instituted a poll tax and required bulk payment after a voter missed elections, making voting a luxury. The Constitution also required that voters pass a literacy test with their performance graded by the registrar. When questioned as to whether these measures were potentially discriminatory, Glass exclaimed, \"Discrimination! Why that is exactly what we propose. To remove every [African American] voter who can be gotten rid of, legally, without materially impairing the numerical strength of the white electorate.\" Indeed, the number of African Americans qualified to vote dropped from 147,000 to 21,000 immediately. More than 50 years after it was ratified, the Lynchburg senator remained opposed to the 15th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, which granted African Americans the right to vote. He said in the 1920's it \"constituted an attempt to destroy white civilization in nearly one-third of the nation and to erect on its ruins an Ethiopian state ignorant, profligate, corrupt, controlled by manumitted slaves.\" Glass was in step with his white constituents in Virginia, where African Americans did not receive equal voting rights until the 1960s. In 1928, during a debate involving prohibition, Glass said, \"people of the original thirteen Southern States curse and deride and spit upon the Fifteenth Amendment — and have no intention of letting the [African American] vote\" all the while maintaining Virginia was complying with the law.","\nCarter Glass remained one of the strongest advocates of segregation and continued to dedicate much of his political career to the perpetuation of Jim Crow laws in the South. He sponsored massive resistance legislation along with Virginia Senator Harry F. Byrd of Winchester, another Virginia newspaperman who shared many of Glass's political views. Both Glass and Byrd were opposed to Roosevelt's New Deal policies. Each was a strong supporter of fiscal conservatism and states' rights. Carter Glass supported President Roosevelt but later criticized his policies, including the New Deal, attempts to pack the Supreme Court, third term presidency, and nominations for Federal Judgeships.","Glass had suffered from ill health throughout his life, and usually walked on tip toes because he believed that would help with his indigestion. He kept his seat in his final term in the Senate even though he was not able to be in attendance. He died in his hotel apartment in Washington, D.C., on May 28, 1946. His funeral in Lynchburg was attended by the Chief Justice, the Secretary of State, 11 Senators, 11 House members, and other notables. History remembers Carter Glass as the Father of the Federal Reserve Act but today history also considers his role in the 1902 Constitution that disenfranchised virtually every black voter in the state. The reduction in African American votes helped him politically and put him in a postion to create the banking reform legislation. Nationally, Glass might have been the architect of financial reform that stabilized the nation's banking system, but at home, historian J. Douglas Smith calls him, \"the architect of disenfranchisement in the Old Dominion.\" Harvard University named their business school, Glass House, after Carter Glass achievements in banking, but they have now changed the name to Cash House, for James Cash, the first African American tenured professor at Harvard.","Sources: \nWikipedia\nJoe Stinnett, retired editor of The News \u0026 Advance and The Roanoke Times.\nThe Roanoke Times"],"prefercite_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eMSS 2913, Carter Glass papers, Small Special Collections Library, University of Virginia.\u003c/p\u003e"],"prefercite_tesim":["MSS 2913, Carter Glass papers, Small Special Collections Library, University of Virginia."],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe Carter Glass papers, 1820-1946, 141 cubic feet, consist of correspondence, manuscripts, newspaper articles, photographs, speeches, and printed materials from his work in the Banking and Currency Committee, the Secretary of the Treasury (1918-1920), and the United States Senate (1920-1946). Subjects include: The Federal Reserve Banking Act of 1913, the Federal Reserve system, and the Banking Act of 1933 (1932 Glass-Steagall Act).  \u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eOther topics include international, national and state issues reflected in the politics of this time period including opposition to the National Industrial Recovery Act; National Labor Relations Act; Bank Holding Company Bill; Office of Price Administration; World Wars I and II; League of Nations; World Court; Democratic Party platforms and policies; presidential elections of 1912, 1920, 1924, 1928, and 1940; Senator Huey P. Long; Franklin D. Roosevelt and the New Deal; attempted packing of the Supreme Court; neutrality legislation; disarmament; regulation of the coal industry; (business) products and services; child labor; anti-lynching law; immigration restriction (especially Chinese in Hawaii); Muscle Shoals; trade with Russia; diplomatic relations with the Vatican; Four-Power Treaty; soldiers' bonus bill; tariffs and protectionism; and national defense.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eVirginia topics of concern to Glass or his constituents include poll tax elimination; African American suffrage; women's suffrage; highways; intrastate commerce; University of Virginia Board of Visitors;  Woodrow Wilson Foundation; national Patrick Henry shrine at \"Red Hill\"; gubernatorial election of 1924; Bishop James Cannon, Jr., prohibition and the Anti-saloon League; Skyline Drive; Spotsylvania Battlefield Park; Virginia Fight For Freedom Committee; operation of the Lynchburg News and Advance; and patronage requests from Lynchburg, Roanoke, and Bedford, Campbell, Floyd, Montgomery, and Roanoke Counties, Va.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eMiscellaneous items of interest include a letter describing the early life of Booker T. Washington, election tickets for 1848, a 1906 recipe book, and letters concerning Glass' belief in the Baconian theory of Shakespeare authorship.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eAmong the many correspondents are Edwin A. Alderman, Newton Baker, Ray Stannard Baker, Alben Barkley, Bernard Baruch, William E. Borah, Chester Bowles, John Stewart Bryan, William Jennings Bryan, Harry F. Byrd, Richard E. Byrd, Calvin Coolidge, John W. Daniel, Josephus Daniels, Colgate W. Darden, Westmoreland Davis, Frederic A. Delano, the Democratic National Committee, Marriner S. Eccles, James A. Farley, Henry Ford, Douglas Southall Freeman, James A. Garfield, Samuel Gompers, Cary T. Grayson, Charles S. Hamlin, William P.G. Harding, Warren G. Harding, George L. Harrison, J. Edgar Hoover,Herbert Hoover, Edwin M. House, Cordell Hull, Harold Ickes, Hugh S. Johnson, Jesse Jones, Joseph P. Kennedy, Russell C. Leffingwell, Walter Lippmann, Huey Long, William Gibbs McAdoo, George Walter Mapp, Andrew Mellon, Eugene and Agnes Meyer, Andrew J. Montague, R. Walton Moore, Henry Morgenthau, Jr., Robert L. Owen, George C. Peery, Edmund Platt, John Garland Pollard, A. Willis Robertson, Eleanor Roosevelt, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Dave E. Satterfield, C. Bascom Slemp, Rixey Smith, Billy Sunday, Claude A. Swanson, Harry S. Truman, Joseph P. Tumulty, Oscar W. Underwood, Samuel Untermeyer, Arthur H. Vandenberg, Robert F. Wagner, Henry A. Wallace, Paul Moritz Warburg, Richard S. Whaley, William Allen White, John Skelton Williams, Henry Parker Willis, , Edith Bolling Wilson, Woodrow Wilson, Clifton A. Woodrum, and Walter Wyatt.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCorrespondents include President Woodrow Wilson, Samuel Untermyer, Henry Parker Willis, Charles G. Hamlin, William Gibbs McAdoo, Robert Owen, Victor Morawetz, Harry F. Byrd, John Skelton Williams, Henry Moehlenpah, Paul M. Warburg (under revision)\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eBox summaries\nBox 1: The Federal Reserve Bank Act and Federal Reserve system; the Federal Farm Loan Act; Panic of 1912; The Aldrich Bill; branch banks; central banking board; gold reserves; Currency [reform] Bill of 1913; Emergency Banking Act, 1933; the Banking Act of 1933 (Glass-Steagall Act; the Bank Bill of 1935; opposition to the National Industrial Recovery Act; the National Labor Relations Act; the Bank Holding Company Bill; and the Office of Price Administration.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBox 2: Federal Reserve Act (Glass-Owen Bill)6454, 2639, 7837;Aldrich-Vreeland Law;Federal Farm Loan Act Rural Credits Bill;and Clayton Anti-Trust Bill\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBox 3: Federal Reserve Act; Federal Reserve Banks; Federal Farm Loan Act; Land Mortgage Bank Bill; Branch banking; Kern Bill; Hollis Buckley Bill; Usury laws; Charles S. Hamlin; Edmund D. Hulbert; William Gibbs McAdoo; J. H. Tregoe; Woodrow Wilson; John Skelton Williams; Henry A. Moehlenpah; Frederic A. Delano; and Carter Glass\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBox 4: Federal Farm Loan Act;Rural credits;Federal Reserve Amendments and responses; McFadden Bill; Hollis Buckley Bill; and gold certificates\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBox 5: Federal Reserve Amendments and responses (Kitchin and Hardwick Bill);and Pomerene Bill. Charles S. Hamlin,William Gibbs McAdoo,Woodrow Wilson,Clayton Act,George M. Reynolds,Paul M. Warburg,John Skelton Williams,and Carter Glass\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBox 6: Federal Reserve Amendments and responses (Kitchin and Hardwick Bill); Federal Reserve Act authorship; Capital Issues Committee; Federal Land Bank of Baltimore; and the Revenue Act of 1918.George Norris,Edmund Platt, Frederic A. Delano, William P. G. Harding,Paul M. Warburg,Charles S. Hamlin, John Skelton Williams,Henry Parker Willis,Eugene Meyer,and Carter Glass\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBox 7: Federal Reserve Act authorship; Federal Farm Loan Amendments; Federal Land Banks; currency shortage; check collection; Smoot Bill; Liberty loans; Federal Reserve Bank of New York; railroad and shipping costs; War Finance Corporation; and Second Pan American Conference. William P. G. Harding,George W. Norris,Robert L. Owen,Russell C. Leffingwell,Benjamin Strong,John Skelton Williams renomination,William Gibbs McAdoo,Charles S. Hamlin,and Carter Glass\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBox 8: Federal Reserve Act authorship; Clayton Anti-Trust Act; Smoot Bill; check collecting fees; branch banking; Virginia-Carolina Joint StockLandBank; budget bill; excess profits tax; gold; and Liberty bonds. Walter Edward Harris, Charles A. Korbly,Edmund Platt,William Skelton Williams,William P. G. Harding,William Gibbs McAdoo, Hollins N. Randolph,Henry Parker Willis,Russell C. Leffingwell,Arthur Capper,Thomas B. McAdams,and Carter Glass\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBox 9: Federal Reserve Act and authorship; Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond; Bank of Haysi; Bank of New York; Open market commercial paper rates; McFadden Bill; discount rates; Overman Resolution; Liberty bonds; Pan American Conference; and Russian trade.William P. G. Harding,John Skelton Williams,Thomas B. McAdams,Russell C. Leffingwell,Edmund Platt,John Thomas Heflin,Hollins N. Randolph,William Gibbs McAdoo,George J. Seay,Henry Parker Willis, George Armstrong,Benjamin Strong,and Carter Glass\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBox 10: Federal Reserve System; McFadden Bill H. R. 2; Farm Loan Mortgage; discount rates and eligible paper; Pittman Silver Act; Frank A. Vanderlip banking plan; War Finance Corporation; Bank of New York; bank failure; Anderson Bill; Lenroot Bill; and William P. G. Harding reappointment.John Skelton Williams,Reed Smoot,Hollins N. Randolph,Russell C. Leffingwell,Thomas B. McAdams,Paul M. Warburg,Edmund Platt,Henry Parker Willis,Woodrow Wilson,Benjamin Strong, Daniel C. Roper, William Gibbs McAdoo,Charles S. Hamlin,George W. Norris,and Carter Glass\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBox 12:Federal Reserve Act authorship; McNary-Haugen Billand (speech responses); McFadden Bill; Federal Farm Loan Act; and Carter Glass book. Walter Edward Harris,Paul Warburg,Norman Davis,Walter E. Edge,Charles W. Collins,Charles S. Hamlin,Henry Parker Willis,George J. Seay,Benjamin Strong,and Edmund Platt\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBox 13: Pascagoula case; Federal Reserve Act authorship; McFadden Bill; \"Committee of One Hundred\"; Carter Glass book; and the McNary-Haugen Bill. Henry Parker Willis,William P. G. Harding,George J. Seay,Harry Flood Byrd,Bernard M. Baruch,Russell C. Leffingwell,Charles S. Hamlin,Charles W. Collins,Walter Edward Harris,Thomas B. McAdams,George W. Norris,and Edmund Platt\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBox 14 Federal Reserve Act authorship; McFadden Bill; Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas; Lafollette Resolution; \"Committee of One Hundred\"; Federal Home Loan Bill; misuse of Federal Reserve System; President Roosevelt criticism of Federal Reserve System; Charles E. Mitchell; and bank failures. Eugene Meyer,Edmund Platt,Henry Parker Willis,Bishop James Cannon, Jr., Thomas B. McAdams,Russell C. Plainwell,and Elben C. Folks\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBox 15: Federal Reserve Act authorship; responses to Depression and banking crisis; Bank of Kentucky; curb stock speculations; security abuses; Charles E. Mitchell; McFadden Bill; and criticism of Herbert Hoover. Thomas B. McAdams,Walter B. Mahoney,John W. Pole,Edmund Platt,Henry Parker Willis,Bernard M. Baruch,Eugene Meyer,William P. G. Harding,George L. Harrison,George W. Norris,George J. Seay,and Richard C. Whitney\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBox 16: Responses to the Depressionand(banking crisis); and Bank of Kentucky.Jouett Shouse,Henry Parker Willis,Henry B. Steagall,Eugene Meyer,Charles S. Hamlin,Milton S. Florsheim,Samuel M. Kaplan,and Elben C. Folkes\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBox 17: Responses to the Depression and banking crisis; President Hoover Plan; Federal Land Banks; Wall Street bankers; bank failures; Bank of Kentucky; Federal Reserve Act authorship; Federal Farm Loan Act; Federal Home Loan; and Hoover moratorium. Bernard M. Baruch,Jouett Shouse,Richard C. Whitney,Charles S. Hamlin,Henry A. Moehlenpah,Millard E. Tydings,Henry Parker Willis,Andrew W. Mellon,Edmund Platt,Eugene Meyer,Russell C. Leffingwell,and Thomas B. McAdams\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBox 18:Depression and banking crisis; Bank of Kentucky; Senate Committee on Banking and Currency Hearings; Reconstruction Finance Corporation; Nye Report; Pan American Finance Conference; Gold; Silver; and death of E. C. Glass. Elben C. Folkes,Al Kaplan,Herbert Hoover,Jouett Shouse,Charles S. Hamlin,George L. Harrison, Thorwald Siegfried, Eugene Meyer,and Pat H. Drewery\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBox 19:Federal Home Loan Bank; Federal Land Bank of Baltimore; foreclosures; Glass-Steagall; and Henry Parker Willis articles in France on gold upsetting to colleagues.Franklin Delano Roosevelt,John W. Pole,Henry B. Steagall,Oliver J. Sands,Russell C. Leffingwell,Charles W. Collins,Charles S. Hamlin,and George L. Harrison\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBox 20-24: Glass Steagall responses; and Glass speech on gold\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBox 25: Glass-Steagall Act; Goldsborough Bill; gold standard; Reconstruction Finance Corporation; Joint Stock Land Banks;Revenue Act of 1932; responses to Carter Glass speech;praise for Carter Glass; bank failures; Banking study; Holiday proclamation by President Roosevelt; Funding for projects such as the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California, and a bridge across the Potomac River; Herbert Hoover;Newton D. Baker;Russell C. Leffingwell;George L. Harrison; Eugene Meyer; Samuel Untermyer; Chester Morrill; George W. Norris; Richard S. Whaley;Princess Amelie Rives Troubetzkoy;James F. Byrnes;Louis Wiley; Robert J. Bulkley;John W. Owens;HenryParker Willis; and the Dallas Chamber of Commerce\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBox 26: Responses to banking crisis and Depressionand criticism of Herbert Hoover\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBox 27: Responses to Depression; McNary-Haugen Bill; Home Loan Bill; Emergency Farm Mortgage Act of 1933; Thomas Bill; Federal Reserve Amendment Section 10b; Glass-Steagall Banking Act; and Credit Report U.S. S. R. (George N. Peek).George L. Harrison,Chester Morrill,Russell C. Leffingwell,Louis T. McFadden,Emmanuel Kaplan,Hugh S. Johnson,and the National Recovery Act\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBox 28: Glass-Steagall Act responses; Emergency Bank Bill; California banks; and Goldsborough Amendment. Edmund Platt and Frank A. Vanderlip\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBox 29: Glass-Steagall Act responses, and Section 19 Statewide branch banking for national banks; Huey Long filibuster; bank guarantees; Charles E. Mitchell investigation; and continued moratorium on closing banks. Duncan U. Fletcher; Ferdinand Pecora; and Virginia Governor John Garland Pollard\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBox 30: Gold, Reconstruction Finance Corporation, Senate Banking and Currency Committee investigation of J. P. Morgan; Glass-Steagall Banking Act; National Recovery Act; Emergency Banking Act relief; Morris Plan; and criticism of Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Duncan U. Fletcher; and William Gibbs McAdoo\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBox 31: Senate investigation of J. P. Morgan;Gold standard; Expand use of silver; stability of the dollar; praise for Carter Glass radio speech \"Facts about Fiscal Policy of Our Government During the Past Few Years\" and \"Shall We Go Over the Precipice?\" Duncan U. Fletcher; Edmund Platt; and Herbert L. Myrick\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBox 32: Rsponses to Glass speech [\"Shall We Go Over the Precipice?\"] against Roosevelt inflation bill; Emergency Bank Bill; Bankruptcy legislation; Banking Act of 1935; Credit Union Act; Marriner S. Eccles as Governor of the Federal Reserve Board; Branchbanking; Bank of the United States; death of Eugerne R. Black; and Philippine currency. Charles S. Hamlin; Edmund Platt; George W. Norris; George L. Harrison; Herny Parker Willis; Paul M. Warburg; Henry B. Steagall; Clifton A. Woodrum; Edward W. Kemmerer;Rudolph Spreckels; Sam M. Kaplan; John Foster Dulles; Milton Friedman; T. F. Wentworth; Dean Acheson; Chester Morrill; Walter Wyatt; Eugene R. Black; James P. Warburg; and James Elliott Heath\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBox 33: (Fletcher-Rayburn Bill, Kean Bill; National Securities Exchange Act, McLeod Bill, or the Banking Act of 1935); Federal Reserve Amendment Section 12b; Morris-Sheppard Bill; Chester Morrill; Thomas B. McAdams; William Gibbs McAdoo; Elmer Thomas; Henry Morgenthau, Jr.; Eugene Meyer; Duncan U. Fletcher; Jesse H. Jones; and Richard C. Whitney\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBox 34: Banking Act of 1933; National Securities Exchange Act; Kean Bill; Fletcher-Rayburn Bill; misuse of the Federal Reserve System; de-evaluation of the dollar; and Gold Reserve Act\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBox 35: Banking Act of 1935; Gold Reserve Act; Gold speech of Russell C. Leffingwell; National Recovery Act; Hugh S. Johnson; Kaplan Plan; Robert L. Owen inquiry; Huey Long; Goldsborough Amendment;Elmer Thomas; Charles S. Hamlin; George Wharton Pepper; Henry H. Heiman; Henry Parker Willis; George W. Norris; Duncan U. Fletcher; J. F. T. O'Connor; Robert D. Kent; Royal S. Copeland; Edward W. Kemmerer; and A. Willis Robertson\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBox 36: Responses to the Banking Act of 1935; Harry Flood Byrd; Duncan U. Fletcher; A. Willis Robertson; Leo T. Crowley; Jesse H. Jones; Edmund Platt; Henry Morgenthau, Jr.; J. F. T. O'Connor; Thomas B. McAdams; and Thomas P. Gore\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBox 37: Responses to the Banking Act of 1935; Glass concerns about Marriner S. Eccles as Governor of the Federal Reserve Board and criticism of government and political control of banking; Federal Reserve Act authorship; Goldsborough Amendment; Townsend Plan; A. H. Dobson; Frank A. Vanderlip; Irving Fisher; Walter Lichtenstein; Arthur Capper; Duncan U. Fletcher; Bennett Champ Clark; Thomas P. Gore; Henry Heiman; Thomas B. McAdams; Hollins N. Randolph; Hugo L. Black; and Thorwald Siegfried\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBox 38: Banking Act of 1935; Gold clause; Comptroller of the Currency; silver; Robert L. Owen inquiry; Reconstruction Finance Corporation; repeal of Thomas Amendment; concern about Marriner S. Eccles as Governor of the Federal Reserve Board; portrait of John Skelton Williams; Edmund Platt; Agnes and Eugene Meyer; Chester Morrill; Robert F. Wagner; Kenneth D. McKellar; George L. Harrison; Harry S. Truman; George W. Norris; Henry Parker Willis; Henry Morgenthau, Jr.; Marriner S. Eccles and Russell C. Leffingwell(Treasury and Nye Report)\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBox 39: Repeal Thomas Amendment; Branch banking; Bankhead-Jones Farm Act; Federal Land Bank of Baltimore Bank Holding companies; and Reconstruction Finance Corporation.William Gibbs McAdoo,Edmund Platt,Thomas B. McAdams,Henry Heiman,Jesse H. Jones,Henry Morgenthau, Jr.,Robert L. Owen,and the death of Henry Parker Willis\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBox 40: Henry Parker Willis Foundation; Federal Reserve Act anniversary; J. F. T. O'Connor resignation; misuse of the Federal Reserve System; Robert L. Owen and Carter Glass accusations against Marriner S. Eccles; Reconstruction Finance Corporation; Clayton Act; Mead Bill; De-evaluation of the dollar;silver program; Gold Act; Home Owners Loan Corporation Act; Self-liquidating Bill; and Barden Bill.Edmund Platt,Jesse H. Jones, William Gibbs McAdoo,Henry Morgenthau, Jr.,Robert F. Wagner,and Marriner S. Eccles\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBox 41: Tribute to Edmund Platt; Embargo Act; Banking and Currency Committee pending legislation; Branch banking; Silver Purchase Act; de-evaluation of the dollar; Trust Indenture Act (Robert F.Wagner); Bank Holding company; Jones Wheeler Bill; Federal Home Loan Bank Act; Clayton Act; Townsend Plan; FDIC; Pittman Amendment; Farm Relief Bill; Reconstruction Finance Corporation; Wagner Lea Bill; and disappointment with Marriner S. Eccles;Harry Flood Byrd,Jesse H. Jones,Henry Heiman,Frederic Delano,and Leo T. Crowley\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBox 42: Tribute to Carter Glass; Banking and Currency Committee pending legislation; FDIC and excess profits tax; Federal Reserve Amendment Section 23; medal for Howard Hughes; American Palestine Committee (Robert F. Wagner); Farm credit; Credit Union Act; price control; Bank Holding Company; Reconstruction Finance Corporation; de-evaluation of the dollar Federal Reserve Act authorship; and criticism of Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Cordell Hull; Walter Lichtenstein; Chester Morrill; Robert F. Wagner; and Leo T. Crowley\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eH. S. Trout, president First National Bank, hoping that the bill will be defeated\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eGlass expressses concern that Untermeyer is trying to push the Aldrich Bill. Other correspondents include William A. Glasgow, A. P. Pujo, Hubert D. Stephens, and Henry Parker Willis\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eGlasgow to act as counsel to the Banking and Currency Committee of the Senate\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSet up a meeting with the President to revise the currency system; Henry Parker Willis; and reference to Aldrich Bill\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eJ. C. Goodloe suggests the need for new banking laws in order to help the farmers\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eOffering methods to create calmness in banking instead of panic\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eBanking and Currency Committee of the Senate Banking survey questions about banking\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCriticism of S. 4129 and H.R. 13570 to place tax on real estate instead of stocks and bonds to help relieve bankrupt Treasury\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eColonel House wants to set up a secret meeting for Samuel Untermeyer with President Wilson in order to promote the Aldrich Bill\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eGlass apologizes for his reaction to a speech given by Forgan\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCharles McCulloch, Andrew J. Montague, and William GibbsMcAdoo\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIncludes correspondence about the banking bills from January to April 1916. (Carter Glass correspondence with Clement C. Dickinson January 22, 1916 defending the Federal Reserve.)\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eBankruptcy laws, World War I\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMentions medal for Howard Hughes\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eincludes correspondence Carter Glass\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSee also 1933\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eWoodrow Wilson typed speech to the House of Representatives\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eHistoric moment when Glass takes the first transatlantic flight to Europe with the loan from Treasurer Russell C. Leffingwell\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAgriculture Appropriation Bill; Smith-lever funds; and African Americans in Virginia\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSee also Trade Farmers' and Growers Association Box 52 Folder 1\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eprinted item \"The Aluminum Monopoly\"\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eVirginia Polytechnic Institute request for captured German cannon\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003emention of J. G. Ferneyhough and cows also\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eEdwin Anderson Alderman, Governor E.Lee Trinkle, Jr.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eGlass S. 4029 to determine location for engagement of war vessels and memorial; interview with last survivor of the Merrimac, Richard Curtis; and John Stewart Bryan\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSibley lawsuit claim H. B. 3436\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eElben C. Folkes requests help for his son; lawsuit J. G. Ferneyhough; Senator Couzens; and Florence Adams nomination for AppleBlossom Princess\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eEdwin Anderson Alderman letter advocating for a hospital in Charlottesville\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMemorial Bridge approach bill; H. R. 796; furlough and shorter work week; claims; capital punishment for kidnappers H. R. 96; transportation of persons or property in commerce by motor carrier S. 2793; opposition to income tax;Montgomery county Civic Federation special meeting; Tariff Act of 1930 to import science books for teaching purposes; stamp tax on bank checks (banking); Public Works Program; equal protection of voters in Puerto Rico S. 4691; unemployment relief bills; Railroad pension bill H. R. 10023 and S. 3892, H. R. 9891; Hatfield Bill; Keller Bill 4646; S. 4161; Boulder Dam; Home Loan Bank S. 2959; Emergency Industries Preservation Act; Stuart Junior High School; Albemarle County Medical Society S. 3090 and H. R. 8077; prohibit experiments on living dogs in District of Columbia S. 2146; night work pay H. R. 11267; District of Columbia appropriation bill H. R. 11361; Brookhart Bill censorship of moving pictures; vocational rehabilitation S. 3818; opposition to abolishment of Army Transports and Panama Railroad Steamship Line; Federal relief for unemployed; Capper-Kelly bill to relief excise taxes on druggist; patenting of original designs of silk patterns; Georgetown Branch Library Building and District of Columbia appropriation bill; radio lottery advertising H. R. 7716; Injunction measure S. 936; strengthen immigration laws H. B. 1967; crime to advocate overthrow of government H. B. 8549; issue two or three billions in bonds of small denominations for soldiers bonus or as currency;intrinsic property values vs market values in depression times; and President Hoover's Bankers-Industrialists Committee of Twelve for Credit Expansion\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eErnie Adamson\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eimmigration; Tangiers Island; and Colgate W. Darden, Jr.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eHarry Flood Byrd\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eFrances Perkins\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eRobert F. Wagner\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eKenneth McKellar; and Astor case\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSee also Political correspondence\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSee also Political correspondence\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSee also Legislative correspondence 1921\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eColgate Darden Jr.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSchuyler O. Bland\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\"Pump Priming Bill\" Harry Flood Byrd; Public Works Administration; Equal Rights Bill; and Industrial Profits Tax\u003c/p\u003e"],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents"],"scopecontent_tesim":["The Carter Glass papers, 1820-1946, 141 cubic feet, consist of correspondence, manuscripts, newspaper articles, photographs, speeches, and printed materials from his work in the Banking and Currency Committee, the Secretary of the Treasury (1918-1920), and the United States Senate (1920-1946). Subjects include: The Federal Reserve Banking Act of 1913, the Federal Reserve system, and the Banking Act of 1933 (1932 Glass-Steagall Act).  ","Other topics include international, national and state issues reflected in the politics of this time period including opposition to the National Industrial Recovery Act; National Labor Relations Act; Bank Holding Company Bill; Office of Price Administration; World Wars I and II; League of Nations; World Court; Democratic Party platforms and policies; presidential elections of 1912, 1920, 1924, 1928, and 1940; Senator Huey P. Long; Franklin D. Roosevelt and the New Deal; attempted packing of the Supreme Court; neutrality legislation; disarmament; regulation of the coal industry; (business) products and services; child labor; anti-lynching law; immigration restriction (especially Chinese in Hawaii); Muscle Shoals; trade with Russia; diplomatic relations with the Vatican; Four-Power Treaty; soldiers' bonus bill; tariffs and protectionism; and national defense.","Virginia topics of concern to Glass or his constituents include poll tax elimination; African American suffrage; women's suffrage; highways; intrastate commerce; University of Virginia Board of Visitors;  Woodrow Wilson Foundation; national Patrick Henry shrine at \"Red Hill\"; gubernatorial election of 1924; Bishop James Cannon, Jr., prohibition and the Anti-saloon League; Skyline Drive; Spotsylvania Battlefield Park; Virginia Fight For Freedom Committee; operation of the Lynchburg News and Advance; and patronage requests from Lynchburg, Roanoke, and Bedford, Campbell, Floyd, Montgomery, and Roanoke Counties, Va.","Miscellaneous items of interest include a letter describing the early life of Booker T. Washington, election tickets for 1848, a 1906 recipe book, and letters concerning Glass' belief in the Baconian theory of Shakespeare authorship.","Among the many correspondents are Edwin A. Alderman, Newton Baker, Ray Stannard Baker, Alben Barkley, Bernard Baruch, William E. Borah, Chester Bowles, John Stewart Bryan, William Jennings Bryan, Harry F. Byrd, Richard E. Byrd, Calvin Coolidge, John W. Daniel, Josephus Daniels, Colgate W. Darden, Westmoreland Davis, Frederic A. Delano, the Democratic National Committee, Marriner S. Eccles, James A. Farley, Henry Ford, Douglas Southall Freeman, James A. Garfield, Samuel Gompers, Cary T. Grayson, Charles S. Hamlin, William P.G. Harding, Warren G. Harding, George L. Harrison, J. Edgar Hoover,Herbert Hoover, Edwin M. House, Cordell Hull, Harold Ickes, Hugh S. Johnson, Jesse Jones, Joseph P. Kennedy, Russell C. Leffingwell, Walter Lippmann, Huey Long, William Gibbs McAdoo, George Walter Mapp, Andrew Mellon, Eugene and Agnes Meyer, Andrew J. Montague, R. Walton Moore, Henry Morgenthau, Jr., Robert L. Owen, George C. Peery, Edmund Platt, John Garland Pollard, A. Willis Robertson, Eleanor Roosevelt, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Dave E. Satterfield, C. Bascom Slemp, Rixey Smith, Billy Sunday, Claude A. Swanson, Harry S. Truman, Joseph P. Tumulty, Oscar W. Underwood, Samuel Untermeyer, Arthur H. Vandenberg, Robert F. Wagner, Henry A. Wallace, Paul Moritz Warburg, Richard S. Whaley, William Allen White, John Skelton Williams, Henry Parker Willis, , Edith Bolling Wilson, Woodrow Wilson, Clifton A. Woodrum, and Walter Wyatt.","Correspondents include President Woodrow Wilson, Samuel Untermyer, Henry Parker Willis, Charles G. Hamlin, William Gibbs McAdoo, Robert Owen, Victor Morawetz, Harry F. Byrd, John Skelton Williams, Henry Moehlenpah, Paul M. Warburg (under revision)","Box summaries\nBox 1: The Federal Reserve Bank Act and Federal Reserve system; the Federal Farm Loan Act; Panic of 1912; The Aldrich Bill; branch banks; central banking board; gold reserves; Currency [reform] Bill of 1913; Emergency Banking Act, 1933; the Banking Act of 1933 (Glass-Steagall Act; the Bank Bill of 1935; opposition to the National Industrial Recovery Act; the National Labor Relations Act; the Bank Holding Company Bill; and the Office of Price Administration.","Box 2: Federal Reserve Act (Glass-Owen Bill)6454, 2639, 7837;Aldrich-Vreeland Law;Federal Farm Loan Act Rural Credits Bill;and Clayton Anti-Trust Bill","Box 3: Federal Reserve Act; Federal Reserve Banks; Federal Farm Loan Act; Land Mortgage Bank Bill; Branch banking; Kern Bill; Hollis Buckley Bill; Usury laws; Charles S. Hamlin; Edmund D. Hulbert; William Gibbs McAdoo; J. H. Tregoe; Woodrow Wilson; John Skelton Williams; Henry A. Moehlenpah; Frederic A. Delano; and Carter Glass","Box 4: Federal Farm Loan Act;Rural credits;Federal Reserve Amendments and responses; McFadden Bill; Hollis Buckley Bill; and gold certificates","Box 5: Federal Reserve Amendments and responses (Kitchin and Hardwick Bill);and Pomerene Bill. Charles S. Hamlin,William Gibbs McAdoo,Woodrow Wilson,Clayton Act,George M. Reynolds,Paul M. Warburg,John Skelton Williams,and Carter Glass","Box 6: Federal Reserve Amendments and responses (Kitchin and Hardwick Bill); Federal Reserve Act authorship; Capital Issues Committee; Federal Land Bank of Baltimore; and the Revenue Act of 1918.George Norris,Edmund Platt, Frederic A. Delano, William P. G. Harding,Paul M. Warburg,Charles S. Hamlin, John Skelton Williams,Henry Parker Willis,Eugene Meyer,and Carter Glass","Box 7: Federal Reserve Act authorship; Federal Farm Loan Amendments; Federal Land Banks; currency shortage; check collection; Smoot Bill; Liberty loans; Federal Reserve Bank of New York; railroad and shipping costs; War Finance Corporation; and Second Pan American Conference. William P. G. Harding,George W. Norris,Robert L. Owen,Russell C. Leffingwell,Benjamin Strong,John Skelton Williams renomination,William Gibbs McAdoo,Charles S. Hamlin,and Carter Glass","Box 8: Federal Reserve Act authorship; Clayton Anti-Trust Act; Smoot Bill; check collecting fees; branch banking; Virginia-Carolina Joint StockLandBank; budget bill; excess profits tax; gold; and Liberty bonds. Walter Edward Harris, Charles A. Korbly,Edmund Platt,William Skelton Williams,William P. G. Harding,William Gibbs McAdoo, Hollins N. Randolph,Henry Parker Willis,Russell C. Leffingwell,Arthur Capper,Thomas B. McAdams,and Carter Glass","Box 9: Federal Reserve Act and authorship; Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond; Bank of Haysi; Bank of New York; Open market commercial paper rates; McFadden Bill; discount rates; Overman Resolution; Liberty bonds; Pan American Conference; and Russian trade.William P. G. Harding,John Skelton Williams,Thomas B. McAdams,Russell C. Leffingwell,Edmund Platt,John Thomas Heflin,Hollins N. Randolph,William Gibbs McAdoo,George J. Seay,Henry Parker Willis, George Armstrong,Benjamin Strong,and Carter Glass","Box 10: Federal Reserve System; McFadden Bill H. R. 2; Farm Loan Mortgage; discount rates and eligible paper; Pittman Silver Act; Frank A. Vanderlip banking plan; War Finance Corporation; Bank of New York; bank failure; Anderson Bill; Lenroot Bill; and William P. G. Harding reappointment.John Skelton Williams,Reed Smoot,Hollins N. Randolph,Russell C. Leffingwell,Thomas B. McAdams,Paul M. Warburg,Edmund Platt,Henry Parker Willis,Woodrow Wilson,Benjamin Strong, Daniel C. Roper, William Gibbs McAdoo,Charles S. Hamlin,George W. Norris,and Carter Glass","Box 12:Federal Reserve Act authorship; McNary-Haugen Billand (speech responses); McFadden Bill; Federal Farm Loan Act; and Carter Glass book. Walter Edward Harris,Paul Warburg,Norman Davis,Walter E. Edge,Charles W. Collins,Charles S. Hamlin,Henry Parker Willis,George J. Seay,Benjamin Strong,and Edmund Platt","Box 13: Pascagoula case; Federal Reserve Act authorship; McFadden Bill; \"Committee of One Hundred\"; Carter Glass book; and the McNary-Haugen Bill. Henry Parker Willis,William P. G. Harding,George J. Seay,Harry Flood Byrd,Bernard M. Baruch,Russell C. Leffingwell,Charles S. Hamlin,Charles W. Collins,Walter Edward Harris,Thomas B. McAdams,George W. Norris,and Edmund Platt","Box 14 Federal Reserve Act authorship; McFadden Bill; Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas; Lafollette Resolution; \"Committee of One Hundred\"; Federal Home Loan Bill; misuse of Federal Reserve System; President Roosevelt criticism of Federal Reserve System; Charles E. Mitchell; and bank failures. Eugene Meyer,Edmund Platt,Henry Parker Willis,Bishop James Cannon, Jr., Thomas B. McAdams,Russell C. Plainwell,and Elben C. Folks","Box 15: Federal Reserve Act authorship; responses to Depression and banking crisis; Bank of Kentucky; curb stock speculations; security abuses; Charles E. Mitchell; McFadden Bill; and criticism of Herbert Hoover. Thomas B. McAdams,Walter B. Mahoney,John W. Pole,Edmund Platt,Henry Parker Willis,Bernard M. Baruch,Eugene Meyer,William P. G. Harding,George L. Harrison,George W. Norris,George J. Seay,and Richard C. Whitney","Box 16: Responses to the Depressionand(banking crisis); and Bank of Kentucky.Jouett Shouse,Henry Parker Willis,Henry B. Steagall,Eugene Meyer,Charles S. Hamlin,Milton S. Florsheim,Samuel M. Kaplan,and Elben C. Folkes","Box 17: Responses to the Depression and banking crisis; President Hoover Plan; Federal Land Banks; Wall Street bankers; bank failures; Bank of Kentucky; Federal Reserve Act authorship; Federal Farm Loan Act; Federal Home Loan; and Hoover moratorium. Bernard M. Baruch,Jouett Shouse,Richard C. Whitney,Charles S. Hamlin,Henry A. Moehlenpah,Millard E. Tydings,Henry Parker Willis,Andrew W. Mellon,Edmund Platt,Eugene Meyer,Russell C. Leffingwell,and Thomas B. McAdams","Box 18:Depression and banking crisis; Bank of Kentucky; Senate Committee on Banking and Currency Hearings; Reconstruction Finance Corporation; Nye Report; Pan American Finance Conference; Gold; Silver; and death of E. C. Glass. Elben C. Folkes,Al Kaplan,Herbert Hoover,Jouett Shouse,Charles S. Hamlin,George L. Harrison, Thorwald Siegfried, Eugene Meyer,and Pat H. Drewery","Box 19:Federal Home Loan Bank; Federal Land Bank of Baltimore; foreclosures; Glass-Steagall; and Henry Parker Willis articles in France on gold upsetting to colleagues.Franklin Delano Roosevelt,John W. Pole,Henry B. Steagall,Oliver J. Sands,Russell C. Leffingwell,Charles W. Collins,Charles S. Hamlin,and George L. Harrison","Box 20-24: Glass Steagall responses; and Glass speech on gold","Box 25: Glass-Steagall Act; Goldsborough Bill; gold standard; Reconstruction Finance Corporation; Joint Stock Land Banks;Revenue Act of 1932; responses to Carter Glass speech;praise for Carter Glass; bank failures; Banking study; Holiday proclamation by President Roosevelt; Funding for projects such as the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California, and a bridge across the Potomac River; Herbert Hoover;Newton D. Baker;Russell C. Leffingwell;George L. Harrison; Eugene Meyer; Samuel Untermyer; Chester Morrill; George W. Norris; Richard S. Whaley;Princess Amelie Rives Troubetzkoy;James F. Byrnes;Louis Wiley; Robert J. Bulkley;John W. Owens;HenryParker Willis; and the Dallas Chamber of Commerce","Box 26: Responses to banking crisis and Depressionand criticism of Herbert Hoover","Box 27: Responses to Depression; McNary-Haugen Bill; Home Loan Bill; Emergency Farm Mortgage Act of 1933; Thomas Bill; Federal Reserve Amendment Section 10b; Glass-Steagall Banking Act; and Credit Report U.S. S. R. (George N. Peek).George L. Harrison,Chester Morrill,Russell C. Leffingwell,Louis T. McFadden,Emmanuel Kaplan,Hugh S. Johnson,and the National Recovery Act","Box 28: Glass-Steagall Act responses; Emergency Bank Bill; California banks; and Goldsborough Amendment. Edmund Platt and Frank A. Vanderlip","Box 29: Glass-Steagall Act responses, and Section 19 Statewide branch banking for national banks; Huey Long filibuster; bank guarantees; Charles E. Mitchell investigation; and continued moratorium on closing banks. Duncan U. Fletcher; Ferdinand Pecora; and Virginia Governor John Garland Pollard","Box 30: Gold, Reconstruction Finance Corporation, Senate Banking and Currency Committee investigation of J. P. Morgan; Glass-Steagall Banking Act; National Recovery Act; Emergency Banking Act relief; Morris Plan; and criticism of Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Duncan U. Fletcher; and William Gibbs McAdoo","Box 31: Senate investigation of J. P. Morgan;Gold standard; Expand use of silver; stability of the dollar; praise for Carter Glass radio speech \"Facts about Fiscal Policy of Our Government During the Past Few Years\" and \"Shall We Go Over the Precipice?\" Duncan U. Fletcher; Edmund Platt; and Herbert L. Myrick","Box 32: Rsponses to Glass speech [\"Shall We Go Over the Precipice?\"] against Roosevelt inflation bill; Emergency Bank Bill; Bankruptcy legislation; Banking Act of 1935; Credit Union Act; Marriner S. Eccles as Governor of the Federal Reserve Board; Branchbanking; Bank of the United States; death of Eugerne R. Black; and Philippine currency. Charles S. Hamlin; Edmund Platt; George W. Norris; George L. Harrison; Herny Parker Willis; Paul M. Warburg; Henry B. Steagall; Clifton A. Woodrum; Edward W. Kemmerer;Rudolph Spreckels; Sam M. Kaplan; John Foster Dulles; Milton Friedman; T. F. Wentworth; Dean Acheson; Chester Morrill; Walter Wyatt; Eugene R. Black; James P. Warburg; and James Elliott Heath","Box 33: (Fletcher-Rayburn Bill, Kean Bill; National Securities Exchange Act, McLeod Bill, or the Banking Act of 1935); Federal Reserve Amendment Section 12b; Morris-Sheppard Bill; Chester Morrill; Thomas B. McAdams; William Gibbs McAdoo; Elmer Thomas; Henry Morgenthau, Jr.; Eugene Meyer; Duncan U. Fletcher; Jesse H. Jones; and Richard C. Whitney","Box 34: Banking Act of 1933; National Securities Exchange Act; Kean Bill; Fletcher-Rayburn Bill; misuse of the Federal Reserve System; de-evaluation of the dollar; and Gold Reserve Act","Box 35: Banking Act of 1935; Gold Reserve Act; Gold speech of Russell C. Leffingwell; National Recovery Act; Hugh S. Johnson; Kaplan Plan; Robert L. Owen inquiry; Huey Long; Goldsborough Amendment;Elmer Thomas; Charles S. Hamlin; George Wharton Pepper; Henry H. Heiman; Henry Parker Willis; George W. Norris; Duncan U. Fletcher; J. F. T. O'Connor; Robert D. Kent; Royal S. Copeland; Edward W. Kemmerer; and A. Willis Robertson","Box 36: Responses to the Banking Act of 1935; Harry Flood Byrd; Duncan U. Fletcher; A. Willis Robertson; Leo T. Crowley; Jesse H. Jones; Edmund Platt; Henry Morgenthau, Jr.; J. F. T. O'Connor; Thomas B. McAdams; and Thomas P. Gore","Box 37: Responses to the Banking Act of 1935; Glass concerns about Marriner S. Eccles as Governor of the Federal Reserve Board and criticism of government and political control of banking; Federal Reserve Act authorship; Goldsborough Amendment; Townsend Plan; A. H. Dobson; Frank A. Vanderlip; Irving Fisher; Walter Lichtenstein; Arthur Capper; Duncan U. Fletcher; Bennett Champ Clark; Thomas P. Gore; Henry Heiman; Thomas B. McAdams; Hollins N. Randolph; Hugo L. Black; and Thorwald Siegfried","Box 38: Banking Act of 1935; Gold clause; Comptroller of the Currency; silver; Robert L. Owen inquiry; Reconstruction Finance Corporation; repeal of Thomas Amendment; concern about Marriner S. Eccles as Governor of the Federal Reserve Board; portrait of John Skelton Williams; Edmund Platt; Agnes and Eugene Meyer; Chester Morrill; Robert F. Wagner; Kenneth D. McKellar; George L. Harrison; Harry S. Truman; George W. Norris; Henry Parker Willis; Henry Morgenthau, Jr.; Marriner S. Eccles and Russell C. Leffingwell(Treasury and Nye Report)","Box 39: Repeal Thomas Amendment; Branch banking; Bankhead-Jones Farm Act; Federal Land Bank of Baltimore Bank Holding companies; and Reconstruction Finance Corporation.William Gibbs McAdoo,Edmund Platt,Thomas B. McAdams,Henry Heiman,Jesse H. Jones,Henry Morgenthau, Jr.,Robert L. Owen,and the death of Henry Parker Willis","Box 40: Henry Parker Willis Foundation; Federal Reserve Act anniversary; J. F. T. O'Connor resignation; misuse of the Federal Reserve System; Robert L. Owen and Carter Glass accusations against Marriner S. Eccles; Reconstruction Finance Corporation; Clayton Act; Mead Bill; De-evaluation of the dollar;silver program; Gold Act; Home Owners Loan Corporation Act; Self-liquidating Bill; and Barden Bill.Edmund Platt,Jesse H. Jones, William Gibbs McAdoo,Henry Morgenthau, Jr.,Robert F. Wagner,and Marriner S. Eccles","Box 41: Tribute to Edmund Platt; Embargo Act; Banking and Currency Committee pending legislation; Branch banking; Silver Purchase Act; de-evaluation of the dollar; Trust Indenture Act (Robert F.Wagner); Bank Holding company; Jones Wheeler Bill; Federal Home Loan Bank Act; Clayton Act; Townsend Plan; FDIC; Pittman Amendment; Farm Relief Bill; Reconstruction Finance Corporation; Wagner Lea Bill; and disappointment with Marriner S. Eccles;Harry Flood Byrd,Jesse H. Jones,Henry Heiman,Frederic Delano,and Leo T. Crowley","Box 42: Tribute to Carter Glass; Banking and Currency Committee pending legislation; FDIC and excess profits tax; Federal Reserve Amendment Section 23; medal for Howard Hughes; American Palestine Committee (Robert F. Wagner); Farm credit; Credit Union Act; price control; Bank Holding Company; Reconstruction Finance Corporation; de-evaluation of the dollar Federal Reserve Act authorship; and criticism of Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Cordell Hull; Walter Lichtenstein; Chester Morrill; Robert F. Wagner; and Leo T. Crowley","H. S. Trout, president First National Bank, hoping that the bill will be defeated","Glass expressses concern that Untermeyer is trying to push the Aldrich Bill. Other correspondents include William A. Glasgow, A. P. Pujo, Hubert D. Stephens, and Henry Parker Willis","Glasgow to act as counsel to the Banking and Currency Committee of the Senate","Set up a meeting with the President to revise the currency system; Henry Parker Willis; and reference to Aldrich Bill","J. C. Goodloe suggests the need for new banking laws in order to help the farmers","Offering methods to create calmness in banking instead of panic","Banking and Currency Committee of the Senate Banking survey questions about banking","Criticism of S. 4129 and H.R. 13570 to place tax on real estate instead of stocks and bonds to help relieve bankrupt Treasury","Colonel House wants to set up a secret meeting for Samuel Untermeyer with President Wilson in order to promote the Aldrich Bill","Glass apologizes for his reaction to a speech given by Forgan","Charles McCulloch, Andrew J. Montague, and William GibbsMcAdoo","Includes correspondence about the banking bills from January to April 1916. (Carter Glass correspondence with Clement C. Dickinson January 22, 1916 defending the Federal Reserve.)","Bankruptcy laws, World War I","Mentions medal for Howard Hughes","includes correspondence Carter Glass","See also 1933","Woodrow Wilson typed speech to the House of Representatives","Historic moment when Glass takes the first transatlantic flight to Europe with the loan from Treasurer Russell C. Leffingwell","Agriculture Appropriation Bill; Smith-lever funds; and African Americans in Virginia","See also Trade Farmers' and Growers Association Box 52 Folder 1","printed item \"The Aluminum Monopoly\"","Virginia Polytechnic Institute request for captured German cannon","mention of J. G. Ferneyhough and cows also","Edwin Anderson Alderman, Governor E.Lee Trinkle, Jr.","Glass S. 4029 to determine location for engagement of war vessels and memorial; interview with last survivor of the Merrimac, Richard Curtis; and John Stewart Bryan","Sibley lawsuit claim H. B. 3436","Elben C. Folkes requests help for his son; lawsuit J. G. Ferneyhough; Senator Couzens; and Florence Adams nomination for AppleBlossom Princess","Edwin Anderson Alderman letter advocating for a hospital in Charlottesville","Memorial Bridge approach bill; H. R. 796; furlough and shorter work week; claims; capital punishment for kidnappers H. R. 96; transportation of persons or property in commerce by motor carrier S. 2793; opposition to income tax;Montgomery county Civic Federation special meeting; Tariff Act of 1930 to import science books for teaching purposes; stamp tax on bank checks (banking); Public Works Program; equal protection of voters in Puerto Rico S. 4691; unemployment relief bills; Railroad pension bill H. R. 10023 and S. 3892, H. R. 9891; Hatfield Bill; Keller Bill 4646; S. 4161; Boulder Dam; Home Loan Bank S. 2959; Emergency Industries Preservation Act; Stuart Junior High School; Albemarle County Medical Society S. 3090 and H. R. 8077; prohibit experiments on living dogs in District of Columbia S. 2146; night work pay H. R. 11267; District of Columbia appropriation bill H. R. 11361; Brookhart Bill censorship of moving pictures; vocational rehabilitation S. 3818; opposition to abolishment of Army Transports and Panama Railroad Steamship Line; Federal relief for unemployed; Capper-Kelly bill to relief excise taxes on druggist; patenting of original designs of silk patterns; Georgetown Branch Library Building and District of Columbia appropriation bill; radio lottery advertising H. R. 7716; Injunction measure S. 936; strengthen immigration laws H. B. 1967; crime to advocate overthrow of government H. B. 8549; issue two or three billions in bonds of small denominations for soldiers bonus or as currency;intrinsic property values vs market values in depression times; and President Hoover's Bankers-Industrialists Committee of Twelve for Credit Expansion","Ernie Adamson","immigration; Tangiers Island; and Colgate W. Darden, Jr.","Harry Flood Byrd","Frances Perkins","Robert F. Wagner","Kenneth McKellar; and Astor case","See also Political correspondence","See also Political correspondence","See also Legislative correspondence 1921","Colgate Darden Jr.","Schuyler O. Bland","\"Pump Priming Bill\" Harry Flood Byrd; Public Works Administration; Equal Rights Bill; and Industrial Profits Tax"],"userestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThere are no restrictions in this collection except for veterans claims.\u003c/p\u003e"],"userestrict_heading_ssm":["Conditions Governing Use"],"userestrict_tesim":["There are no restrictions in this collection except for veterans claims."],"names_ssim":["Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections Library"],"corpname_ssim":["Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections Library"],"language_ssim":["English"],"descrules_ssm":["Describing Archives: A Content Standard"],"total_component_count_is":4648,"online_item_count_is":0,"component_level_isim":[0],"sort_isi":0,"timestamp":"2026-05-20T23:38:40.572Z"}]}},"label":"Breadcrumbs"}}},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_repositories_3_resources_206_c01_c01"}},{"id":"viu_repositories_3_resources_206_c01_c02","type":"Subseries","attributes":{"title":"Banking Printed","breadcrumbs":{"id":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_repositories_3_resources_206_c01_c02#breadcrumbs","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":{"ref_ssi":"viu_repositories_3_resources_206_c01_c02","ref_ssm":["viu_repositories_3_resources_206_c01_c02"],"id":"viu_repositories_3_resources_206_c01_c02","ead_ssi":"viu_repositories_3_resources_206","_root_":"viu_repositories_3_resources_206","_nest_parent_":"viu_repositories_3_resources_206_c01","parent_ssi":"viu_repositories_3_resources_206_c01","parent_ssim":["viu_repositories_3_resources_206","viu_repositories_3_resources_206_c01"],"parent_ids_ssim":["viu_repositories_3_resources_206","viu_repositories_3_resources_206_c01"],"parent_unittitles_ssm":["Carter Glass Papers","Series 1. Banking"],"parent_unittitles_tesim":["Carter Glass Papers","Series 1. Banking"],"text":["Carter Glass Papers","Series 1. Banking","Banking Printed","English"],"title_filing_ssi":"Banking Printed","title_ssm":["Banking Printed"],"title_tesim":["Banking Printed"],"unitdate_inclusive_ssm":["1910-1939"],"normalized_date_ssm":["1910/1939"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Banking Printed"],"component_level_isim":[2],"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"collection_ssim":["Carter Glass Papers"],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"child_component_count_isi":144,"level_ssm":["Subseries"],"level_ssim":["Subseries"],"sort_isi":840,"parent_access_restrict_tesm":["This collection is open for research. Restrictions apply to veterans claims."],"parent_access_terms_tesm":["There are no restrictions in this collection except for veterans claims."],"date_range_isim":[1910,1911,1912,1913,1914,1915,1916,1917,1918,1919,1920,1921,1922,1923,1924,1925,1926,1927,1928,1929,1930,1931,1932,1933,1934,1935,1936,1937,1938,1939],"language_ssim":["English"],"_nest_path_":"/components#0/components#1","timestamp":"2026-05-20T23:38:40.572Z","collection":{"numFound":1,"start":0,"numFoundExact":true,"docs":[{"id":"viu_repositories_3_resources_206","ead_ssi":"viu_repositories_3_resources_206","_root_":"viu_repositories_3_resources_206","_nest_parent_":"viu_repositories_3_resources_206","ead_source_url_ssi":"data/oai/UVA/repositories_3_resources_206.xml","aspace_url_ssi":"https://archives.lib.virginia.edu/ark:/59853/146110","title_filing_ssi":"Glass, Carter, papers","title_ssm":["Carter Glass Papers"],"title_tesim":["Carter Glass Papers"],"unitdate_ssm":["1820-1946"],"unitdate_inclusive_ssm":["1820-1946"],"level_ssm":["collection"],"level_ssim":["Collection"],"unitid_ssm":["MSS 2913","Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","/repositories/3/resources/206"],"text":["MSS 2913","Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","/repositories/3/resources/206","Carter Glass Papers","Virginia -- Politics and government -- 20th century","Banks and banking -- United States","Judges -- Selection and appointment","Depressions -- 1929 -- United States","Labor laws and legislation -- United States","World War, 1939-1945","World War, 1914-1918","This collection is open for research. Restrictions apply to veterans claims.","The collection is arranged into four series: Series 1. Banking: Subseries banking correspondence,  banking printed, Series 2. Correspondence: Subseries legislative, military, political, topical, greeting cards, business and related cards, honors, constituent (patronage, praise),veterans claim (restricted), and veterinary (farming), Series 3. Manuscripts and miscellaneous, Series 4. Printed and miscellaneous: Subseries newspaper clippings, articles, bills, reports and photographs, speeches, and election tickets. ","Due to the large size of this collection these categories are meant as general guidelines and some cross over of subjects can be expected throughout the series. Similarly,further searching may be necessary if an area of research is not found in the identified series of the guide, for example military correspondence is located chronologically throughout the collection and as a subseries.","Series 1 Banking Correspondence is in boxes 1-43, 171-177; Banking Printed is in boxes 44-47; Series 2 Correspondence: Legislative Correspondence is in boxes 47-105, 178-180; Military Correspondence is in boxes 105-109; Political Correspondence is in boxes 109-143, 180-183; Topical Correspondence is in boxes 143-169; 183-193; Greeting Cards are in boxes 169-170; Honors are in box 170; Constituent Correspondence is in boxes 194-220; Patronage Correspondence is in boxes 220-249; Praise for Carter Glass is in boxes 250-258; Invitations are in boxes 259-264; Veteran's Claims (restricted) are in boxes 265-268; Veterinarian and farming (cows) are in box 269; Series 3 Manuscripts and Miscellaneous are in box 270; Series 4 Printed(including newspaper articles, photographs, and speeches) are in boxes 271-279; Letterbooks for 1918-1919 are in boxes 281-282."," Carter Glass (January 4, 1858 – May 28, 1946) was born on January 4, 1858, in Lynchburg, Virginia, to Robert Henry Glass and Augusta Elizabeth Christian. He became a newspaper publisher (like his father)and after hearing a speech by William Jenning Bryan in 1896, entered politics in 1902 as a Democrat in the United States House of Representatives and was re-elected to eight terms. He was a United States Senator from Lynchburg, Virginia from 1920 until his death in 1946.  In 1913, he became Chairman of the House Committee on Banking and Currency, where he worked with President Woodrow Wilson to pass the Glass-Owen Federal Reserve Act and he went on to pass the Glass-Steagall Act in 1932 and the Banking Act in 1933 that made banking more stable in the United States. In 1918, President Wilson appointed him Secretary of the Treasury, where he marketed Victory Liberty Loans for World War I debts.  At the 1920 Democratic National Convention Glass was nominated for President of the United States. Many of his supporters have said that at 5'4 inches tall, his speeches and political prowess made him seem larger than life.","Carter Glass became an apprentice printer to his father when he was 13 years old, and continued his education through reading literature in his father's library. At the age of 22, Glass became a reporter, a job he had long sought, for the \"Lynchburg News\". He rose to become the morning newspaper's editor by 1887. After acquiring the afternoon \"Daily Advance\", the competing \"Daily Republican\",  he became Lynchburg's sole newspaper publisher. The \"Lynchburg News and Advance\" is the successor publication to his newspapers. ","  Carter Glass played a major role in the establishment of the U.S. financial regulatory system, helping to establish the Federal Reserve System and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. He co-sponsored the 1933 Banking Act, also known as the Glass–Steagall Act, which created the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation and enforced the separation of investment banking firms and commercial banks. His banking reforms (Banking Act of 1913, Glass Steagall Act 1932, Banking Act of 1933) earned him gratitude across the country, landing him on the cover of Time Magazine twice, and honoring him with many degrees from universities.  Prior to Glass's reforms, the country's banking system was chaotic and regulated by bankers. The Glass-Steagall bill restricted banks from engaging in invesment banking. The country had suffered eight recessions between 1890 and 1914. Portions of the Glass-Steagall bill were repealed in 1999, allowing banks to combine their own investment activity with commercial banking and possibly contributing to the recession in 2008.\n ","Not as well-publicized was Carter Glass's lifelong opposition to voting rights for African Americans. One of Glass's first political exploits was helping craft the revised 1902 Virginia Constitution to bar [African American] citizens from voting. The 1902 Constitution instituted a poll tax and required bulk payment after a voter missed elections, making voting a luxury. The Constitution also required that voters pass a literacy test with their performance graded by the registrar. When questioned as to whether these measures were potentially discriminatory, Glass exclaimed, \"Discrimination! Why that is exactly what we propose. To remove every [African American] voter who can be gotten rid of, legally, without materially impairing the numerical strength of the white electorate.\" Indeed, the number of African Americans qualified to vote dropped from 147,000 to 21,000 immediately. More than 50 years after it was ratified, the Lynchburg senator remained opposed to the 15th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, which granted African Americans the right to vote. He said in the 1920's it \"constituted an attempt to destroy white civilization in nearly one-third of the nation and to erect on its ruins an Ethiopian state ignorant, profligate, corrupt, controlled by manumitted slaves.\" Glass was in step with his white constituents in Virginia, where African Americans did not receive equal voting rights until the 1960s. In 1928, during a debate involving prohibition, Glass said, \"people of the original thirteen Southern States curse and deride and spit upon the Fifteenth Amendment — and have no intention of letting the [African American] vote\" all the while maintaining Virginia was complying with the law.","\nCarter Glass remained one of the strongest advocates of segregation and continued to dedicate much of his political career to the perpetuation of Jim Crow laws in the South. He sponsored massive resistance legislation along with Virginia Senator Harry F. Byrd of Winchester, another Virginia newspaperman who shared many of Glass's political views. Both Glass and Byrd were opposed to Roosevelt's New Deal policies. Each was a strong supporter of fiscal conservatism and states' rights. Carter Glass supported President Roosevelt but later criticized his policies, including the New Deal, attempts to pack the Supreme Court, third term presidency, and nominations for Federal Judgeships.","Glass had suffered from ill health throughout his life, and usually walked on tip toes because he believed that would help with his indigestion. He kept his seat in his final term in the Senate even though he was not able to be in attendance. He died in his hotel apartment in Washington, D.C., on May 28, 1946. His funeral in Lynchburg was attended by the Chief Justice, the Secretary of State, 11 Senators, 11 House members, and other notables. History remembers Carter Glass as the Father of the Federal Reserve Act but today history also considers his role in the 1902 Constitution that disenfranchised virtually every black voter in the state. The reduction in African American votes helped him politically and put him in a postion to create the banking reform legislation. Nationally, Glass might have been the architect of financial reform that stabilized the nation's banking system, but at home, historian J. Douglas Smith calls him, \"the architect of disenfranchisement in the Old Dominion.\" Harvard University named their business school, Glass House, after Carter Glass achievements in banking, but they have now changed the name to Cash House, for James Cash, the first African American tenured professor at Harvard.","Sources: \nWikipedia\nJoe Stinnett, retired editor of The News \u0026 Advance and The Roanoke Times.\nThe Roanoke Times","The Carter Glass papers, 1820-1946, 141 cubic feet, consist of correspondence, manuscripts, newspaper articles, photographs, speeches, and printed materials from his work in the Banking and Currency Committee, the Secretary of the Treasury (1918-1920), and the United States Senate (1920-1946). Subjects include: The Federal Reserve Banking Act of 1913, the Federal Reserve system, and the Banking Act of 1933 (1932 Glass-Steagall Act).  ","Other topics include international, national and state issues reflected in the politics of this time period including opposition to the National Industrial Recovery Act; National Labor Relations Act; Bank Holding Company Bill; Office of Price Administration; World Wars I and II; League of Nations; World Court; Democratic Party platforms and policies; presidential elections of 1912, 1920, 1924, 1928, and 1940; Senator Huey P. Long; Franklin D. Roosevelt and the New Deal; attempted packing of the Supreme Court; neutrality legislation; disarmament; regulation of the coal industry; (business) products and services; child labor; anti-lynching law; immigration restriction (especially Chinese in Hawaii); Muscle Shoals; trade with Russia; diplomatic relations with the Vatican; Four-Power Treaty; soldiers' bonus bill; tariffs and protectionism; and national defense.","Virginia topics of concern to Glass or his constituents include poll tax elimination; African American suffrage; women's suffrage; highways; intrastate commerce; University of Virginia Board of Visitors;  Woodrow Wilson Foundation; national Patrick Henry shrine at \"Red Hill\"; gubernatorial election of 1924; Bishop James Cannon, Jr., prohibition and the Anti-saloon League; Skyline Drive; Spotsylvania Battlefield Park; Virginia Fight For Freedom Committee; operation of the Lynchburg News and Advance; and patronage requests from Lynchburg, Roanoke, and Bedford, Campbell, Floyd, Montgomery, and Roanoke Counties, Va.","Miscellaneous items of interest include a letter describing the early life of Booker T. Washington, election tickets for 1848, a 1906 recipe book, and letters concerning Glass' belief in the Baconian theory of Shakespeare authorship.","Among the many correspondents are Edwin A. Alderman, Newton Baker, Ray Stannard Baker, Alben Barkley, Bernard Baruch, William E. Borah, Chester Bowles, John Stewart Bryan, William Jennings Bryan, Harry F. Byrd, Richard E. Byrd, Calvin Coolidge, John W. Daniel, Josephus Daniels, Colgate W. Darden, Westmoreland Davis, Frederic A. Delano, the Democratic National Committee, Marriner S. Eccles, James A. Farley, Henry Ford, Douglas Southall Freeman, James A. Garfield, Samuel Gompers, Cary T. Grayson, Charles S. Hamlin, William P.G. Harding, Warren G. Harding, George L. Harrison, J. Edgar Hoover,Herbert Hoover, Edwin M. House, Cordell Hull, Harold Ickes, Hugh S. Johnson, Jesse Jones, Joseph P. Kennedy, Russell C. Leffingwell, Walter Lippmann, Huey Long, William Gibbs McAdoo, George Walter Mapp, Andrew Mellon, Eugene and Agnes Meyer, Andrew J. Montague, R. Walton Moore, Henry Morgenthau, Jr., Robert L. Owen, George C. Peery, Edmund Platt, John Garland Pollard, A. Willis Robertson, Eleanor Roosevelt, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Dave E. Satterfield, C. Bascom Slemp, Rixey Smith, Billy Sunday, Claude A. Swanson, Harry S. Truman, Joseph P. Tumulty, Oscar W. Underwood, Samuel Untermeyer, Arthur H. Vandenberg, Robert F. Wagner, Henry A. Wallace, Paul Moritz Warburg, Richard S. Whaley, William Allen White, John Skelton Williams, Henry Parker Willis, , Edith Bolling Wilson, Woodrow Wilson, Clifton A. Woodrum, and Walter Wyatt.","Correspondents include President Woodrow Wilson, Samuel Untermyer, Henry Parker Willis, Charles G. Hamlin, William Gibbs McAdoo, Robert Owen, Victor Morawetz, Harry F. Byrd, John Skelton Williams, Henry Moehlenpah, Paul M. Warburg (under revision)","Box summaries\nBox 1: The Federal Reserve Bank Act and Federal Reserve system; the Federal Farm Loan Act; Panic of 1912; The Aldrich Bill; branch banks; central banking board; gold reserves; Currency [reform] Bill of 1913; Emergency Banking Act, 1933; the Banking Act of 1933 (Glass-Steagall Act; the Bank Bill of 1935; opposition to the National Industrial Recovery Act; the National Labor Relations Act; the Bank Holding Company Bill; and the Office of Price Administration.","Box 2: Federal Reserve Act (Glass-Owen Bill)6454, 2639, 7837;Aldrich-Vreeland Law;Federal Farm Loan Act Rural Credits Bill;and Clayton Anti-Trust Bill","Box 3: Federal Reserve Act; Federal Reserve Banks; Federal Farm Loan Act; Land Mortgage Bank Bill; Branch banking; Kern Bill; Hollis Buckley Bill; Usury laws; Charles S. Hamlin; Edmund D. Hulbert; William Gibbs McAdoo; J. H. Tregoe; Woodrow Wilson; John Skelton Williams; Henry A. Moehlenpah; Frederic A. Delano; and Carter Glass","Box 4: Federal Farm Loan Act;Rural credits;Federal Reserve Amendments and responses; McFadden Bill; Hollis Buckley Bill; and gold certificates","Box 5: Federal Reserve Amendments and responses (Kitchin and Hardwick Bill);and Pomerene Bill. Charles S. Hamlin,William Gibbs McAdoo,Woodrow Wilson,Clayton Act,George M. Reynolds,Paul M. Warburg,John Skelton Williams,and Carter Glass","Box 6: Federal Reserve Amendments and responses (Kitchin and Hardwick Bill); Federal Reserve Act authorship; Capital Issues Committee; Federal Land Bank of Baltimore; and the Revenue Act of 1918.George Norris,Edmund Platt, Frederic A. Delano, William P. G. Harding,Paul M. Warburg,Charles S. Hamlin, John Skelton Williams,Henry Parker Willis,Eugene Meyer,and Carter Glass","Box 7: Federal Reserve Act authorship; Federal Farm Loan Amendments; Federal Land Banks; currency shortage; check collection; Smoot Bill; Liberty loans; Federal Reserve Bank of New York; railroad and shipping costs; War Finance Corporation; and Second Pan American Conference. William P. G. Harding,George W. Norris,Robert L. Owen,Russell C. Leffingwell,Benjamin Strong,John Skelton Williams renomination,William Gibbs McAdoo,Charles S. Hamlin,and Carter Glass","Box 8: Federal Reserve Act authorship; Clayton Anti-Trust Act; Smoot Bill; check collecting fees; branch banking; Virginia-Carolina Joint StockLandBank; budget bill; excess profits tax; gold; and Liberty bonds. Walter Edward Harris, Charles A. Korbly,Edmund Platt,William Skelton Williams,William P. G. Harding,William Gibbs McAdoo, Hollins N. Randolph,Henry Parker Willis,Russell C. Leffingwell,Arthur Capper,Thomas B. McAdams,and Carter Glass","Box 9: Federal Reserve Act and authorship; Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond; Bank of Haysi; Bank of New York; Open market commercial paper rates; McFadden Bill; discount rates; Overman Resolution; Liberty bonds; Pan American Conference; and Russian trade.William P. G. Harding,John Skelton Williams,Thomas B. McAdams,Russell C. Leffingwell,Edmund Platt,John Thomas Heflin,Hollins N. Randolph,William Gibbs McAdoo,George J. Seay,Henry Parker Willis, George Armstrong,Benjamin Strong,and Carter Glass","Box 10: Federal Reserve System; McFadden Bill H. R. 2; Farm Loan Mortgage; discount rates and eligible paper; Pittman Silver Act; Frank A. Vanderlip banking plan; War Finance Corporation; Bank of New York; bank failure; Anderson Bill; Lenroot Bill; and William P. G. Harding reappointment.John Skelton Williams,Reed Smoot,Hollins N. Randolph,Russell C. Leffingwell,Thomas B. McAdams,Paul M. Warburg,Edmund Platt,Henry Parker Willis,Woodrow Wilson,Benjamin Strong, Daniel C. Roper, William Gibbs McAdoo,Charles S. Hamlin,George W. Norris,and Carter Glass","Box 12:Federal Reserve Act authorship; McNary-Haugen Billand (speech responses); McFadden Bill; Federal Farm Loan Act; and Carter Glass book. Walter Edward Harris,Paul Warburg,Norman Davis,Walter E. Edge,Charles W. Collins,Charles S. Hamlin,Henry Parker Willis,George J. Seay,Benjamin Strong,and Edmund Platt","Box 13: Pascagoula case; Federal Reserve Act authorship; McFadden Bill; \"Committee of One Hundred\"; Carter Glass book; and the McNary-Haugen Bill. Henry Parker Willis,William P. G. Harding,George J. Seay,Harry Flood Byrd,Bernard M. Baruch,Russell C. Leffingwell,Charles S. Hamlin,Charles W. Collins,Walter Edward Harris,Thomas B. McAdams,George W. Norris,and Edmund Platt","Box 14 Federal Reserve Act authorship; McFadden Bill; Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas; Lafollette Resolution; \"Committee of One Hundred\"; Federal Home Loan Bill; misuse of Federal Reserve System; President Roosevelt criticism of Federal Reserve System; Charles E. Mitchell; and bank failures. Eugene Meyer,Edmund Platt,Henry Parker Willis,Bishop James Cannon, Jr., Thomas B. McAdams,Russell C. Plainwell,and Elben C. Folks","Box 15: Federal Reserve Act authorship; responses to Depression and banking crisis; Bank of Kentucky; curb stock speculations; security abuses; Charles E. Mitchell; McFadden Bill; and criticism of Herbert Hoover. Thomas B. McAdams,Walter B. Mahoney,John W. Pole,Edmund Platt,Henry Parker Willis,Bernard M. Baruch,Eugene Meyer,William P. G. Harding,George L. Harrison,George W. Norris,George J. Seay,and Richard C. Whitney","Box 16: Responses to the Depressionand(banking crisis); and Bank of Kentucky.Jouett Shouse,Henry Parker Willis,Henry B. Steagall,Eugene Meyer,Charles S. Hamlin,Milton S. Florsheim,Samuel M. Kaplan,and Elben C. Folkes","Box 17: Responses to the Depression and banking crisis; President Hoover Plan; Federal Land Banks; Wall Street bankers; bank failures; Bank of Kentucky; Federal Reserve Act authorship; Federal Farm Loan Act; Federal Home Loan; and Hoover moratorium. Bernard M. Baruch,Jouett Shouse,Richard C. Whitney,Charles S. Hamlin,Henry A. Moehlenpah,Millard E. Tydings,Henry Parker Willis,Andrew W. Mellon,Edmund Platt,Eugene Meyer,Russell C. Leffingwell,and Thomas B. McAdams","Box 18:Depression and banking crisis; Bank of Kentucky; Senate Committee on Banking and Currency Hearings; Reconstruction Finance Corporation; Nye Report; Pan American Finance Conference; Gold; Silver; and death of E. C. Glass. Elben C. Folkes,Al Kaplan,Herbert Hoover,Jouett Shouse,Charles S. Hamlin,George L. Harrison, Thorwald Siegfried, Eugene Meyer,and Pat H. Drewery","Box 19:Federal Home Loan Bank; Federal Land Bank of Baltimore; foreclosures; Glass-Steagall; and Henry Parker Willis articles in France on gold upsetting to colleagues.Franklin Delano Roosevelt,John W. Pole,Henry B. Steagall,Oliver J. Sands,Russell C. Leffingwell,Charles W. Collins,Charles S. Hamlin,and George L. Harrison","Box 20-24: Glass Steagall responses; and Glass speech on gold","Box 25: Glass-Steagall Act; Goldsborough Bill; gold standard; Reconstruction Finance Corporation; Joint Stock Land Banks;Revenue Act of 1932; responses to Carter Glass speech;praise for Carter Glass; bank failures; Banking study; Holiday proclamation by President Roosevelt; Funding for projects such as the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California, and a bridge across the Potomac River; Herbert Hoover;Newton D. Baker;Russell C. Leffingwell;George L. Harrison; Eugene Meyer; Samuel Untermyer; Chester Morrill; George W. Norris; Richard S. Whaley;Princess Amelie Rives Troubetzkoy;James F. Byrnes;Louis Wiley; Robert J. Bulkley;John W. Owens;HenryParker Willis; and the Dallas Chamber of Commerce","Box 26: Responses to banking crisis and Depressionand criticism of Herbert Hoover","Box 27: Responses to Depression; McNary-Haugen Bill; Home Loan Bill; Emergency Farm Mortgage Act of 1933; Thomas Bill; Federal Reserve Amendment Section 10b; Glass-Steagall Banking Act; and Credit Report U.S. S. R. (George N. Peek).George L. Harrison,Chester Morrill,Russell C. Leffingwell,Louis T. McFadden,Emmanuel Kaplan,Hugh S. Johnson,and the National Recovery Act","Box 28: Glass-Steagall Act responses; Emergency Bank Bill; California banks; and Goldsborough Amendment. Edmund Platt and Frank A. Vanderlip","Box 29: Glass-Steagall Act responses, and Section 19 Statewide branch banking for national banks; Huey Long filibuster; bank guarantees; Charles E. Mitchell investigation; and continued moratorium on closing banks. Duncan U. Fletcher; Ferdinand Pecora; and Virginia Governor John Garland Pollard","Box 30: Gold, Reconstruction Finance Corporation, Senate Banking and Currency Committee investigation of J. P. Morgan; Glass-Steagall Banking Act; National Recovery Act; Emergency Banking Act relief; Morris Plan; and criticism of Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Duncan U. Fletcher; and William Gibbs McAdoo","Box 31: Senate investigation of J. P. Morgan;Gold standard; Expand use of silver; stability of the dollar; praise for Carter Glass radio speech \"Facts about Fiscal Policy of Our Government During the Past Few Years\" and \"Shall We Go Over the Precipice?\" Duncan U. Fletcher; Edmund Platt; and Herbert L. Myrick","Box 32: Rsponses to Glass speech [\"Shall We Go Over the Precipice?\"] against Roosevelt inflation bill; Emergency Bank Bill; Bankruptcy legislation; Banking Act of 1935; Credit Union Act; Marriner S. Eccles as Governor of the Federal Reserve Board; Branchbanking; Bank of the United States; death of Eugerne R. Black; and Philippine currency. Charles S. Hamlin; Edmund Platt; George W. Norris; George L. Harrison; Herny Parker Willis; Paul M. Warburg; Henry B. Steagall; Clifton A. Woodrum; Edward W. Kemmerer;Rudolph Spreckels; Sam M. Kaplan; John Foster Dulles; Milton Friedman; T. F. Wentworth; Dean Acheson; Chester Morrill; Walter Wyatt; Eugene R. Black; James P. Warburg; and James Elliott Heath","Box 33: (Fletcher-Rayburn Bill, Kean Bill; National Securities Exchange Act, McLeod Bill, or the Banking Act of 1935); Federal Reserve Amendment Section 12b; Morris-Sheppard Bill; Chester Morrill; Thomas B. McAdams; William Gibbs McAdoo; Elmer Thomas; Henry Morgenthau, Jr.; Eugene Meyer; Duncan U. Fletcher; Jesse H. Jones; and Richard C. Whitney","Box 34: Banking Act of 1933; National Securities Exchange Act; Kean Bill; Fletcher-Rayburn Bill; misuse of the Federal Reserve System; de-evaluation of the dollar; and Gold Reserve Act","Box 35: Banking Act of 1935; Gold Reserve Act; Gold speech of Russell C. Leffingwell; National Recovery Act; Hugh S. Johnson; Kaplan Plan; Robert L. Owen inquiry; Huey Long; Goldsborough Amendment;Elmer Thomas; Charles S. Hamlin; George Wharton Pepper; Henry H. Heiman; Henry Parker Willis; George W. Norris; Duncan U. Fletcher; J. F. T. O'Connor; Robert D. Kent; Royal S. Copeland; Edward W. Kemmerer; and A. Willis Robertson","Box 36: Responses to the Banking Act of 1935; Harry Flood Byrd; Duncan U. Fletcher; A. Willis Robertson; Leo T. Crowley; Jesse H. Jones; Edmund Platt; Henry Morgenthau, Jr.; J. F. T. O'Connor; Thomas B. McAdams; and Thomas P. Gore","Box 37: Responses to the Banking Act of 1935; Glass concerns about Marriner S. Eccles as Governor of the Federal Reserve Board and criticism of government and political control of banking; Federal Reserve Act authorship; Goldsborough Amendment; Townsend Plan; A. H. Dobson; Frank A. Vanderlip; Irving Fisher; Walter Lichtenstein; Arthur Capper; Duncan U. Fletcher; Bennett Champ Clark; Thomas P. Gore; Henry Heiman; Thomas B. McAdams; Hollins N. Randolph; Hugo L. Black; and Thorwald Siegfried","Box 38: Banking Act of 1935; Gold clause; Comptroller of the Currency; silver; Robert L. Owen inquiry; Reconstruction Finance Corporation; repeal of Thomas Amendment; concern about Marriner S. Eccles as Governor of the Federal Reserve Board; portrait of John Skelton Williams; Edmund Platt; Agnes and Eugene Meyer; Chester Morrill; Robert F. Wagner; Kenneth D. McKellar; George L. Harrison; Harry S. Truman; George W. Norris; Henry Parker Willis; Henry Morgenthau, Jr.; Marriner S. Eccles and Russell C. Leffingwell(Treasury and Nye Report)","Box 39: Repeal Thomas Amendment; Branch banking; Bankhead-Jones Farm Act; Federal Land Bank of Baltimore Bank Holding companies; and Reconstruction Finance Corporation.William Gibbs McAdoo,Edmund Platt,Thomas B. McAdams,Henry Heiman,Jesse H. Jones,Henry Morgenthau, Jr.,Robert L. Owen,and the death of Henry Parker Willis","Box 40: Henry Parker Willis Foundation; Federal Reserve Act anniversary; J. F. T. O'Connor resignation; misuse of the Federal Reserve System; Robert L. Owen and Carter Glass accusations against Marriner S. Eccles; Reconstruction Finance Corporation; Clayton Act; Mead Bill; De-evaluation of the dollar;silver program; Gold Act; Home Owners Loan Corporation Act; Self-liquidating Bill; and Barden Bill.Edmund Platt,Jesse H. Jones, William Gibbs McAdoo,Henry Morgenthau, Jr.,Robert F. Wagner,and Marriner S. Eccles","Box 41: Tribute to Edmund Platt; Embargo Act; Banking and Currency Committee pending legislation; Branch banking; Silver Purchase Act; de-evaluation of the dollar; Trust Indenture Act (Robert F.Wagner); Bank Holding company; Jones Wheeler Bill; Federal Home Loan Bank Act; Clayton Act; Townsend Plan; FDIC; Pittman Amendment; Farm Relief Bill; Reconstruction Finance Corporation; Wagner Lea Bill; and disappointment with Marriner S. Eccles;Harry Flood Byrd,Jesse H. Jones,Henry Heiman,Frederic Delano,and Leo T. Crowley","Box 42: Tribute to Carter Glass; Banking and Currency Committee pending legislation; FDIC and excess profits tax; Federal Reserve Amendment Section 23; medal for Howard Hughes; American Palestine Committee (Robert F. Wagner); Farm credit; Credit Union Act; price control; Bank Holding Company; Reconstruction Finance Corporation; de-evaluation of the dollar Federal Reserve Act authorship; and criticism of Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Cordell Hull; Walter Lichtenstein; Chester Morrill; Robert F. Wagner; and Leo T. Crowley","H. S. Trout, president First National Bank, hoping that the bill will be defeated","Glass expressses concern that Untermeyer is trying to push the Aldrich Bill. Other correspondents include William A. Glasgow, A. P. Pujo, Hubert D. Stephens, and Henry Parker Willis","Glasgow to act as counsel to the Banking and Currency Committee of the Senate","Set up a meeting with the President to revise the currency system; Henry Parker Willis; and reference to Aldrich Bill","J. C. Goodloe suggests the need for new banking laws in order to help the farmers","Offering methods to create calmness in banking instead of panic","Banking and Currency Committee of the Senate Banking survey questions about banking","Criticism of S. 4129 and H.R. 13570 to place tax on real estate instead of stocks and bonds to help relieve bankrupt Treasury","Colonel House wants to set up a secret meeting for Samuel Untermeyer with President Wilson in order to promote the Aldrich Bill","Glass apologizes for his reaction to a speech given by Forgan","Charles McCulloch, Andrew J. Montague, and William GibbsMcAdoo","Includes correspondence about the banking bills from January to April 1916. (Carter Glass correspondence with Clement C. Dickinson January 22, 1916 defending the Federal Reserve.)","Bankruptcy laws, World War I","Mentions medal for Howard Hughes","includes correspondence Carter Glass","See also 1933","Woodrow Wilson typed speech to the House of Representatives","Historic moment when Glass takes the first transatlantic flight to Europe with the loan from Treasurer Russell C. Leffingwell","Agriculture Appropriation Bill; Smith-lever funds; and African Americans in Virginia","See also Trade Farmers' and Growers Association Box 52 Folder 1","printed item \"The Aluminum Monopoly\"","Virginia Polytechnic Institute request for captured German cannon","mention of J. G. Ferneyhough and cows also","Edwin Anderson Alderman, Governor E.Lee Trinkle, Jr.","Glass S. 4029 to determine location for engagement of war vessels and memorial; interview with last survivor of the Merrimac, Richard Curtis; and John Stewart Bryan","Sibley lawsuit claim H. B. 3436","Elben C. Folkes requests help for his son; lawsuit J. G. Ferneyhough; Senator Couzens; and Florence Adams nomination for AppleBlossom Princess","Edwin Anderson Alderman letter advocating for a hospital in Charlottesville","Memorial Bridge approach bill; H. R. 796; furlough and shorter work week; claims; capital punishment for kidnappers H. R. 96; transportation of persons or property in commerce by motor carrier S. 2793; opposition to income tax;Montgomery county Civic Federation special meeting; Tariff Act of 1930 to import science books for teaching purposes; stamp tax on bank checks (banking); Public Works Program; equal protection of voters in Puerto Rico S. 4691; unemployment relief bills; Railroad pension bill H. R. 10023 and S. 3892, H. R. 9891; Hatfield Bill; Keller Bill 4646; S. 4161; Boulder Dam; Home Loan Bank S. 2959; Emergency Industries Preservation Act; Stuart Junior High School; Albemarle County Medical Society S. 3090 and H. R. 8077; prohibit experiments on living dogs in District of Columbia S. 2146; night work pay H. R. 11267; District of Columbia appropriation bill H. R. 11361; Brookhart Bill censorship of moving pictures; vocational rehabilitation S. 3818; opposition to abolishment of Army Transports and Panama Railroad Steamship Line; Federal relief for unemployed; Capper-Kelly bill to relief excise taxes on druggist; patenting of original designs of silk patterns; Georgetown Branch Library Building and District of Columbia appropriation bill; radio lottery advertising H. R. 7716; Injunction measure S. 936; strengthen immigration laws H. B. 1967; crime to advocate overthrow of government H. B. 8549; issue two or three billions in bonds of small denominations for soldiers bonus or as currency;intrinsic property values vs market values in depression times; and President Hoover's Bankers-Industrialists Committee of Twelve for Credit Expansion","Ernie Adamson","immigration; Tangiers Island; and Colgate W. Darden, Jr.","Harry Flood Byrd","Frances Perkins","Robert F. Wagner","Kenneth McKellar; and Astor case","See also Political correspondence","See also Political correspondence","See also Legislative correspondence 1921","Colgate Darden Jr.","Schuyler O. Bland","\"Pump Priming Bill\" Harry Flood Byrd; Public Works Administration; Equal Rights Bill; and Industrial Profits Tax","There are no restrictions in this collection except for veterans claims.","Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections Library","English"],"unitid_tesim":["MSS 2913","Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","Previous Archival Resource Key","/repositories/3/resources/206"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Carter Glass Papers"],"collection_title_tesim":["Carter Glass Papers"],"collection_ssim":["Carter Glass Papers"],"repository_ssm":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"geogname_ssm":["Virginia -- Politics and government -- 20th century"],"geogname_ssim":["Virginia -- Politics and government -- 20th century"],"places_ssim":["Virginia -- Politics and government -- 20th century"],"access_terms_ssm":["There are no restrictions in this collection except for veterans claims."],"acqinfo_ssim":["This collection was a gift from the Glass family to the Small Special Collections Library at the University of Virginia in 1948."],"access_subjects_ssim":["Banks and banking -- United States","Judges -- Selection and appointment","Depressions -- 1929 -- United States","Labor laws and legislation -- United States","World War, 1939-1945","World War, 1914-1918"],"access_subjects_ssm":["Banks and banking -- United States","Judges -- Selection and appointment","Depressions -- 1929 -- United States","Labor laws and legislation -- United States","World War, 1939-1945","World War, 1914-1918"],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"extent_ssm":["141 Cubic Feet 285 document boxes, 3 oversize flat boxes"],"extent_tesim":["141 Cubic Feet 285 document boxes, 3 oversize flat boxes"],"date_range_isim":[1820,1821,1822,1823,1824,1825,1826,1827,1828,1829,1830,1831,1832,1833,1834,1835,1836,1837,1838,1839,1840,1841,1842,1843,1844,1845,1846,1847,1848,1849,1850,1851,1852,1853,1854,1855,1856,1857,1858,1859,1860,1861,1862,1863,1864,1865,1866,1867,1868,1869,1870,1871,1872,1873,1874,1875,1876,1877,1878,1879,1880,1881,1882,1883,1884,1885,1886,1887,1888,1889,1890,1891,1892,1893,1894,1895,1896,1897,1898,1899,1900,1901,1902,1903,1904,1905,1906,1907,1908,1909,1910,1911,1912,1913,1914,1915,1916,1917,1918,1919,1920,1921,1922,1923,1924,1925,1926,1927,1928,1929,1930,1931,1932,1933,1934,1935,1936,1937,1938,1939,1940,1941,1942,1943,1944,1945,1946],"accessrestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThis collection is open for research. Restrictions apply to veterans claims.\u003c/p\u003e"],"accessrestrict_heading_ssm":["Conditions Governing Access"],"accessrestrict_tesim":["This collection is open for research. Restrictions apply to veterans claims."],"arrangement_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe collection is arranged into four series: Series 1. Banking: Subseries banking correspondence,  banking printed, Series 2. Correspondence: Subseries legislative, military, political, topical, greeting cards, business and related cards, honors, constituent (patronage, praise),veterans claim (restricted), and veterinary (farming), Series 3. Manuscripts and miscellaneous, Series 4. Printed and miscellaneous: Subseries newspaper clippings, articles, bills, reports and photographs, speeches, and election tickets. \u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eDue to the large size of this collection these categories are meant as general guidelines and some cross over of subjects can be expected throughout the series. Similarly,further searching may be necessary if an area of research is not found in the identified series of the guide, for example military correspondence is located chronologically throughout the collection and as a subseries.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eSeries 1 Banking Correspondence is in boxes 1-43, 171-177; Banking Printed is in boxes 44-47; Series 2 Correspondence: Legislative Correspondence is in boxes 47-105, 178-180; Military Correspondence is in boxes 105-109; Political Correspondence is in boxes 109-143, 180-183; Topical Correspondence is in boxes 143-169; 183-193; Greeting Cards are in boxes 169-170; Honors are in box 170; Constituent Correspondence is in boxes 194-220; Patronage Correspondence is in boxes 220-249; Praise for Carter Glass is in boxes 250-258; Invitations are in boxes 259-264; Veteran's Claims (restricted) are in boxes 265-268; Veterinarian and farming (cows) are in box 269; Series 3 Manuscripts and Miscellaneous are in box 270; Series 4 Printed(including newspaper articles, photographs, and speeches) are in boxes 271-279; Letterbooks for 1918-1919 are in boxes 281-282.\u003c/p\u003e"],"arrangement_heading_ssm":["Arrangement"],"arrangement_tesim":["The collection is arranged into four series: Series 1. Banking: Subseries banking correspondence,  banking printed, Series 2. Correspondence: Subseries legislative, military, political, topical, greeting cards, business and related cards, honors, constituent (patronage, praise),veterans claim (restricted), and veterinary (farming), Series 3. Manuscripts and miscellaneous, Series 4. Printed and miscellaneous: Subseries newspaper clippings, articles, bills, reports and photographs, speeches, and election tickets. ","Due to the large size of this collection these categories are meant as general guidelines and some cross over of subjects can be expected throughout the series. Similarly,further searching may be necessary if an area of research is not found in the identified series of the guide, for example military correspondence is located chronologically throughout the collection and as a subseries.","Series 1 Banking Correspondence is in boxes 1-43, 171-177; Banking Printed is in boxes 44-47; Series 2 Correspondence: Legislative Correspondence is in boxes 47-105, 178-180; Military Correspondence is in boxes 105-109; Political Correspondence is in boxes 109-143, 180-183; Topical Correspondence is in boxes 143-169; 183-193; Greeting Cards are in boxes 169-170; Honors are in box 170; Constituent Correspondence is in boxes 194-220; Patronage Correspondence is in boxes 220-249; Praise for Carter Glass is in boxes 250-258; Invitations are in boxes 259-264; Veteran's Claims (restricted) are in boxes 265-268; Veterinarian and farming (cows) are in box 269; Series 3 Manuscripts and Miscellaneous are in box 270; Series 4 Printed(including newspaper articles, photographs, and speeches) are in boxes 271-279; Letterbooks for 1918-1919 are in boxes 281-282."],"bioghist_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003e Carter Glass (January 4, 1858 – May 28, 1946) was born on January 4, 1858, in Lynchburg, Virginia, to Robert Henry Glass and Augusta Elizabeth Christian. He became a newspaper publisher (like his father)and after hearing a speech by William Jenning Bryan in 1896, entered politics in 1902 as a Democrat in the United States House of Representatives and was re-elected to eight terms. He was a United States Senator from Lynchburg, Virginia from 1920 until his death in 1946.  In 1913, he became Chairman of the House Committee on Banking and Currency, where he worked with President Woodrow Wilson to pass the Glass-Owen Federal Reserve Act and he went on to pass the Glass-Steagall Act in 1932 and the Banking Act in 1933 that made banking more stable in the United States. In 1918, President Wilson appointed him Secretary of the Treasury, where he marketed Victory Liberty Loans for World War I debts.  At the 1920 Democratic National Convention Glass was nominated for President of the United States. Many of his supporters have said that at 5'4 inches tall, his speeches and political prowess made him seem larger than life.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eCarter Glass became an apprentice printer to his father when he was 13 years old, and continued his education through reading literature in his father's library. At the age of 22, Glass became a reporter, a job he had long sought, for the \"Lynchburg News\". He rose to become the morning newspaper's editor by 1887. After acquiring the afternoon \"Daily Advance\", the competing \"Daily Republican\",  he became Lynchburg's sole newspaper publisher. The \"Lynchburg News and Advance\" is the successor publication to his newspapers. \u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003e  Carter Glass played a major role in the establishment of the U.S. financial regulatory system, helping to establish the Federal Reserve System and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. He co-sponsored the 1933 Banking Act, also known as the Glass–Steagall Act, which created the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation and enforced the separation of investment banking firms and commercial banks. His banking reforms (Banking Act of 1913, Glass Steagall Act 1932, Banking Act of 1933) earned him gratitude across the country, landing him on the cover of Time Magazine twice, and honoring him with many degrees from universities.  Prior to Glass's reforms, the country's banking system was chaotic and regulated by bankers. The Glass-Steagall bill restricted banks from engaging in invesment banking. The country had suffered eight recessions between 1890 and 1914. Portions of the Glass-Steagall bill were repealed in 1999, allowing banks to combine their own investment activity with commercial banking and possibly contributing to the recession in 2008.\n \u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eNot as well-publicized was Carter Glass's lifelong opposition to voting rights for African Americans. One of Glass's first political exploits was helping craft the revised 1902 Virginia Constitution to bar [African American] citizens from voting. The 1902 Constitution instituted a poll tax and required bulk payment after a voter missed elections, making voting a luxury. The Constitution also required that voters pass a literacy test with their performance graded by the registrar. When questioned as to whether these measures were potentially discriminatory, Glass exclaimed, \"Discrimination! Why that is exactly what we propose. To remove every [African American] voter who can be gotten rid of, legally, without materially impairing the numerical strength of the white electorate.\" Indeed, the number of African Americans qualified to vote dropped from 147,000 to 21,000 immediately. More than 50 years after it was ratified, the Lynchburg senator remained opposed to the 15th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, which granted African Americans the right to vote. He said in the 1920's it \"constituted an attempt to destroy white civilization in nearly one-third of the nation and to erect on its ruins an Ethiopian state ignorant, profligate, corrupt, controlled by manumitted slaves.\" Glass was in step with his white constituents in Virginia, where African Americans did not receive equal voting rights until the 1960s. In 1928, during a debate involving prohibition, Glass said, \"people of the original thirteen Southern States curse and deride and spit upon the Fifteenth Amendment — and have no intention of letting the [African American] vote\" all the while maintaining Virginia was complying with the law.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003e\nCarter Glass remained one of the strongest advocates of segregation and continued to dedicate much of his political career to the perpetuation of Jim Crow laws in the South. He sponsored massive resistance legislation along with Virginia Senator Harry F. Byrd of Winchester, another Virginia newspaperman who shared many of Glass's political views. Both Glass and Byrd were opposed to Roosevelt's New Deal policies. Each was a strong supporter of fiscal conservatism and states' rights. Carter Glass supported President Roosevelt but later criticized his policies, including the New Deal, attempts to pack the Supreme Court, third term presidency, and nominations for Federal Judgeships.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eGlass had suffered from ill health throughout his life, and usually walked on tip toes because he believed that would help with his indigestion. He kept his seat in his final term in the Senate even though he was not able to be in attendance. He died in his hotel apartment in Washington, D.C., on May 28, 1946. His funeral in Lynchburg was attended by the Chief Justice, the Secretary of State, 11 Senators, 11 House members, and other notables. History remembers Carter Glass as the Father of the Federal Reserve Act but today history also considers his role in the 1902 Constitution that disenfranchised virtually every black voter in the state. The reduction in African American votes helped him politically and put him in a postion to create the banking reform legislation. Nationally, Glass might have been the architect of financial reform that stabilized the nation's banking system, but at home, historian J. Douglas Smith calls him, \"the architect of disenfranchisement in the Old Dominion.\" Harvard University named their business school, Glass House, after Carter Glass achievements in banking, but they have now changed the name to Cash House, for James Cash, the first African American tenured professor at Harvard.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eSources: \nWikipedia\nJoe Stinnett, retired editor of The News \u0026amp; Advance and The Roanoke Times.\nThe Roanoke Times\u003c/p\u003e"],"bioghist_heading_ssm":["Biographical / Historical"],"bioghist_tesim":[" Carter Glass (January 4, 1858 – May 28, 1946) was born on January 4, 1858, in Lynchburg, Virginia, to Robert Henry Glass and Augusta Elizabeth Christian. He became a newspaper publisher (like his father)and after hearing a speech by William Jenning Bryan in 1896, entered politics in 1902 as a Democrat in the United States House of Representatives and was re-elected to eight terms. He was a United States Senator from Lynchburg, Virginia from 1920 until his death in 1946.  In 1913, he became Chairman of the House Committee on Banking and Currency, where he worked with President Woodrow Wilson to pass the Glass-Owen Federal Reserve Act and he went on to pass the Glass-Steagall Act in 1932 and the Banking Act in 1933 that made banking more stable in the United States. In 1918, President Wilson appointed him Secretary of the Treasury, where he marketed Victory Liberty Loans for World War I debts.  At the 1920 Democratic National Convention Glass was nominated for President of the United States. Many of his supporters have said that at 5'4 inches tall, his speeches and political prowess made him seem larger than life.","Carter Glass became an apprentice printer to his father when he was 13 years old, and continued his education through reading literature in his father's library. At the age of 22, Glass became a reporter, a job he had long sought, for the \"Lynchburg News\". He rose to become the morning newspaper's editor by 1887. After acquiring the afternoon \"Daily Advance\", the competing \"Daily Republican\",  he became Lynchburg's sole newspaper publisher. The \"Lynchburg News and Advance\" is the successor publication to his newspapers. ","  Carter Glass played a major role in the establishment of the U.S. financial regulatory system, helping to establish the Federal Reserve System and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. He co-sponsored the 1933 Banking Act, also known as the Glass–Steagall Act, which created the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation and enforced the separation of investment banking firms and commercial banks. His banking reforms (Banking Act of 1913, Glass Steagall Act 1932, Banking Act of 1933) earned him gratitude across the country, landing him on the cover of Time Magazine twice, and honoring him with many degrees from universities.  Prior to Glass's reforms, the country's banking system was chaotic and regulated by bankers. The Glass-Steagall bill restricted banks from engaging in invesment banking. The country had suffered eight recessions between 1890 and 1914. Portions of the Glass-Steagall bill were repealed in 1999, allowing banks to combine their own investment activity with commercial banking and possibly contributing to the recession in 2008.\n ","Not as well-publicized was Carter Glass's lifelong opposition to voting rights for African Americans. One of Glass's first political exploits was helping craft the revised 1902 Virginia Constitution to bar [African American] citizens from voting. The 1902 Constitution instituted a poll tax and required bulk payment after a voter missed elections, making voting a luxury. The Constitution also required that voters pass a literacy test with their performance graded by the registrar. When questioned as to whether these measures were potentially discriminatory, Glass exclaimed, \"Discrimination! Why that is exactly what we propose. To remove every [African American] voter who can be gotten rid of, legally, without materially impairing the numerical strength of the white electorate.\" Indeed, the number of African Americans qualified to vote dropped from 147,000 to 21,000 immediately. More than 50 years after it was ratified, the Lynchburg senator remained opposed to the 15th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, which granted African Americans the right to vote. He said in the 1920's it \"constituted an attempt to destroy white civilization in nearly one-third of the nation and to erect on its ruins an Ethiopian state ignorant, profligate, corrupt, controlled by manumitted slaves.\" Glass was in step with his white constituents in Virginia, where African Americans did not receive equal voting rights until the 1960s. In 1928, during a debate involving prohibition, Glass said, \"people of the original thirteen Southern States curse and deride and spit upon the Fifteenth Amendment — and have no intention of letting the [African American] vote\" all the while maintaining Virginia was complying with the law.","\nCarter Glass remained one of the strongest advocates of segregation and continued to dedicate much of his political career to the perpetuation of Jim Crow laws in the South. He sponsored massive resistance legislation along with Virginia Senator Harry F. Byrd of Winchester, another Virginia newspaperman who shared many of Glass's political views. Both Glass and Byrd were opposed to Roosevelt's New Deal policies. Each was a strong supporter of fiscal conservatism and states' rights. Carter Glass supported President Roosevelt but later criticized his policies, including the New Deal, attempts to pack the Supreme Court, third term presidency, and nominations for Federal Judgeships.","Glass had suffered from ill health throughout his life, and usually walked on tip toes because he believed that would help with his indigestion. He kept his seat in his final term in the Senate even though he was not able to be in attendance. He died in his hotel apartment in Washington, D.C., on May 28, 1946. His funeral in Lynchburg was attended by the Chief Justice, the Secretary of State, 11 Senators, 11 House members, and other notables. History remembers Carter Glass as the Father of the Federal Reserve Act but today history also considers his role in the 1902 Constitution that disenfranchised virtually every black voter in the state. The reduction in African American votes helped him politically and put him in a postion to create the banking reform legislation. Nationally, Glass might have been the architect of financial reform that stabilized the nation's banking system, but at home, historian J. Douglas Smith calls him, \"the architect of disenfranchisement in the Old Dominion.\" Harvard University named their business school, Glass House, after Carter Glass achievements in banking, but they have now changed the name to Cash House, for James Cash, the first African American tenured professor at Harvard.","Sources: \nWikipedia\nJoe Stinnett, retired editor of The News \u0026 Advance and The Roanoke Times.\nThe Roanoke Times"],"prefercite_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eMSS 2913, Carter Glass papers, Small Special Collections Library, University of Virginia.\u003c/p\u003e"],"prefercite_tesim":["MSS 2913, Carter Glass papers, Small Special Collections Library, University of Virginia."],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe Carter Glass papers, 1820-1946, 141 cubic feet, consist of correspondence, manuscripts, newspaper articles, photographs, speeches, and printed materials from his work in the Banking and Currency Committee, the Secretary of the Treasury (1918-1920), and the United States Senate (1920-1946). Subjects include: The Federal Reserve Banking Act of 1913, the Federal Reserve system, and the Banking Act of 1933 (1932 Glass-Steagall Act).  \u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eOther topics include international, national and state issues reflected in the politics of this time period including opposition to the National Industrial Recovery Act; National Labor Relations Act; Bank Holding Company Bill; Office of Price Administration; World Wars I and II; League of Nations; World Court; Democratic Party platforms and policies; presidential elections of 1912, 1920, 1924, 1928, and 1940; Senator Huey P. Long; Franklin D. Roosevelt and the New Deal; attempted packing of the Supreme Court; neutrality legislation; disarmament; regulation of the coal industry; (business) products and services; child labor; anti-lynching law; immigration restriction (especially Chinese in Hawaii); Muscle Shoals; trade with Russia; diplomatic relations with the Vatican; Four-Power Treaty; soldiers' bonus bill; tariffs and protectionism; and national defense.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eVirginia topics of concern to Glass or his constituents include poll tax elimination; African American suffrage; women's suffrage; highways; intrastate commerce; University of Virginia Board of Visitors;  Woodrow Wilson Foundation; national Patrick Henry shrine at \"Red Hill\"; gubernatorial election of 1924; Bishop James Cannon, Jr., prohibition and the Anti-saloon League; Skyline Drive; Spotsylvania Battlefield Park; Virginia Fight For Freedom Committee; operation of the Lynchburg News and Advance; and patronage requests from Lynchburg, Roanoke, and Bedford, Campbell, Floyd, Montgomery, and Roanoke Counties, Va.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eMiscellaneous items of interest include a letter describing the early life of Booker T. Washington, election tickets for 1848, a 1906 recipe book, and letters concerning Glass' belief in the Baconian theory of Shakespeare authorship.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eAmong the many correspondents are Edwin A. Alderman, Newton Baker, Ray Stannard Baker, Alben Barkley, Bernard Baruch, William E. Borah, Chester Bowles, John Stewart Bryan, William Jennings Bryan, Harry F. Byrd, Richard E. Byrd, Calvin Coolidge, John W. Daniel, Josephus Daniels, Colgate W. Darden, Westmoreland Davis, Frederic A. Delano, the Democratic National Committee, Marriner S. Eccles, James A. Farley, Henry Ford, Douglas Southall Freeman, James A. Garfield, Samuel Gompers, Cary T. Grayson, Charles S. Hamlin, William P.G. Harding, Warren G. Harding, George L. Harrison, J. Edgar Hoover,Herbert Hoover, Edwin M. House, Cordell Hull, Harold Ickes, Hugh S. Johnson, Jesse Jones, Joseph P. Kennedy, Russell C. Leffingwell, Walter Lippmann, Huey Long, William Gibbs McAdoo, George Walter Mapp, Andrew Mellon, Eugene and Agnes Meyer, Andrew J. Montague, R. Walton Moore, Henry Morgenthau, Jr., Robert L. Owen, George C. Peery, Edmund Platt, John Garland Pollard, A. Willis Robertson, Eleanor Roosevelt, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Dave E. Satterfield, C. Bascom Slemp, Rixey Smith, Billy Sunday, Claude A. Swanson, Harry S. Truman, Joseph P. Tumulty, Oscar W. Underwood, Samuel Untermeyer, Arthur H. Vandenberg, Robert F. Wagner, Henry A. Wallace, Paul Moritz Warburg, Richard S. Whaley, William Allen White, John Skelton Williams, Henry Parker Willis, , Edith Bolling Wilson, Woodrow Wilson, Clifton A. Woodrum, and Walter Wyatt.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCorrespondents include President Woodrow Wilson, Samuel Untermyer, Henry Parker Willis, Charles G. Hamlin, William Gibbs McAdoo, Robert Owen, Victor Morawetz, Harry F. Byrd, John Skelton Williams, Henry Moehlenpah, Paul M. Warburg (under revision)\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eBox summaries\nBox 1: The Federal Reserve Bank Act and Federal Reserve system; the Federal Farm Loan Act; Panic of 1912; The Aldrich Bill; branch banks; central banking board; gold reserves; Currency [reform] Bill of 1913; Emergency Banking Act, 1933; the Banking Act of 1933 (Glass-Steagall Act; the Bank Bill of 1935; opposition to the National Industrial Recovery Act; the National Labor Relations Act; the Bank Holding Company Bill; and the Office of Price Administration.\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBox 2: Federal Reserve Act (Glass-Owen Bill)6454, 2639, 7837;Aldrich-Vreeland Law;Federal Farm Loan Act Rural Credits Bill;and Clayton Anti-Trust Bill\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBox 3: Federal Reserve Act; Federal Reserve Banks; Federal Farm Loan Act; Land Mortgage Bank Bill; Branch banking; Kern Bill; Hollis Buckley Bill; Usury laws; Charles S. Hamlin; Edmund D. Hulbert; William Gibbs McAdoo; J. H. Tregoe; Woodrow Wilson; John Skelton Williams; Henry A. Moehlenpah; Frederic A. Delano; and Carter Glass\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBox 4: Federal Farm Loan Act;Rural credits;Federal Reserve Amendments and responses; McFadden Bill; Hollis Buckley Bill; and gold certificates\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBox 5: Federal Reserve Amendments and responses (Kitchin and Hardwick Bill);and Pomerene Bill. Charles S. Hamlin,William Gibbs McAdoo,Woodrow Wilson,Clayton Act,George M. Reynolds,Paul M. Warburg,John Skelton Williams,and Carter Glass\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBox 6: Federal Reserve Amendments and responses (Kitchin and Hardwick Bill); Federal Reserve Act authorship; Capital Issues Committee; Federal Land Bank of Baltimore; and the Revenue Act of 1918.George Norris,Edmund Platt, Frederic A. Delano, William P. G. Harding,Paul M. Warburg,Charles S. Hamlin, John Skelton Williams,Henry Parker Willis,Eugene Meyer,and Carter Glass\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBox 7: Federal Reserve Act authorship; Federal Farm Loan Amendments; Federal Land Banks; currency shortage; check collection; Smoot Bill; Liberty loans; Federal Reserve Bank of New York; railroad and shipping costs; War Finance Corporation; and Second Pan American Conference. William P. G. Harding,George W. Norris,Robert L. Owen,Russell C. Leffingwell,Benjamin Strong,John Skelton Williams renomination,William Gibbs McAdoo,Charles S. Hamlin,and Carter Glass\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBox 8: Federal Reserve Act authorship; Clayton Anti-Trust Act; Smoot Bill; check collecting fees; branch banking; Virginia-Carolina Joint StockLandBank; budget bill; excess profits tax; gold; and Liberty bonds. Walter Edward Harris, Charles A. Korbly,Edmund Platt,William Skelton Williams,William P. G. Harding,William Gibbs McAdoo, Hollins N. Randolph,Henry Parker Willis,Russell C. Leffingwell,Arthur Capper,Thomas B. McAdams,and Carter Glass\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBox 9: Federal Reserve Act and authorship; Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond; Bank of Haysi; Bank of New York; Open market commercial paper rates; McFadden Bill; discount rates; Overman Resolution; Liberty bonds; Pan American Conference; and Russian trade.William P. G. Harding,John Skelton Williams,Thomas B. McAdams,Russell C. Leffingwell,Edmund Platt,John Thomas Heflin,Hollins N. Randolph,William Gibbs McAdoo,George J. Seay,Henry Parker Willis, George Armstrong,Benjamin Strong,and Carter Glass\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBox 10: Federal Reserve System; McFadden Bill H. R. 2; Farm Loan Mortgage; discount rates and eligible paper; Pittman Silver Act; Frank A. Vanderlip banking plan; War Finance Corporation; Bank of New York; bank failure; Anderson Bill; Lenroot Bill; and William P. G. Harding reappointment.John Skelton Williams,Reed Smoot,Hollins N. Randolph,Russell C. Leffingwell,Thomas B. McAdams,Paul M. Warburg,Edmund Platt,Henry Parker Willis,Woodrow Wilson,Benjamin Strong, Daniel C. Roper, William Gibbs McAdoo,Charles S. Hamlin,George W. Norris,and Carter Glass\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBox 12:Federal Reserve Act authorship; McNary-Haugen Billand (speech responses); McFadden Bill; Federal Farm Loan Act; and Carter Glass book. Walter Edward Harris,Paul Warburg,Norman Davis,Walter E. Edge,Charles W. Collins,Charles S. Hamlin,Henry Parker Willis,George J. Seay,Benjamin Strong,and Edmund Platt\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBox 13: Pascagoula case; Federal Reserve Act authorship; McFadden Bill; \"Committee of One Hundred\"; Carter Glass book; and the McNary-Haugen Bill. Henry Parker Willis,William P. G. Harding,George J. Seay,Harry Flood Byrd,Bernard M. Baruch,Russell C. Leffingwell,Charles S. Hamlin,Charles W. Collins,Walter Edward Harris,Thomas B. McAdams,George W. Norris,and Edmund Platt\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBox 14 Federal Reserve Act authorship; McFadden Bill; Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas; Lafollette Resolution; \"Committee of One Hundred\"; Federal Home Loan Bill; misuse of Federal Reserve System; President Roosevelt criticism of Federal Reserve System; Charles E. Mitchell; and bank failures. Eugene Meyer,Edmund Platt,Henry Parker Willis,Bishop James Cannon, Jr., Thomas B. McAdams,Russell C. Plainwell,and Elben C. Folks\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBox 15: Federal Reserve Act authorship; responses to Depression and banking crisis; Bank of Kentucky; curb stock speculations; security abuses; Charles E. Mitchell; McFadden Bill; and criticism of Herbert Hoover. Thomas B. McAdams,Walter B. Mahoney,John W. Pole,Edmund Platt,Henry Parker Willis,Bernard M. Baruch,Eugene Meyer,William P. G. Harding,George L. Harrison,George W. Norris,George J. Seay,and Richard C. Whitney\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBox 16: Responses to the Depressionand(banking crisis); and Bank of Kentucky.Jouett Shouse,Henry Parker Willis,Henry B. Steagall,Eugene Meyer,Charles S. Hamlin,Milton S. Florsheim,Samuel M. Kaplan,and Elben C. Folkes\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBox 17: Responses to the Depression and banking crisis; President Hoover Plan; Federal Land Banks; Wall Street bankers; bank failures; Bank of Kentucky; Federal Reserve Act authorship; Federal Farm Loan Act; Federal Home Loan; and Hoover moratorium. Bernard M. Baruch,Jouett Shouse,Richard C. Whitney,Charles S. Hamlin,Henry A. Moehlenpah,Millard E. Tydings,Henry Parker Willis,Andrew W. Mellon,Edmund Platt,Eugene Meyer,Russell C. Leffingwell,and Thomas B. McAdams\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBox 18:Depression and banking crisis; Bank of Kentucky; Senate Committee on Banking and Currency Hearings; Reconstruction Finance Corporation; Nye Report; Pan American Finance Conference; Gold; Silver; and death of E. C. Glass. Elben C. Folkes,Al Kaplan,Herbert Hoover,Jouett Shouse,Charles S. Hamlin,George L. Harrison, Thorwald Siegfried, Eugene Meyer,and Pat H. Drewery\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBox 19:Federal Home Loan Bank; Federal Land Bank of Baltimore; foreclosures; Glass-Steagall; and Henry Parker Willis articles in France on gold upsetting to colleagues.Franklin Delano Roosevelt,John W. Pole,Henry B. Steagall,Oliver J. Sands,Russell C. Leffingwell,Charles W. Collins,Charles S. Hamlin,and George L. Harrison\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBox 20-24: Glass Steagall responses; and Glass speech on gold\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBox 25: Glass-Steagall Act; Goldsborough Bill; gold standard; Reconstruction Finance Corporation; Joint Stock Land Banks;Revenue Act of 1932; responses to Carter Glass speech;praise for Carter Glass; bank failures; Banking study; Holiday proclamation by President Roosevelt; Funding for projects such as the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California, and a bridge across the Potomac River; Herbert Hoover;Newton D. Baker;Russell C. Leffingwell;George L. Harrison; Eugene Meyer; Samuel Untermyer; Chester Morrill; George W. Norris; Richard S. Whaley;Princess Amelie Rives Troubetzkoy;James F. Byrnes;Louis Wiley; Robert J. Bulkley;John W. Owens;HenryParker Willis; and the Dallas Chamber of Commerce\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBox 26: Responses to banking crisis and Depressionand criticism of Herbert Hoover\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBox 27: Responses to Depression; McNary-Haugen Bill; Home Loan Bill; Emergency Farm Mortgage Act of 1933; Thomas Bill; Federal Reserve Amendment Section 10b; Glass-Steagall Banking Act; and Credit Report U.S. S. R. (George N. Peek).George L. Harrison,Chester Morrill,Russell C. Leffingwell,Louis T. McFadden,Emmanuel Kaplan,Hugh S. Johnson,and the National Recovery Act\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBox 28: Glass-Steagall Act responses; Emergency Bank Bill; California banks; and Goldsborough Amendment. Edmund Platt and Frank A. Vanderlip\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBox 29: Glass-Steagall Act responses, and Section 19 Statewide branch banking for national banks; Huey Long filibuster; bank guarantees; Charles E. Mitchell investigation; and continued moratorium on closing banks. Duncan U. Fletcher; Ferdinand Pecora; and Virginia Governor John Garland Pollard\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBox 30: Gold, Reconstruction Finance Corporation, Senate Banking and Currency Committee investigation of J. P. Morgan; Glass-Steagall Banking Act; National Recovery Act; Emergency Banking Act relief; Morris Plan; and criticism of Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Duncan U. Fletcher; and William Gibbs McAdoo\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBox 31: Senate investigation of J. P. Morgan;Gold standard; Expand use of silver; stability of the dollar; praise for Carter Glass radio speech \"Facts about Fiscal Policy of Our Government During the Past Few Years\" and \"Shall We Go Over the Precipice?\" Duncan U. Fletcher; Edmund Platt; and Herbert L. Myrick\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBox 32: Rsponses to Glass speech [\"Shall We Go Over the Precipice?\"] against Roosevelt inflation bill; Emergency Bank Bill; Bankruptcy legislation; Banking Act of 1935; Credit Union Act; Marriner S. Eccles as Governor of the Federal Reserve Board; Branchbanking; Bank of the United States; death of Eugerne R. Black; and Philippine currency. Charles S. Hamlin; Edmund Platt; George W. Norris; George L. Harrison; Herny Parker Willis; Paul M. Warburg; Henry B. Steagall; Clifton A. Woodrum; Edward W. Kemmerer;Rudolph Spreckels; Sam M. Kaplan; John Foster Dulles; Milton Friedman; T. F. Wentworth; Dean Acheson; Chester Morrill; Walter Wyatt; Eugene R. Black; James P. Warburg; and James Elliott Heath\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBox 33: (Fletcher-Rayburn Bill, Kean Bill; National Securities Exchange Act, McLeod Bill, or the Banking Act of 1935); Federal Reserve Amendment Section 12b; Morris-Sheppard Bill; Chester Morrill; Thomas B. McAdams; William Gibbs McAdoo; Elmer Thomas; Henry Morgenthau, Jr.; Eugene Meyer; Duncan U. Fletcher; Jesse H. Jones; and Richard C. Whitney\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBox 34: Banking Act of 1933; National Securities Exchange Act; Kean Bill; Fletcher-Rayburn Bill; misuse of the Federal Reserve System; de-evaluation of the dollar; and Gold Reserve Act\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBox 35: Banking Act of 1935; Gold Reserve Act; Gold speech of Russell C. Leffingwell; National Recovery Act; Hugh S. Johnson; Kaplan Plan; Robert L. Owen inquiry; Huey Long; Goldsborough Amendment;Elmer Thomas; Charles S. Hamlin; George Wharton Pepper; Henry H. Heiman; Henry Parker Willis; George W. Norris; Duncan U. Fletcher; J. F. T. O'Connor; Robert D. Kent; Royal S. Copeland; Edward W. Kemmerer; and A. Willis Robertson\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBox 36: Responses to the Banking Act of 1935; Harry Flood Byrd; Duncan U. Fletcher; A. Willis Robertson; Leo T. Crowley; Jesse H. Jones; Edmund Platt; Henry Morgenthau, Jr.; J. F. T. O'Connor; Thomas B. McAdams; and Thomas P. Gore\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBox 37: Responses to the Banking Act of 1935; Glass concerns about Marriner S. Eccles as Governor of the Federal Reserve Board and criticism of government and political control of banking; Federal Reserve Act authorship; Goldsborough Amendment; Townsend Plan; A. H. Dobson; Frank A. Vanderlip; Irving Fisher; Walter Lichtenstein; Arthur Capper; Duncan U. Fletcher; Bennett Champ Clark; Thomas P. Gore; Henry Heiman; Thomas B. McAdams; Hollins N. Randolph; Hugo L. Black; and Thorwald Siegfried\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBox 38: Banking Act of 1935; Gold clause; Comptroller of the Currency; silver; Robert L. Owen inquiry; Reconstruction Finance Corporation; repeal of Thomas Amendment; concern about Marriner S. Eccles as Governor of the Federal Reserve Board; portrait of John Skelton Williams; Edmund Platt; Agnes and Eugene Meyer; Chester Morrill; Robert F. Wagner; Kenneth D. McKellar; George L. Harrison; Harry S. Truman; George W. Norris; Henry Parker Willis; Henry Morgenthau, Jr.; Marriner S. Eccles and Russell C. Leffingwell(Treasury and Nye Report)\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBox 39: Repeal Thomas Amendment; Branch banking; Bankhead-Jones Farm Act; Federal Land Bank of Baltimore Bank Holding companies; and Reconstruction Finance Corporation.William Gibbs McAdoo,Edmund Platt,Thomas B. McAdams,Henry Heiman,Jesse H. Jones,Henry Morgenthau, Jr.,Robert L. Owen,and the death of Henry Parker Willis\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBox 40: Henry Parker Willis Foundation; Federal Reserve Act anniversary; J. F. T. O'Connor resignation; misuse of the Federal Reserve System; Robert L. Owen and Carter Glass accusations against Marriner S. Eccles; Reconstruction Finance Corporation; Clayton Act; Mead Bill; De-evaluation of the dollar;silver program; Gold Act; Home Owners Loan Corporation Act; Self-liquidating Bill; and Barden Bill.Edmund Platt,Jesse H. Jones, William Gibbs McAdoo,Henry Morgenthau, Jr.,Robert F. Wagner,and Marriner S. Eccles\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBox 41: Tribute to Edmund Platt; Embargo Act; Banking and Currency Committee pending legislation; Branch banking; Silver Purchase Act; de-evaluation of the dollar; Trust Indenture Act (Robert F.Wagner); Bank Holding company; Jones Wheeler Bill; Federal Home Loan Bank Act; Clayton Act; Townsend Plan; FDIC; Pittman Amendment; Farm Relief Bill; Reconstruction Finance Corporation; Wagner Lea Bill; and disappointment with Marriner S. Eccles;Harry Flood Byrd,Jesse H. Jones,Henry Heiman,Frederic Delano,and Leo T. Crowley\u003c/p\u003e\n","\u003cp\u003eBox 42: Tribute to Carter Glass; Banking and Currency Committee pending legislation; FDIC and excess profits tax; Federal Reserve Amendment Section 23; medal for Howard Hughes; American Palestine Committee (Robert F. Wagner); Farm credit; Credit Union Act; price control; Bank Holding Company; Reconstruction Finance Corporation; de-evaluation of the dollar Federal Reserve Act authorship; and criticism of Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Cordell Hull; Walter Lichtenstein; Chester Morrill; Robert F. Wagner; and Leo T. Crowley\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eH. S. Trout, president First National Bank, hoping that the bill will be defeated\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eGlass expressses concern that Untermeyer is trying to push the Aldrich Bill. Other correspondents include William A. Glasgow, A. P. Pujo, Hubert D. Stephens, and Henry Parker Willis\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eGlasgow to act as counsel to the Banking and Currency Committee of the Senate\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSet up a meeting with the President to revise the currency system; Henry Parker Willis; and reference to Aldrich Bill\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eJ. C. Goodloe suggests the need for new banking laws in order to help the farmers\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eOffering methods to create calmness in banking instead of panic\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eBanking and Currency Committee of the Senate Banking survey questions about banking\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCriticism of S. 4129 and H.R. 13570 to place tax on real estate instead of stocks and bonds to help relieve bankrupt Treasury\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eColonel House wants to set up a secret meeting for Samuel Untermeyer with President Wilson in order to promote the Aldrich Bill\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eGlass apologizes for his reaction to a speech given by Forgan\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCharles McCulloch, Andrew J. Montague, and William GibbsMcAdoo\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIncludes correspondence about the banking bills from January to April 1916. (Carter Glass correspondence with Clement C. Dickinson January 22, 1916 defending the Federal Reserve.)\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eBankruptcy laws, World War I\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMentions medal for Howard Hughes\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eincludes correspondence Carter Glass\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSee also 1933\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eWoodrow Wilson typed speech to the House of Representatives\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eHistoric moment when Glass takes the first transatlantic flight to Europe with the loan from Treasurer Russell C. Leffingwell\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAgriculture Appropriation Bill; Smith-lever funds; and African Americans in Virginia\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSee also Trade Farmers' and Growers Association Box 52 Folder 1\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eprinted item \"The Aluminum Monopoly\"\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eVirginia Polytechnic Institute request for captured German cannon\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003emention of J. G. Ferneyhough and cows also\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eEdwin Anderson Alderman, Governor E.Lee Trinkle, Jr.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eGlass S. 4029 to determine location for engagement of war vessels and memorial; interview with last survivor of the Merrimac, Richard Curtis; and John Stewart Bryan\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSibley lawsuit claim H. B. 3436\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eElben C. Folkes requests help for his son; lawsuit J. G. Ferneyhough; Senator Couzens; and Florence Adams nomination for AppleBlossom Princess\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eEdwin Anderson Alderman letter advocating for a hospital in Charlottesville\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMemorial Bridge approach bill; H. R. 796; furlough and shorter work week; claims; capital punishment for kidnappers H. R. 96; transportation of persons or property in commerce by motor carrier S. 2793; opposition to income tax;Montgomery county Civic Federation special meeting; Tariff Act of 1930 to import science books for teaching purposes; stamp tax on bank checks (banking); Public Works Program; equal protection of voters in Puerto Rico S. 4691; unemployment relief bills; Railroad pension bill H. R. 10023 and S. 3892, H. R. 9891; Hatfield Bill; Keller Bill 4646; S. 4161; Boulder Dam; Home Loan Bank S. 2959; Emergency Industries Preservation Act; Stuart Junior High School; Albemarle County Medical Society S. 3090 and H. R. 8077; prohibit experiments on living dogs in District of Columbia S. 2146; night work pay H. R. 11267; District of Columbia appropriation bill H. R. 11361; Brookhart Bill censorship of moving pictures; vocational rehabilitation S. 3818; opposition to abolishment of Army Transports and Panama Railroad Steamship Line; Federal relief for unemployed; Capper-Kelly bill to relief excise taxes on druggist; patenting of original designs of silk patterns; Georgetown Branch Library Building and District of Columbia appropriation bill; radio lottery advertising H. R. 7716; Injunction measure S. 936; strengthen immigration laws H. B. 1967; crime to advocate overthrow of government H. B. 8549; issue two or three billions in bonds of small denominations for soldiers bonus or as currency;intrinsic property values vs market values in depression times; and President Hoover's Bankers-Industrialists Committee of Twelve for Credit Expansion\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eErnie Adamson\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eimmigration; Tangiers Island; and Colgate W. Darden, Jr.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eHarry Flood Byrd\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eFrances Perkins\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eRobert F. Wagner\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eKenneth McKellar; and Astor case\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSee also Political correspondence\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSee also Political correspondence\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSee also Legislative correspondence 1921\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eColgate Darden Jr.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSchuyler O. Bland\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\"Pump Priming Bill\" Harry Flood Byrd; Public Works Administration; Equal Rights Bill; and Industrial Profits Tax\u003c/p\u003e"],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents","Scope and Contents"],"scopecontent_tesim":["The Carter Glass papers, 1820-1946, 141 cubic feet, consist of correspondence, manuscripts, newspaper articles, photographs, speeches, and printed materials from his work in the Banking and Currency Committee, the Secretary of the Treasury (1918-1920), and the United States Senate (1920-1946). Subjects include: The Federal Reserve Banking Act of 1913, the Federal Reserve system, and the Banking Act of 1933 (1932 Glass-Steagall Act).  ","Other topics include international, national and state issues reflected in the politics of this time period including opposition to the National Industrial Recovery Act; National Labor Relations Act; Bank Holding Company Bill; Office of Price Administration; World Wars I and II; League of Nations; World Court; Democratic Party platforms and policies; presidential elections of 1912, 1920, 1924, 1928, and 1940; Senator Huey P. Long; Franklin D. Roosevelt and the New Deal; attempted packing of the Supreme Court; neutrality legislation; disarmament; regulation of the coal industry; (business) products and services; child labor; anti-lynching law; immigration restriction (especially Chinese in Hawaii); Muscle Shoals; trade with Russia; diplomatic relations with the Vatican; Four-Power Treaty; soldiers' bonus bill; tariffs and protectionism; and national defense.","Virginia topics of concern to Glass or his constituents include poll tax elimination; African American suffrage; women's suffrage; highways; intrastate commerce; University of Virginia Board of Visitors;  Woodrow Wilson Foundation; national Patrick Henry shrine at \"Red Hill\"; gubernatorial election of 1924; Bishop James Cannon, Jr., prohibition and the Anti-saloon League; Skyline Drive; Spotsylvania Battlefield Park; Virginia Fight For Freedom Committee; operation of the Lynchburg News and Advance; and patronage requests from Lynchburg, Roanoke, and Bedford, Campbell, Floyd, Montgomery, and Roanoke Counties, Va.","Miscellaneous items of interest include a letter describing the early life of Booker T. Washington, election tickets for 1848, a 1906 recipe book, and letters concerning Glass' belief in the Baconian theory of Shakespeare authorship.","Among the many correspondents are Edwin A. Alderman, Newton Baker, Ray Stannard Baker, Alben Barkley, Bernard Baruch, William E. Borah, Chester Bowles, John Stewart Bryan, William Jennings Bryan, Harry F. Byrd, Richard E. Byrd, Calvin Coolidge, John W. Daniel, Josephus Daniels, Colgate W. Darden, Westmoreland Davis, Frederic A. Delano, the Democratic National Committee, Marriner S. Eccles, James A. Farley, Henry Ford, Douglas Southall Freeman, James A. Garfield, Samuel Gompers, Cary T. Grayson, Charles S. Hamlin, William P.G. Harding, Warren G. Harding, George L. Harrison, J. Edgar Hoover,Herbert Hoover, Edwin M. House, Cordell Hull, Harold Ickes, Hugh S. Johnson, Jesse Jones, Joseph P. Kennedy, Russell C. Leffingwell, Walter Lippmann, Huey Long, William Gibbs McAdoo, George Walter Mapp, Andrew Mellon, Eugene and Agnes Meyer, Andrew J. Montague, R. Walton Moore, Henry Morgenthau, Jr., Robert L. Owen, George C. Peery, Edmund Platt, John Garland Pollard, A. Willis Robertson, Eleanor Roosevelt, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Dave E. Satterfield, C. Bascom Slemp, Rixey Smith, Billy Sunday, Claude A. Swanson, Harry S. Truman, Joseph P. Tumulty, Oscar W. Underwood, Samuel Untermeyer, Arthur H. Vandenberg, Robert F. Wagner, Henry A. Wallace, Paul Moritz Warburg, Richard S. Whaley, William Allen White, John Skelton Williams, Henry Parker Willis, , Edith Bolling Wilson, Woodrow Wilson, Clifton A. Woodrum, and Walter Wyatt.","Correspondents include President Woodrow Wilson, Samuel Untermyer, Henry Parker Willis, Charles G. Hamlin, William Gibbs McAdoo, Robert Owen, Victor Morawetz, Harry F. Byrd, John Skelton Williams, Henry Moehlenpah, Paul M. Warburg (under revision)","Box summaries\nBox 1: The Federal Reserve Bank Act and Federal Reserve system; the Federal Farm Loan Act; Panic of 1912; The Aldrich Bill; branch banks; central banking board; gold reserves; Currency [reform] Bill of 1913; Emergency Banking Act, 1933; the Banking Act of 1933 (Glass-Steagall Act; the Bank Bill of 1935; opposition to the National Industrial Recovery Act; the National Labor Relations Act; the Bank Holding Company Bill; and the Office of Price Administration.","Box 2: Federal Reserve Act (Glass-Owen Bill)6454, 2639, 7837;Aldrich-Vreeland Law;Federal Farm Loan Act Rural Credits Bill;and Clayton Anti-Trust Bill","Box 3: Federal Reserve Act; Federal Reserve Banks; Federal Farm Loan Act; Land Mortgage Bank Bill; Branch banking; Kern Bill; Hollis Buckley Bill; Usury laws; Charles S. Hamlin; Edmund D. Hulbert; William Gibbs McAdoo; J. H. Tregoe; Woodrow Wilson; John Skelton Williams; Henry A. Moehlenpah; Frederic A. Delano; and Carter Glass","Box 4: Federal Farm Loan Act;Rural credits;Federal Reserve Amendments and responses; McFadden Bill; Hollis Buckley Bill; and gold certificates","Box 5: Federal Reserve Amendments and responses (Kitchin and Hardwick Bill);and Pomerene Bill. Charles S. Hamlin,William Gibbs McAdoo,Woodrow Wilson,Clayton Act,George M. Reynolds,Paul M. Warburg,John Skelton Williams,and Carter Glass","Box 6: Federal Reserve Amendments and responses (Kitchin and Hardwick Bill); Federal Reserve Act authorship; Capital Issues Committee; Federal Land Bank of Baltimore; and the Revenue Act of 1918.George Norris,Edmund Platt, Frederic A. Delano, William P. G. Harding,Paul M. Warburg,Charles S. Hamlin, John Skelton Williams,Henry Parker Willis,Eugene Meyer,and Carter Glass","Box 7: Federal Reserve Act authorship; Federal Farm Loan Amendments; Federal Land Banks; currency shortage; check collection; Smoot Bill; Liberty loans; Federal Reserve Bank of New York; railroad and shipping costs; War Finance Corporation; and Second Pan American Conference. William P. G. Harding,George W. Norris,Robert L. Owen,Russell C. Leffingwell,Benjamin Strong,John Skelton Williams renomination,William Gibbs McAdoo,Charles S. Hamlin,and Carter Glass","Box 8: Federal Reserve Act authorship; Clayton Anti-Trust Act; Smoot Bill; check collecting fees; branch banking; Virginia-Carolina Joint StockLandBank; budget bill; excess profits tax; gold; and Liberty bonds. Walter Edward Harris, Charles A. Korbly,Edmund Platt,William Skelton Williams,William P. G. Harding,William Gibbs McAdoo, Hollins N. Randolph,Henry Parker Willis,Russell C. Leffingwell,Arthur Capper,Thomas B. McAdams,and Carter Glass","Box 9: Federal Reserve Act and authorship; Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond; Bank of Haysi; Bank of New York; Open market commercial paper rates; McFadden Bill; discount rates; Overman Resolution; Liberty bonds; Pan American Conference; and Russian trade.William P. G. Harding,John Skelton Williams,Thomas B. McAdams,Russell C. Leffingwell,Edmund Platt,John Thomas Heflin,Hollins N. Randolph,William Gibbs McAdoo,George J. Seay,Henry Parker Willis, George Armstrong,Benjamin Strong,and Carter Glass","Box 10: Federal Reserve System; McFadden Bill H. R. 2; Farm Loan Mortgage; discount rates and eligible paper; Pittman Silver Act; Frank A. Vanderlip banking plan; War Finance Corporation; Bank of New York; bank failure; Anderson Bill; Lenroot Bill; and William P. G. Harding reappointment.John Skelton Williams,Reed Smoot,Hollins N. Randolph,Russell C. Leffingwell,Thomas B. McAdams,Paul M. Warburg,Edmund Platt,Henry Parker Willis,Woodrow Wilson,Benjamin Strong, Daniel C. Roper, William Gibbs McAdoo,Charles S. Hamlin,George W. Norris,and Carter Glass","Box 12:Federal Reserve Act authorship; McNary-Haugen Billand (speech responses); McFadden Bill; Federal Farm Loan Act; and Carter Glass book. Walter Edward Harris,Paul Warburg,Norman Davis,Walter E. Edge,Charles W. Collins,Charles S. Hamlin,Henry Parker Willis,George J. Seay,Benjamin Strong,and Edmund Platt","Box 13: Pascagoula case; Federal Reserve Act authorship; McFadden Bill; \"Committee of One Hundred\"; Carter Glass book; and the McNary-Haugen Bill. Henry Parker Willis,William P. G. Harding,George J. Seay,Harry Flood Byrd,Bernard M. Baruch,Russell C. Leffingwell,Charles S. Hamlin,Charles W. Collins,Walter Edward Harris,Thomas B. McAdams,George W. Norris,and Edmund Platt","Box 14 Federal Reserve Act authorship; McFadden Bill; Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas; Lafollette Resolution; \"Committee of One Hundred\"; Federal Home Loan Bill; misuse of Federal Reserve System; President Roosevelt criticism of Federal Reserve System; Charles E. Mitchell; and bank failures. Eugene Meyer,Edmund Platt,Henry Parker Willis,Bishop James Cannon, Jr., Thomas B. McAdams,Russell C. Plainwell,and Elben C. Folks","Box 15: Federal Reserve Act authorship; responses to Depression and banking crisis; Bank of Kentucky; curb stock speculations; security abuses; Charles E. Mitchell; McFadden Bill; and criticism of Herbert Hoover. Thomas B. McAdams,Walter B. Mahoney,John W. Pole,Edmund Platt,Henry Parker Willis,Bernard M. Baruch,Eugene Meyer,William P. G. Harding,George L. Harrison,George W. Norris,George J. Seay,and Richard C. Whitney","Box 16: Responses to the Depressionand(banking crisis); and Bank of Kentucky.Jouett Shouse,Henry Parker Willis,Henry B. Steagall,Eugene Meyer,Charles S. Hamlin,Milton S. Florsheim,Samuel M. Kaplan,and Elben C. Folkes","Box 17: Responses to the Depression and banking crisis; President Hoover Plan; Federal Land Banks; Wall Street bankers; bank failures; Bank of Kentucky; Federal Reserve Act authorship; Federal Farm Loan Act; Federal Home Loan; and Hoover moratorium. Bernard M. Baruch,Jouett Shouse,Richard C. Whitney,Charles S. Hamlin,Henry A. Moehlenpah,Millard E. Tydings,Henry Parker Willis,Andrew W. Mellon,Edmund Platt,Eugene Meyer,Russell C. Leffingwell,and Thomas B. McAdams","Box 18:Depression and banking crisis; Bank of Kentucky; Senate Committee on Banking and Currency Hearings; Reconstruction Finance Corporation; Nye Report; Pan American Finance Conference; Gold; Silver; and death of E. C. Glass. Elben C. Folkes,Al Kaplan,Herbert Hoover,Jouett Shouse,Charles S. Hamlin,George L. Harrison, Thorwald Siegfried, Eugene Meyer,and Pat H. Drewery","Box 19:Federal Home Loan Bank; Federal Land Bank of Baltimore; foreclosures; Glass-Steagall; and Henry Parker Willis articles in France on gold upsetting to colleagues.Franklin Delano Roosevelt,John W. Pole,Henry B. Steagall,Oliver J. Sands,Russell C. Leffingwell,Charles W. Collins,Charles S. Hamlin,and George L. Harrison","Box 20-24: Glass Steagall responses; and Glass speech on gold","Box 25: Glass-Steagall Act; Goldsborough Bill; gold standard; Reconstruction Finance Corporation; Joint Stock Land Banks;Revenue Act of 1932; responses to Carter Glass speech;praise for Carter Glass; bank failures; Banking study; Holiday proclamation by President Roosevelt; Funding for projects such as the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California, and a bridge across the Potomac River; Herbert Hoover;Newton D. Baker;Russell C. Leffingwell;George L. Harrison; Eugene Meyer; Samuel Untermyer; Chester Morrill; George W. Norris; Richard S. Whaley;Princess Amelie Rives Troubetzkoy;James F. Byrnes;Louis Wiley; Robert J. Bulkley;John W. Owens;HenryParker Willis; and the Dallas Chamber of Commerce","Box 26: Responses to banking crisis and Depressionand criticism of Herbert Hoover","Box 27: Responses to Depression; McNary-Haugen Bill; Home Loan Bill; Emergency Farm Mortgage Act of 1933; Thomas Bill; Federal Reserve Amendment Section 10b; Glass-Steagall Banking Act; and Credit Report U.S. S. R. (George N. Peek).George L. Harrison,Chester Morrill,Russell C. Leffingwell,Louis T. McFadden,Emmanuel Kaplan,Hugh S. Johnson,and the National Recovery Act","Box 28: Glass-Steagall Act responses; Emergency Bank Bill; California banks; and Goldsborough Amendment. Edmund Platt and Frank A. Vanderlip","Box 29: Glass-Steagall Act responses, and Section 19 Statewide branch banking for national banks; Huey Long filibuster; bank guarantees; Charles E. Mitchell investigation; and continued moratorium on closing banks. Duncan U. Fletcher; Ferdinand Pecora; and Virginia Governor John Garland Pollard","Box 30: Gold, Reconstruction Finance Corporation, Senate Banking and Currency Committee investigation of J. P. Morgan; Glass-Steagall Banking Act; National Recovery Act; Emergency Banking Act relief; Morris Plan; and criticism of Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Duncan U. Fletcher; and William Gibbs McAdoo","Box 31: Senate investigation of J. P. Morgan;Gold standard; Expand use of silver; stability of the dollar; praise for Carter Glass radio speech \"Facts about Fiscal Policy of Our Government During the Past Few Years\" and \"Shall We Go Over the Precipice?\" Duncan U. Fletcher; Edmund Platt; and Herbert L. Myrick","Box 32: Rsponses to Glass speech [\"Shall We Go Over the Precipice?\"] against Roosevelt inflation bill; Emergency Bank Bill; Bankruptcy legislation; Banking Act of 1935; Credit Union Act; Marriner S. Eccles as Governor of the Federal Reserve Board; Branchbanking; Bank of the United States; death of Eugerne R. Black; and Philippine currency. Charles S. Hamlin; Edmund Platt; George W. Norris; George L. Harrison; Herny Parker Willis; Paul M. Warburg; Henry B. Steagall; Clifton A. Woodrum; Edward W. Kemmerer;Rudolph Spreckels; Sam M. Kaplan; John Foster Dulles; Milton Friedman; T. F. Wentworth; Dean Acheson; Chester Morrill; Walter Wyatt; Eugene R. Black; James P. Warburg; and James Elliott Heath","Box 33: (Fletcher-Rayburn Bill, Kean Bill; National Securities Exchange Act, McLeod Bill, or the Banking Act of 1935); Federal Reserve Amendment Section 12b; Morris-Sheppard Bill; Chester Morrill; Thomas B. McAdams; William Gibbs McAdoo; Elmer Thomas; Henry Morgenthau, Jr.; Eugene Meyer; Duncan U. Fletcher; Jesse H. Jones; and Richard C. Whitney","Box 34: Banking Act of 1933; National Securities Exchange Act; Kean Bill; Fletcher-Rayburn Bill; misuse of the Federal Reserve System; de-evaluation of the dollar; and Gold Reserve Act","Box 35: Banking Act of 1935; Gold Reserve Act; Gold speech of Russell C. Leffingwell; National Recovery Act; Hugh S. Johnson; Kaplan Plan; Robert L. Owen inquiry; Huey Long; Goldsborough Amendment;Elmer Thomas; Charles S. Hamlin; George Wharton Pepper; Henry H. Heiman; Henry Parker Willis; George W. Norris; Duncan U. Fletcher; J. F. T. O'Connor; Robert D. Kent; Royal S. Copeland; Edward W. Kemmerer; and A. Willis Robertson","Box 36: Responses to the Banking Act of 1935; Harry Flood Byrd; Duncan U. Fletcher; A. Willis Robertson; Leo T. Crowley; Jesse H. Jones; Edmund Platt; Henry Morgenthau, Jr.; J. F. T. O'Connor; Thomas B. McAdams; and Thomas P. Gore","Box 37: Responses to the Banking Act of 1935; Glass concerns about Marriner S. Eccles as Governor of the Federal Reserve Board and criticism of government and political control of banking; Federal Reserve Act authorship; Goldsborough Amendment; Townsend Plan; A. H. Dobson; Frank A. Vanderlip; Irving Fisher; Walter Lichtenstein; Arthur Capper; Duncan U. Fletcher; Bennett Champ Clark; Thomas P. Gore; Henry Heiman; Thomas B. McAdams; Hollins N. Randolph; Hugo L. Black; and Thorwald Siegfried","Box 38: Banking Act of 1935; Gold clause; Comptroller of the Currency; silver; Robert L. Owen inquiry; Reconstruction Finance Corporation; repeal of Thomas Amendment; concern about Marriner S. Eccles as Governor of the Federal Reserve Board; portrait of John Skelton Williams; Edmund Platt; Agnes and Eugene Meyer; Chester Morrill; Robert F. Wagner; Kenneth D. McKellar; George L. Harrison; Harry S. Truman; George W. Norris; Henry Parker Willis; Henry Morgenthau, Jr.; Marriner S. Eccles and Russell C. Leffingwell(Treasury and Nye Report)","Box 39: Repeal Thomas Amendment; Branch banking; Bankhead-Jones Farm Act; Federal Land Bank of Baltimore Bank Holding companies; and Reconstruction Finance Corporation.William Gibbs McAdoo,Edmund Platt,Thomas B. McAdams,Henry Heiman,Jesse H. Jones,Henry Morgenthau, Jr.,Robert L. Owen,and the death of Henry Parker Willis","Box 40: Henry Parker Willis Foundation; Federal Reserve Act anniversary; J. F. T. O'Connor resignation; misuse of the Federal Reserve System; Robert L. Owen and Carter Glass accusations against Marriner S. Eccles; Reconstruction Finance Corporation; Clayton Act; Mead Bill; De-evaluation of the dollar;silver program; Gold Act; Home Owners Loan Corporation Act; Self-liquidating Bill; and Barden Bill.Edmund Platt,Jesse H. Jones, William Gibbs McAdoo,Henry Morgenthau, Jr.,Robert F. Wagner,and Marriner S. Eccles","Box 41: Tribute to Edmund Platt; Embargo Act; Banking and Currency Committee pending legislation; Branch banking; Silver Purchase Act; de-evaluation of the dollar; Trust Indenture Act (Robert F.Wagner); Bank Holding company; Jones Wheeler Bill; Federal Home Loan Bank Act; Clayton Act; Townsend Plan; FDIC; Pittman Amendment; Farm Relief Bill; Reconstruction Finance Corporation; Wagner Lea Bill; and disappointment with Marriner S. Eccles;Harry Flood Byrd,Jesse H. Jones,Henry Heiman,Frederic Delano,and Leo T. Crowley","Box 42: Tribute to Carter Glass; Banking and Currency Committee pending legislation; FDIC and excess profits tax; Federal Reserve Amendment Section 23; medal for Howard Hughes; American Palestine Committee (Robert F. Wagner); Farm credit; Credit Union Act; price control; Bank Holding Company; Reconstruction Finance Corporation; de-evaluation of the dollar Federal Reserve Act authorship; and criticism of Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Cordell Hull; Walter Lichtenstein; Chester Morrill; Robert F. Wagner; and Leo T. Crowley","H. S. Trout, president First National Bank, hoping that the bill will be defeated","Glass expressses concern that Untermeyer is trying to push the Aldrich Bill. Other correspondents include William A. Glasgow, A. P. Pujo, Hubert D. Stephens, and Henry Parker Willis","Glasgow to act as counsel to the Banking and Currency Committee of the Senate","Set up a meeting with the President to revise the currency system; Henry Parker Willis; and reference to Aldrich Bill","J. C. Goodloe suggests the need for new banking laws in order to help the farmers","Offering methods to create calmness in banking instead of panic","Banking and Currency Committee of the Senate Banking survey questions about banking","Criticism of S. 4129 and H.R. 13570 to place tax on real estate instead of stocks and bonds to help relieve bankrupt Treasury","Colonel House wants to set up a secret meeting for Samuel Untermeyer with President Wilson in order to promote the Aldrich Bill","Glass apologizes for his reaction to a speech given by Forgan","Charles McCulloch, Andrew J. Montague, and William GibbsMcAdoo","Includes correspondence about the banking bills from January to April 1916. (Carter Glass correspondence with Clement C. Dickinson January 22, 1916 defending the Federal Reserve.)","Bankruptcy laws, World War I","Mentions medal for Howard Hughes","includes correspondence Carter Glass","See also 1933","Woodrow Wilson typed speech to the House of Representatives","Historic moment when Glass takes the first transatlantic flight to Europe with the loan from Treasurer Russell C. Leffingwell","Agriculture Appropriation Bill; Smith-lever funds; and African Americans in Virginia","See also Trade Farmers' and Growers Association Box 52 Folder 1","printed item \"The Aluminum Monopoly\"","Virginia Polytechnic Institute request for captured German cannon","mention of J. G. Ferneyhough and cows also","Edwin Anderson Alderman, Governor E.Lee Trinkle, Jr.","Glass S. 4029 to determine location for engagement of war vessels and memorial; interview with last survivor of the Merrimac, Richard Curtis; and John Stewart Bryan","Sibley lawsuit claim H. B. 3436","Elben C. Folkes requests help for his son; lawsuit J. G. Ferneyhough; Senator Couzens; and Florence Adams nomination for AppleBlossom Princess","Edwin Anderson Alderman letter advocating for a hospital in Charlottesville","Memorial Bridge approach bill; H. R. 796; furlough and shorter work week; claims; capital punishment for kidnappers H. R. 96; transportation of persons or property in commerce by motor carrier S. 2793; opposition to income tax;Montgomery county Civic Federation special meeting; Tariff Act of 1930 to import science books for teaching purposes; stamp tax on bank checks (banking); Public Works Program; equal protection of voters in Puerto Rico S. 4691; unemployment relief bills; Railroad pension bill H. R. 10023 and S. 3892, H. R. 9891; Hatfield Bill; Keller Bill 4646; S. 4161; Boulder Dam; Home Loan Bank S. 2959; Emergency Industries Preservation Act; Stuart Junior High School; Albemarle County Medical Society S. 3090 and H. R. 8077; prohibit experiments on living dogs in District of Columbia S. 2146; night work pay H. R. 11267; District of Columbia appropriation bill H. R. 11361; Brookhart Bill censorship of moving pictures; vocational rehabilitation S. 3818; opposition to abolishment of Army Transports and Panama Railroad Steamship Line; Federal relief for unemployed; Capper-Kelly bill to relief excise taxes on druggist; patenting of original designs of silk patterns; Georgetown Branch Library Building and District of Columbia appropriation bill; radio lottery advertising H. R. 7716; Injunction measure S. 936; strengthen immigration laws H. B. 1967; crime to advocate overthrow of government H. B. 8549; issue two or three billions in bonds of small denominations for soldiers bonus or as currency;intrinsic property values vs market values in depression times; and President Hoover's Bankers-Industrialists Committee of Twelve for Credit Expansion","Ernie Adamson","immigration; Tangiers Island; and Colgate W. Darden, Jr.","Harry Flood Byrd","Frances Perkins","Robert F. Wagner","Kenneth McKellar; and Astor case","See also Political correspondence","See also Political correspondence","See also Legislative correspondence 1921","Colgate Darden Jr.","Schuyler O. Bland","\"Pump Priming Bill\" Harry Flood Byrd; Public Works Administration; Equal Rights Bill; and Industrial Profits Tax"],"userestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThere are no restrictions in this collection except for veterans claims.\u003c/p\u003e"],"userestrict_heading_ssm":["Conditions Governing Use"],"userestrict_tesim":["There are no restrictions in this collection except for veterans claims."],"names_ssim":["Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections Library"],"corpname_ssim":["Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections Library"],"language_ssim":["English"],"descrules_ssm":["Describing Archives: A Content Standard"],"total_component_count_is":4648,"online_item_count_is":0,"component_level_isim":[0],"sort_isi":0,"timestamp":"2026-05-20T23:38:40.572Z"}]}},"label":"Breadcrumbs"}}},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_repositories_3_resources_206_c01_c02"}},{"id":"viu_viu00917_c01_c04_c02","type":"Subseries","attributes":{"title":"B. Bills received","breadcrumbs":{"id":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_viu00917_c01_c04_c02#breadcrumbs","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":{"ref_ssi":"viu_viu00917_c01_c04_c02","ref_ssm":["viu_viu00917_c01_c04_c02"],"id":"viu_viu00917_c01_c04_c02","ead_ssi":"viu_viu00917","_root_":"viu_viu00917","_nest_parent_":"viu_viu00917_c01_c04","parent_ssi":"viu_viu00917_c01_c04","parent_ssim":["viu_viu00917","viu_viu00917_c01","viu_viu00917_c01_c04"],"parent_ids_ssim":["viu_viu00917","viu_viu00917_c01","viu_viu00917_c01_c04"],"parent_unittitles_ssm":["Papers of the Low Moor Iron Company \n         1873-1927","Bound Volumes","Bills"],"parent_unittitles_tesim":["Papers of the Low Moor Iron Company \n         1873-1927","Bound Volumes","Bills"],"text":["Papers of the Low Moor Iron Company \n         1873-1927","Bound Volumes","Bills","B. Bills received","29 volumes"],"title_filing_ssi":"B. Bills received","title_ssm":["B. Bills received"],"title_tesim":["B. Bills received"],"unitdate_other_ssim":["1894-1926"],"normalized_date_ssm":["1894/1926"],"normalized_title_ssm":["B. Bills received"],"component_level_isim":[3],"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"collection_ssim":["Papers of the Low Moor Iron Company \n         1873-1927"],"physdesc_tesim":["29 volumes"],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"child_component_count_isi":0,"level_ssm":["Subseries"],"level_ssim":["Subseries"],"sort_isi":17,"date_range_isim":[1894,1895,1896,1897,1898,1899,1900,1901,1902,1903,1904,1905,1906,1907,1908,1909,1910,1911,1912,1913,1914,1915,1916,1917,1918,1919,1920,1921,1922,1923,1924,1925,1926],"_nest_path_":"/components#0/components#3/components#1","timestamp":"2026-05-21T12:10:02.328Z","collection":{"numFound":1,"start":0,"numFoundExact":true,"docs":[{"id":"viu_viu00917","ead_ssi":"viu_viu00917","_root_":"viu_viu00917","_nest_parent_":"viu_viu00917","ead_source_url_ssi":"data/uva-sc/viu00917.xml","title_ssm":["Papers of the Low Moor Iron Company \n         1873-1927"],"title_tesim":["Papers of the Low Moor Iron Company \n         1873-1927"],"level_ssm":["collection"],"level_ssim":["Collection"],"unitid_ssm":["662"],"text":["662","Papers of the Low Moor Iron Company \n         1873-1927","95 linear feer + 1200\n         volumes","Stored off-site. Users must request boxes 48 hours in advance of desired use. Neither drop-in nor next-day requests can be fulfilled. For additional information, contact Special Collections. \n","The word \"organization\" is used here with considerable\n         diffidence, for any researcher studying the container list\n         that follows will realize quickly that there is no\n         organization in the usual sense of the word.","As noted under \"Provenance,\" the Low Moor Iron Company\n         papers were subjected to a number of moves; when processing\n         began in the fall of 1976, no discernible scheme of\n         organization could be determined.","The first step was to review the series of coded numbers\n         placed on the bundles of papers before they were moved to\n         the dormitory attic, but these did not provide any sort of\n         useful organization. Next, the spine titles of the original\n         letter boxes were reviewed (they had been copied onto the\n         gray cardboard sheets before the move to the dormitory\n         attic), but they, too, proved useless.","These steps having provided no scheme, and after a\n         considerable hiatus due to a turnover in student processors\n         on the collection, the new student processors were\n         instructed to begin a box-by-box inventory of the contents\n         of the collection. During this inventory, old folders were\n         replaced with acid-free ones, and the original folder\n         headings were copied onto the new ones. Some removal of\n         paper clips was accomplished, and the materials were\n         reviewed and notes taken for the guide.","Some consolidation of materials was accomplished, and in\n         other cases, materials were moved. This work has created\n         some problems in the numbering of the boxes. Thus, the\n         researchers will find boxes marked \"6A\" and \"23C\"; he will\n         also discover that certain box numbers have been entirely\n         omitted. As the box numbers exist only to aid in the\n         location of material, it was not felt that the unusual\n         numbers and the omissions would cause problems in working\n         with the papers.","A certain amount of movement of boxes within the\n         collection, and of materials among boxes, probably would\n         ease use of it. But what processing was accomplished on\n         this project took far longer than had been anticipated, and\n         there was no time in the late spring of 1978, when the\n         processors had to complete their work with the project, to\n         undertake a mass movement of material. Thus, they stand in\n         the order in which we found them at the beginning of the\n         project.","The Low Moor Iron Company, the first producer of pig\n         iron in Virginia according to the company's claims, was a\n         self-contained manufacturing unit producing from its own\n         mines the coal, limestone, and iron ore needed for its iron\n         production. Located in Low Moor near Clifton Forge in\n         Alleghany County in western Virginia, an area rich in\n         mineral deposits, the company was in operation from\n         1872-1930, producing only pig iron; it never attempted to\n         produce finished iron products.","Coal came to the Low Moor furnaces from the Kay Moor\n         Mines at Kay Moor, West Virginia, about thirty miles from\n         Low Moor; limestone was produced from the Low Moor\n         limestone quarries; and iron ore came from the Fenwick,\n         Dolly Ann, Jordan, Rich Patch, Low Moor, and Longdale\n         Mines, most of them within twenty miles of Low Moor at\n         Covington or Clifton Forge.","The towns of Low Moor and Kay Moor were company towns in\n         every respect. Workers lived in company-owned houses,\n         bought food in company stores, worshiped at the company\n         church, saw movies in the company theater, were treated in\n         the company hospital, and were buried in the company\n         cemetery. Workers received part of their pay in scrip that\n         they exchanged for goods and services. According to a\n         statement from the Kay Moor Mines dated November 1904, Kay\n         Moor then employed 338 people, paid them an average wage of\n         $36.26 per month, and issued half of their pay in scrip.\n         Kay Moor had four stores; Low Moor had seven or eight. All\n         of these stores carried large inventories which are\n         detailed in the collection. These inventories are valuable\n         to anyone interested in determining the wants and needs of\n         a coal miner and his family.","In the late 1910's and 1920's Kay Moor had a company\n         theater called the Azure Theater which seated about 300\n         people. There were also plans for a company-owned social\n         center, to have pool tables, a soda fountain, and\n         provisions for dancing and skating. The company was in\n         tough economic straits by the 1920's, however, and there is\n         no evidence that the social center was built. The town of\n         Low Moor was so completely under the company's influence\n         that one of Low Moor Iron Company's assistant managers\n         served as the town sheriff. He often foreclosed on people\n         who did not pay their debts, and drove troublesome people\n         \"out of town on a rail\" as he put it.","The Low Moor Iron Company's fortunes fluctuated during\n         the various business cycles between the years 1880-1930.\n         Low Moor was one of the larger pig iron producers in\n         Virginia, but Virginia pig iron production was not\n         important nationally. Low Moor officials sometimes sold\n         their product themselves, but more often they used agents,\n         the prevalent method at the time. Low Moor Iron Company\n         used a variety of agents through the 1900's. James F. Bryan\n         acted as the exclusive agent for the sale of Kay Moor Coal\n         from September 21, 1903 to September, 1905. From about 1890\n         until about 1910 Dalton Nash and Company were the exclusive\n         eastern agents of Low Moor Iron. After that time the\n         exclusive agency went to Philips Isham and Company located\n         in New York. From about 1890 the western agency was handled\n         chiefly by Thomas Mack and Company. After 1902 Thomas Mack\n         and Company underwent a name change, becoming Walter\n         Wallingford and Company, with offices located in\n         Cincinnati, Pittsburgh, and Chicago.","Perhaps the Low Moor Iron Company's biggest problem over\n         the years was obtaining railroad cars for the\n         transportation of its finished product. Low Moor Iron\n         Company had its own cars for transporting its raw materials\n         among its various facilities. For the long haul necessary\n         for its finished goods, however, it depended upon the\n         services of the Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad, and the\n         relationship was not always a happy one. The Low Moor\n         Company complained many times to the C \u0026 O Railroad\n         about the discrepancies between long-and shorthaul freight\n         rates. Low Moor also had trouble getting cars from the C\n         \u0026 O. In a letter to one of Low Moor Company's agents\n         from an irate customer dated 1898, the customer wrote: \"We\n         wrote you on Saturday and endeavored to question upon your\n         mind the necessity of taking care of us with Low Moor iron.\n         We are on our uppers--there is not a pound of Low Moor iron\n         in the yard. Of the one hundred tons ordered some time ago,\n         not one pound of it has been received.\" This was, according\n         to the Low Moor Iron Company, because they could not get\n         the railroad cars. In a letter from Thomas Mack and Company\n         dated November 26, 1901, to General Manager E. C. Means:\n         \"We are hopeful that the car supply will get better because\n         of the number of orders you have of ours for prompt\n         shipment. Our customers are complaining that they are not\n         getting the iron fast enough. . . . We hope that the\n         railroad will be able to supply you with empty cars.\" In\n         another letter dated 1916 to John B. Guernsey, then acting\n         General Manager of the Low Moor Iron Company, \"We were not\n         supplied with coke cars for today's loading, and\n         consequently we have been practically down of Kay Moor\n         ovens all day.\"","The problem of procuring labor also plagued the Low Moor\n         Company. The company sometimes tried to hire immigrant\n         laborers and send the men directly to Low Moor from New\n         York City. There were problems with this, as is explained\n         in the following letter dated April 7, 1906: \n          To Mr. George Wickes \n             Supt. of Mines \n             Kay Moor, Virginia \n             Dear George, \n             Tony arrived with twenty one men last night. One\n            got away in Jersey two in Washington D.C., four in\n            Charlottesville. Some of the men are very good looking,\n            but taken as a whole they are the worst lot I have ever\n            seen: Irish, German-Jews, and Italians. . . . Our New\n            York transportations to this place have never been a\n            success. Signed, \n             Ed D. Wickes Supt. of Mines Low Moor usually employed labor agencies, one\n         of which was Atwood's Employment Agency. Often the Low Moor\n         Company would request certain nationalities, believing them\n         to be better workers than others. Sometimes the company\n         would request a gang of twenty made up of \"ten Greeks and\n         ten Italians.\" Many of the immigrants fled Low Moor and Kay\n         Moor when they learned that they would have to work\n         underground. There is a fair amount of material on\n         immigrant labor and its procurement in the collection, and\n         it is noted in the description of the box contents.","Low Moor Iron Company not only had trouble procuring\n         labor, but it also had trouble with labor already employed\n         in the mines and at the factory. Labor dissension and\n         strikes troubled the Kay Moor Mines through the 1900's. The\n         great coal strike of 1902 hurt the Low Moor Company's coal\n         mining operation, but by 1903 things were \"nearly back to\n         normal\" according to the mine superintendent. There was\n         still trouble at Kay Moor Mines, however. In a letter dated\n         April 26, 1906, to the treasurer of Low Moor Company, the\n         manager of the mines wrote about the trouble in \"trying to\n         get the agitators out.\" The mines were seventy-five men\n         short of the total labor force needed because many of the\n         coal miners returned to their farms during the spring.\n         There were rumblings of another strike at Kay Moor, the\n         result of which was to be a fourteen percent increase in\n         wages for the Kay Moor Mine workers via an agreement with\n         the United Mine Workers Union in December.","The Low Moor Iron Company grew along with the rest of\n         Virginia industry in the 1890's and 1900's. Starting with\n         only one furnace in the 1870's, it opened a second furnace\n         at Covington, Virginia, in 1891. In 1911 it opened a third\n         furnace, this time at Low Moor. Covington, with its heavy\n         industry, soon became known as the \"Pittsburgh of\n         Virginia.\" Virginia's pig iron production rose from 9,000\n         short tons in 1870 to 544,034 long tons in 1903. Judging\n         from the Low Moor Company's correspondence, the most\n         prosperous period for the company fell between the years\n         1895-1907. In the years between 1907-1917 problems befell\n         the Virginia pig iron industry. In a letter from William W.\n         Hearns, the president of the Virginia based Princess Pig\n         Iron Company, to U. S. Senator Thomas S. Martin, Hearns\n         writes of the problems of the Virginia pig iron industry:\n         \"There is not a blast furnace in Virginia that is making\n         any money from the manufacture of pig iron. The cause of\n         this is there is an exceedingly low price on pig iron in\n         the country at the present time, and the increased cost of\n         manufacturing is due to the increase in wages in all\n         lines.\" With the outbreak of World War I prices rose\n         dramatically, but in a market report to Low Moor dated\n         November 11, 1916, it was stated that: \"In spite of the\n         high prices, it is not a picnic to be in the iron industry.\n         There is a desperate shortage of cars and equipment in the\n         coal and iron districts, and in consequence there are\n         troubles of all kinds to get materials shipped. The\n         situation has grown serious.\"","When America became involved in the First World War, it\n         meant a boost for the Low Moor Iron Company. The government\n         helped it procure labor, and even helped it repair its\n         furnaces. The problem of supplies and cars for their\n         shipments, however, plagued the company more than ever. It\n         had a good deal of trouble getting all the raw materials it\n         needed due chiefly to the \"tight ship\" run by Harry F.\n         Byrd, Sr., U.S. Fuel Administrator for Virginia. After the\n         war very serious problems began to trouble the Low Moor\n         Iron Company. The demand for iron fell precipitously and a\n         short but severe depression ensued from 1919-1922. The\n         depression seemed to hit the iron industry especially hard.\n         Prices took a huge drop due to the lack of demand, and many\n         pre-war contracts had to be revalued. To compound the\n         company's problems, the Kay Moor Mines went on strike in\n         1919. This strike was quickly settled, as the market for\n         coal was so good that the Low Moor Company ceased taking\n         orders temporarily in 1921 as it could not fill the orders\n         it had on hand.","The Low Moor Company furnaces lay idle for some twenty\n         months. Finally, in November 1922 one of Low Moor's\n         furnaces was finally fired up. While prosperity gradually\n         returned to the rest of the country, the Low Moor Iron\n         Company never recovered. Production of pig iron in the\n         Virginia iron industry declined from 544,034 tons in 1903\n         to 148,053 tons in 1923, considered a good year for the\n         industry as a whole. In February 1926 Low Moor officials\n         talked of merging with two other iron companies in order to\n         revive the iron business for the three companies. The\n         merger, however, never occurred. By late 1926 the company\n         was in the process of liquidation. An advertisement in the\n         Charleston, West Virginia, Daily Mail dated April 30, 1927,\n         told of a huge warehouse sale at the Low Moor Iron Company.\n         The advertisement noted \"thousands of screws, pipe\n         fittings, valves, etc.\" The last piece of correspondence\n         from the Low Moor Iron Company in the collection is dated\n         1929. It deals with the sale of a machine.","Why did the iron industry in Virginia decline as it did?\n         Some say that lack of speed, efficiency, and a decent\n         transportation system for Alleghany County caused it. In a\n         letter from C. E. Bertie, secretary of the Virginia Pig\n         Iron Association, to the \n          Manufacturers Record dated 1925, Bertie claimed that it was the\n         tremendous rise in the cost of transportation. Virginia, he\n         claimed, had almost no home market. Over 80% of its normal\n         production was shipped out to other states. The failure of\n         the Interstate Commerce Commission to treat Virginia\n         furnaces as southern furnaces was the cause of much of the\n         trouble. From 1914-1925 there were four blanket increases\n         in freight rates in the country, of which only one applied\n         equally to all localities. Southern furnaces were received\n         only two increases--a 25% increase in 1918 and a 25%\n         increase in 1920--but northern furnaces had had 5%, 15%,\n         25%, and 40% increases in their transportation costs.\n         Virginia furnaces, although recognized as southern\n         furnaces, had had freight rates increased in line with the\n         northern furnaces. Prior to the war Virginia iron reached\n         all points in Ohio, Indiana, Michigan, and Illinois on a\n         competitive basis with southern furnaces. After World War I\n         the advantage was limited to a small portion of\n         southeastern Ohio. All of Indiana, Illinois, and Michigan\n         were now lost to the Virginia producers. The Virginia\n         producer, according to Bertie, felt that the freight rates\n         should be restored to a relationship with southern\n         furnaces. If what Bertie said was true, the other southern\n         states iron industries should not have been in the same\n         desperate economic straits as Virginia's, and statistics\n         should support this. In the 1920's production rose to new\n         heights in Alabama. In Tennessee, however, iron production\n         plunged to new lows during the 1920's. While the south\n         accounted for 10.2% of the entire U. S. production in the\n         years 1919-1924, Virginia accounted for less than 1% during\n         those years. In 1915 Virginia accounted for over 6% of the\n         U.S. iron production. One can see a decline in other areas\n         of the south than Virginia. While the discrepancies in the\n         freight rates may have helped cause the decline, clearly\n         there are other reasons.","During the 1900's there was a discovery of extremely\n         rich iron ore deposits in the mid-west. Much of this ore\n         was on or near the surface, making the mining of it both\n         easy and inexpensive. This in turn lowered production costs\n         of the pig iron. This caused iron production to shift to\n         that region, and resulted in a decline in the Virginia iron\n         industry. There was a sharp increase in iron production in\n         the mid-west through the 1920's. The iron ore in the\n         mid-west may have been of better quality than Virginia, but\n         the iron ore in Virginia was of sufficient quality to\n         produce a good pig iron. The western ore deposits were not\n         as conveniently located as Virginia deposits, but the\n         inexpensiveness of production more than made up for it.","In examining the rise and fall of the Low Moor Iron\n         Company, we can see a situation in which the conditions for\n         the manufacture of iron were nearly ideal. There was plenty\n         of land for expansion and resources for the manufacture of\n         the iron. The major internal problem faced by the Low Moor\n         Iron Company was that of transportation. External\n         developments, however, caused the final demise of the Low\n         Moor Iron Company.","Low Moor Iron Company Personnel:","Executive Staff: Managing Director, Colonel H. M.\n         Goodwin: ca. 1881. General Managers: H. G. Merry: ca.\n         1884-1902; E. C. Means: ca. 1905-1915; J. P. Guernsey: ca.\n         1915 (acting General Manager); F. U. Humbert: ca.\n         1916-1929. Assistant General Manager: E. B. Wilkinson: ca.\n         1909-1915. Treasurers and Assistant Treasurers: Edward Low:\n         ca. 1886-1898; Frank Lyman (in New York): ca. 1898-1919; S.\n         G. Cragill (Asst. Treasurer): ca. 1900-1915; H. A. Dalton:\n         ca. 1921-1929; John Lipscomb (Asst. Treasurer): ca.\n         1918-1928.","Factory and Mine Supervisors: Kay Moor Superintendents:\n         C. C. Cooke: ca. 1918; Ed. D. Wickes: ca. 1906; H. L.\n         Tansell: ca. 1903; A. H. Reed: ca. 1906. Kay Moor Managers:\n         J. W. Monteith: manager of mines. ca. 1918; promoted in\n         1925 to general superintendent in charge of mine plants,\n         coke ovens, shops, repairs, and construction; A. L.\n         Monteith: assistant superintendent of mines, ca. 1918;\n         George T. Wickes: manager of Covington mines, ca.\n         1906-1917; Ross Howell, ca. 1918. Stack Mines\n         Superintendents: J. H. Carpenter: ca. 1906; C. D.\n         Oberschain: ca. 1907; J. L. Harris: ca. 1903; John S. Ham:\n         ca. 1891-1901. Rich Patch Mines Superintendents: John R.\n         Thompson: foreman, ca. 1906. Low Moor assorted other\n         personnel: S. L. Tulley: trainmaster, ca. 1906; B. J.\n         Shenkley: foreman, Low Moor limestone quarries; L. Q. Wood:\n         assistant traffic manager, ca. 1919.","The Low Moor Iron Company ceased operations in 1930;\n            what happened to the records of the company in the years\n            immediately following is not known, but in 1939, the Green\n            Bookman, a Charlottesville bookshop, sold the records to\n            the University of Virginia Library.","The records arrived at the receiving room door of the\n            new Alderman Library on October 16, 1939, in a trailer\n            truck whose load was estimated to weigh about fourteen\n            tons. As the manuscripts staff dug around in the piles of\n            over 1200 account books, and countless boxes of papers they\n            realized that the company had saved almost all of its\n            papers including checks, invoices, vouchers, and receipts,\n            and certain of these records were destroyed as their\n            information was recorded in other records. Once the bulk of\n            the collection had been reduced, the remaining records were\n            transferred to the stack area of the Division of Rare Books\n            and Manuscripts.","By 1958, little storage space remained in Alderman\n            Library, and the Rare Books and Manuscripts Division was\n            especially crowded because of the rapid growth of its\n            collections. After an examination of its storage areas, the\n            division's staff decided to move the Low Moor records to\n            the attic of one of the student dormitories. The collection\n            had had little use chiefly because there was no finding\n            aid. There seemed little likelihood of extensive researcher\n            use until the collection could be processed.","In preparation for the move, the old letter boxes in\n            which much of the collection had arrived in the Library\n            were discarded. The records from each box were placed\n            between sheets of the heavy gray cardboard used to protect\n            unbound newspapers in the Library's stacks, and the spine\n            labels of the old letter boxes were copied onto the\n            cardboard. The resulting bundles were wrapped with brown\n            Kraft paper and tied up with string. The bundles were\n            numbered. Whatever original order the letter boxes may have\n            had was lost by the time they arrived in the Library, and\n            after the bundling, removal to a dormitory attic, and\n            subsequent return to the Library in 1976, all vestiges of\n            the original order were lost.","The bundles remained in the dormitory attic for almost\n            twenty years. Occasional visits were made by the division\n            staff to check on their condition, and on very rare\n            occasions, a researcher was brave enough to ask to be shown\n            the collection. Once the researcher saw the imposing amount\n            of material and the conditions in the attic, interest in\n            using the collection invariably died.","In late 1976 a grant from the National Endowment for the\n            Humanities was obtained to allow the Library to process the\n            Low Moor Iron Company papers, and the papers of Edward L.\n            Stone and the Borderland Coal Company, another large\n            collection of records stored in the same dormitory attic.\n            All of these records and papers were moved back to the\n            Library where the bundles were cleaned and opened. The\n            contents of each were placed in a Hollinger storage box,\n            and all notes on the paper wrappings and on the gray\n            cardboard sheets were recorded.","The more than 1200 bound accounting records of the Low\n            Moor Iron Company were surveyed by the grant project staff.\n            The contents of each volume were noted on a mimeographed\n            form, and later typed on 3 x 5\" cards to create a\n            readily-accessible file for the Manuscripts Reading Room.\n            This information was also typed on pages to be added to\n            this guide.","The Low Moor Iron Company papers consist of\n         approximately 280 four-inch Hollinger archives boxes (ca.\n         95 linear feet) of records, ca. 1885-1927, and some 1200\n         bound volumes of the company's accounting records,\n         1873-1927, of this iron producing company located in Low\n         Moor (four miles southwest of Clifton Forge), Alleghany\n         County, Virginia.","This material consists of records typical of those\n         produced by a firm of this type in the period, but as the\n         company owned its own coal and iron mines and limestone\n         quarries, there is considerable information about the\n         production of these raw materials. Large numbers of the\n         records that deal with the company's employees have\n         survived: time books, payroll books, hands ledgers, and the\n         like. Because these books sometimes include information\n         about the employee's trade or job with the company, and as\n         race is indicated in some of the records, these books\n         should provide date for studies of the structure and upward\n         mobility within the labor force, patterns of\n         ethnic--possibly racial--occupational penetration and\n         mobility, material conditions of the workers, and so on.\n         The papers should permit a range of studies detailing the\n         pattern and evolution of industrial organization in the\n         iron industry, and the evolution of markets and marketing\n         structures for the entire period. Because the company was\n         dependent upon railroads to move its raw materials to the\n         furnaces, and for the marketing of its products, there is\n         considerable information about railroads and their\n         relationship to their customers.","See the \n             \n            University of Virginia Library’s use policy.","English"],"unitid_tesim":["662"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Papers of the Low Moor Iron Company \n         1873-1927"],"collection_title_tesim":["Papers of the Low Moor Iron Company \n         1873-1927"],"collection_ssim":["Papers of the Low Moor Iron Company \n         1873-1927"],"repository_ssm":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"acqinfo_ssim":["This collection was purchased from Green Bookman in\n            1939."],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"physdesc_tesim":["95 linear feer + 1200\n         volumes"],"accessrestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eStored off-site. Users must request boxes 48 hours in advance of desired use. Neither drop-in nor next-day requests can be fulfilled. For additional information, contact Special Collections. \n\u003c/p\u003e"],"accessrestrict_heading_ssm":["Access Restrictions"],"accessrestrict_tesim":["Stored off-site. Users must request boxes 48 hours in advance of desired use. Neither drop-in nor next-day requests can be fulfilled. For additional information, contact Special Collections. \n"],"arrangement_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe word \"organization\" is used here with considerable\n         diffidence, for any researcher studying the container list\n         that follows will realize quickly that there is no\n         organization in the usual sense of the word.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAs noted under \"Provenance,\" the Low Moor Iron Company\n         papers were subjected to a number of moves; when processing\n         began in the fall of 1976, no discernible scheme of\n         organization could be determined.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe first step was to review the series of coded numbers\n         placed on the bundles of papers before they were moved to\n         the dormitory attic, but these did not provide any sort of\n         useful organization. Next, the spine titles of the original\n         letter boxes were reviewed (they had been copied onto the\n         gray cardboard sheets before the move to the dormitory\n         attic), but they, too, proved useless.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThese steps having provided no scheme, and after a\n         considerable hiatus due to a turnover in student processors\n         on the collection, the new student processors were\n         instructed to begin a box-by-box inventory of the contents\n         of the collection. During this inventory, old folders were\n         replaced with acid-free ones, and the original folder\n         headings were copied onto the new ones. Some removal of\n         paper clips was accomplished, and the materials were\n         reviewed and notes taken for the guide.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSome consolidation of materials was accomplished, and in\n         other cases, materials were moved. This work has created\n         some problems in the numbering of the boxes. Thus, the\n         researchers will find boxes marked \"6A\" and \"23C\"; he will\n         also discover that certain box numbers have been entirely\n         omitted. As the box numbers exist only to aid in the\n         location of material, it was not felt that the unusual\n         numbers and the omissions would cause problems in working\n         with the papers.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eA certain amount of movement of boxes within the\n         collection, and of materials among boxes, probably would\n         ease use of it. But what processing was accomplished on\n         this project took far longer than had been anticipated, and\n         there was no time in the late spring of 1978, when the\n         processors had to complete their work with the project, to\n         undertake a mass movement of material. Thus, they stand in\n         the order in which we found them at the beginning of the\n         project.\u003c/p\u003e"],"arrangement_heading_ssm":["Organization"],"arrangement_tesim":["The word \"organization\" is used here with considerable\n         diffidence, for any researcher studying the container list\n         that follows will realize quickly that there is no\n         organization in the usual sense of the word.","As noted under \"Provenance,\" the Low Moor Iron Company\n         papers were subjected to a number of moves; when processing\n         began in the fall of 1976, no discernible scheme of\n         organization could be determined.","The first step was to review the series of coded numbers\n         placed on the bundles of papers before they were moved to\n         the dormitory attic, but these did not provide any sort of\n         useful organization. Next, the spine titles of the original\n         letter boxes were reviewed (they had been copied onto the\n         gray cardboard sheets before the move to the dormitory\n         attic), but they, too, proved useless.","These steps having provided no scheme, and after a\n         considerable hiatus due to a turnover in student processors\n         on the collection, the new student processors were\n         instructed to begin a box-by-box inventory of the contents\n         of the collection. During this inventory, old folders were\n         replaced with acid-free ones, and the original folder\n         headings were copied onto the new ones. Some removal of\n         paper clips was accomplished, and the materials were\n         reviewed and notes taken for the guide.","Some consolidation of materials was accomplished, and in\n         other cases, materials were moved. This work has created\n         some problems in the numbering of the boxes. Thus, the\n         researchers will find boxes marked \"6A\" and \"23C\"; he will\n         also discover that certain box numbers have been entirely\n         omitted. As the box numbers exist only to aid in the\n         location of material, it was not felt that the unusual\n         numbers and the omissions would cause problems in working\n         with the papers.","A certain amount of movement of boxes within the\n         collection, and of materials among boxes, probably would\n         ease use of it. But what processing was accomplished on\n         this project took far longer than had been anticipated, and\n         there was no time in the late spring of 1978, when the\n         processors had to complete their work with the project, to\n         undertake a mass movement of material. Thus, they stand in\n         the order in which we found them at the beginning of the\n         project."],"bioghist_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe Low Moor Iron Company, the first producer of pig\n         iron in Virginia according to the company's claims, was a\n         self-contained manufacturing unit producing from its own\n         mines the coal, limestone, and iron ore needed for its iron\n         production. Located in Low Moor near Clifton Forge in\n         Alleghany County in western Virginia, an area rich in\n         mineral deposits, the company was in operation from\n         1872-1930, producing only pig iron; it never attempted to\n         produce finished iron products.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCoal came to the Low Moor furnaces from the Kay Moor\n         Mines at Kay Moor, West Virginia, about thirty miles from\n         Low Moor; limestone was produced from the Low Moor\n         limestone quarries; and iron ore came from the Fenwick,\n         Dolly Ann, Jordan, Rich Patch, Low Moor, and Longdale\n         Mines, most of them within twenty miles of Low Moor at\n         Covington or Clifton Forge.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe towns of Low Moor and Kay Moor were company towns in\n         every respect. Workers lived in company-owned houses,\n         bought food in company stores, worshiped at the company\n         church, saw movies in the company theater, were treated in\n         the company hospital, and were buried in the company\n         cemetery. Workers received part of their pay in scrip that\n         they exchanged for goods and services. According to a\n         statement from the Kay Moor Mines dated November 1904, Kay\n         Moor then employed 338 people, paid them an average wage of\n         $36.26 per month, and issued half of their pay in scrip.\n         Kay Moor had four stores; Low Moor had seven or eight. All\n         of these stores carried large inventories which are\n         detailed in the collection. These inventories are valuable\n         to anyone interested in determining the wants and needs of\n         a coal miner and his family.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIn the late 1910's and 1920's Kay Moor had a company\n         theater called the Azure Theater which seated about 300\n         people. There were also plans for a company-owned social\n         center, to have pool tables, a soda fountain, and\n         provisions for dancing and skating. The company was in\n         tough economic straits by the 1920's, however, and there is\n         no evidence that the social center was built. The town of\n         Low Moor was so completely under the company's influence\n         that one of Low Moor Iron Company's assistant managers\n         served as the town sheriff. He often foreclosed on people\n         who did not pay their debts, and drove troublesome people\n         \"out of town on a rail\" as he put it.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe Low Moor Iron Company's fortunes fluctuated during\n         the various business cycles between the years 1880-1930.\n         Low Moor was one of the larger pig iron producers in\n         Virginia, but Virginia pig iron production was not\n         important nationally. Low Moor officials sometimes sold\n         their product themselves, but more often they used agents,\n         the prevalent method at the time. Low Moor Iron Company\n         used a variety of agents through the 1900's. James F. Bryan\n         acted as the exclusive agent for the sale of Kay Moor Coal\n         from September 21, 1903 to September, 1905. From about 1890\n         until about 1910 Dalton Nash and Company were the exclusive\n         eastern agents of Low Moor Iron. After that time the\n         exclusive agency went to Philips Isham and Company located\n         in New York. From about 1890 the western agency was handled\n         chiefly by Thomas Mack and Company. After 1902 Thomas Mack\n         and Company underwent a name change, becoming Walter\n         Wallingford and Company, with offices located in\n         Cincinnati, Pittsburgh, and Chicago.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePerhaps the Low Moor Iron Company's biggest problem over\n         the years was obtaining railroad cars for the\n         transportation of its finished product. Low Moor Iron\n         Company had its own cars for transporting its raw materials\n         among its various facilities. For the long haul necessary\n         for its finished goods, however, it depended upon the\n         services of the Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad, and the\n         relationship was not always a happy one. The Low Moor\n         Company complained many times to the C \u0026amp; O Railroad\n         about the discrepancies between long-and shorthaul freight\n         rates. Low Moor also had trouble getting cars from the C\n         \u0026amp; O. In a letter to one of Low Moor Company's agents\n         from an irate customer dated 1898, the customer wrote: \"We\n         wrote you on Saturday and endeavored to question upon your\n         mind the necessity of taking care of us with Low Moor iron.\n         We are on our uppers--there is not a pound of Low Moor iron\n         in the yard. Of the one hundred tons ordered some time ago,\n         not one pound of it has been received.\" This was, according\n         to the Low Moor Iron Company, because they could not get\n         the railroad cars. In a letter from Thomas Mack and Company\n         dated November 26, 1901, to General Manager E. C. Means:\n         \"We are hopeful that the car supply will get better because\n         of the number of orders you have of ours for prompt\n         shipment. Our customers are complaining that they are not\n         getting the iron fast enough. . . . We hope that the\n         railroad will be able to supply you with empty cars.\" In\n         another letter dated 1916 to John B. Guernsey, then acting\n         General Manager of the Low Moor Iron Company, \"We were not\n         supplied with coke cars for today's loading, and\n         consequently we have been practically down of Kay Moor\n         ovens all day.\"\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe problem of procuring labor also plagued the Low Moor\n         Company. The company sometimes tried to hire immigrant\n         laborers and send the men directly to Low Moor from New\n         York City. There were problems with this, as is explained\n         in the following letter dated April 7, 1906: \n         \u003cblockquote\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eTo Mr. George Wickes \n            \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003eSupt. of Mines \n            \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003eKay Moor, Virginia \n            \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e\u003c/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eDear George, \n            \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003eTony arrived with twenty one men last night. One\n            got away in Jersey two in Washington D.C., four in\n            Charlottesville. Some of the men are very good looking,\n            but taken as a whole they are the worst lot I have ever\n            seen: Irish, German-Jews, and Italians. . . . Our New\n            York transportations to this place have never been a\n            success.\u003c/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eSigned, \n            \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003eEd D. Wickes Supt. of Mines\u003c/p\u003e\n\u003c/blockquote\u003eLow Moor usually employed labor agencies, one\n         of which was Atwood's Employment Agency. Often the Low Moor\n         Company would request certain nationalities, believing them\n         to be better workers than others. Sometimes the company\n         would request a gang of twenty made up of \"ten Greeks and\n         ten Italians.\" Many of the immigrants fled Low Moor and Kay\n         Moor when they learned that they would have to work\n         underground. There is a fair amount of material on\n         immigrant labor and its procurement in the collection, and\n         it is noted in the description of the box contents.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLow Moor Iron Company not only had trouble procuring\n         labor, but it also had trouble with labor already employed\n         in the mines and at the factory. Labor dissension and\n         strikes troubled the Kay Moor Mines through the 1900's. The\n         great coal strike of 1902 hurt the Low Moor Company's coal\n         mining operation, but by 1903 things were \"nearly back to\n         normal\" according to the mine superintendent. There was\n         still trouble at Kay Moor Mines, however. In a letter dated\n         April 26, 1906, to the treasurer of Low Moor Company, the\n         manager of the mines wrote about the trouble in \"trying to\n         get the agitators out.\" The mines were seventy-five men\n         short of the total labor force needed because many of the\n         coal miners returned to their farms during the spring.\n         There were rumblings of another strike at Kay Moor, the\n         result of which was to be a fourteen percent increase in\n         wages for the Kay Moor Mine workers via an agreement with\n         the United Mine Workers Union in December.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe Low Moor Iron Company grew along with the rest of\n         Virginia industry in the 1890's and 1900's. Starting with\n         only one furnace in the 1870's, it opened a second furnace\n         at Covington, Virginia, in 1891. In 1911 it opened a third\n         furnace, this time at Low Moor. Covington, with its heavy\n         industry, soon became known as the \"Pittsburgh of\n         Virginia.\" Virginia's pig iron production rose from 9,000\n         short tons in 1870 to 544,034 long tons in 1903. Judging\n         from the Low Moor Company's correspondence, the most\n         prosperous period for the company fell between the years\n         1895-1907. In the years between 1907-1917 problems befell\n         the Virginia pig iron industry. In a letter from William W.\n         Hearns, the president of the Virginia based Princess Pig\n         Iron Company, to U. S. Senator Thomas S. Martin, Hearns\n         writes of the problems of the Virginia pig iron industry:\n         \"There is not a blast furnace in Virginia that is making\n         any money from the manufacture of pig iron. The cause of\n         this is there is an exceedingly low price on pig iron in\n         the country at the present time, and the increased cost of\n         manufacturing is due to the increase in wages in all\n         lines.\" With the outbreak of World War I prices rose\n         dramatically, but in a market report to Low Moor dated\n         November 11, 1916, it was stated that: \"In spite of the\n         high prices, it is not a picnic to be in the iron industry.\n         There is a desperate shortage of cars and equipment in the\n         coal and iron districts, and in consequence there are\n         troubles of all kinds to get materials shipped. The\n         situation has grown serious.\"\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eWhen America became involved in the First World War, it\n         meant a boost for the Low Moor Iron Company. The government\n         helped it procure labor, and even helped it repair its\n         furnaces. The problem of supplies and cars for their\n         shipments, however, plagued the company more than ever. It\n         had a good deal of trouble getting all the raw materials it\n         needed due chiefly to the \"tight ship\" run by Harry F.\n         Byrd, Sr., U.S. Fuel Administrator for Virginia. After the\n         war very serious problems began to trouble the Low Moor\n         Iron Company. The demand for iron fell precipitously and a\n         short but severe depression ensued from 1919-1922. The\n         depression seemed to hit the iron industry especially hard.\n         Prices took a huge drop due to the lack of demand, and many\n         pre-war contracts had to be revalued. To compound the\n         company's problems, the Kay Moor Mines went on strike in\n         1919. This strike was quickly settled, as the market for\n         coal was so good that the Low Moor Company ceased taking\n         orders temporarily in 1921 as it could not fill the orders\n         it had on hand.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe Low Moor Company furnaces lay idle for some twenty\n         months. Finally, in November 1922 one of Low Moor's\n         furnaces was finally fired up. While prosperity gradually\n         returned to the rest of the country, the Low Moor Iron\n         Company never recovered. Production of pig iron in the\n         Virginia iron industry declined from 544,034 tons in 1903\n         to 148,053 tons in 1923, considered a good year for the\n         industry as a whole. In February 1926 Low Moor officials\n         talked of merging with two other iron companies in order to\n         revive the iron business for the three companies. The\n         merger, however, never occurred. By late 1926 the company\n         was in the process of liquidation. An advertisement in the\n         Charleston, West Virginia, Daily Mail dated April 30, 1927,\n         told of a huge warehouse sale at the Low Moor Iron Company.\n         The advertisement noted \"thousands of screws, pipe\n         fittings, valves, etc.\" The last piece of correspondence\n         from the Low Moor Iron Company in the collection is dated\n         1929. It deals with the sale of a machine.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eWhy did the iron industry in Virginia decline as it did?\n         Some say that lack of speed, efficiency, and a decent\n         transportation system for Alleghany County caused it. In a\n         letter from C. E. Bertie, secretary of the Virginia Pig\n         Iron Association, to the \n         \u003cbibref type=\"simple\" href=\"\"\u003e\u003ctitle type=\"simple\" href=\"\"\u003eManufacturers Record\u003c/title\u003e\u003c/bibref\u003edated 1925, Bertie claimed that it was the\n         tremendous rise in the cost of transportation. Virginia, he\n         claimed, had almost no home market. Over 80% of its normal\n         production was shipped out to other states. The failure of\n         the Interstate Commerce Commission to treat Virginia\n         furnaces as southern furnaces was the cause of much of the\n         trouble. From 1914-1925 there were four blanket increases\n         in freight rates in the country, of which only one applied\n         equally to all localities. Southern furnaces were received\n         only two increases--a 25% increase in 1918 and a 25%\n         increase in 1920--but northern furnaces had had 5%, 15%,\n         25%, and 40% increases in their transportation costs.\n         Virginia furnaces, although recognized as southern\n         furnaces, had had freight rates increased in line with the\n         northern furnaces. Prior to the war Virginia iron reached\n         all points in Ohio, Indiana, Michigan, and Illinois on a\n         competitive basis with southern furnaces. After World War I\n         the advantage was limited to a small portion of\n         southeastern Ohio. All of Indiana, Illinois, and Michigan\n         were now lost to the Virginia producers. The Virginia\n         producer, according to Bertie, felt that the freight rates\n         should be restored to a relationship with southern\n         furnaces. If what Bertie said was true, the other southern\n         states iron industries should not have been in the same\n         desperate economic straits as Virginia's, and statistics\n         should support this. In the 1920's production rose to new\n         heights in Alabama. In Tennessee, however, iron production\n         plunged to new lows during the 1920's. While the south\n         accounted for 10.2% of the entire U. S. production in the\n         years 1919-1924, Virginia accounted for less than 1% during\n         those years. In 1915 Virginia accounted for over 6% of the\n         U.S. iron production. One can see a decline in other areas\n         of the south than Virginia. While the discrepancies in the\n         freight rates may have helped cause the decline, clearly\n         there are other reasons.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eDuring the 1900's there was a discovery of extremely\n         rich iron ore deposits in the mid-west. Much of this ore\n         was on or near the surface, making the mining of it both\n         easy and inexpensive. This in turn lowered production costs\n         of the pig iron. This caused iron production to shift to\n         that region, and resulted in a decline in the Virginia iron\n         industry. There was a sharp increase in iron production in\n         the mid-west through the 1920's. The iron ore in the\n         mid-west may have been of better quality than Virginia, but\n         the iron ore in Virginia was of sufficient quality to\n         produce a good pig iron. The western ore deposits were not\n         as conveniently located as Virginia deposits, but the\n         inexpensiveness of production more than made up for it.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIn examining the rise and fall of the Low Moor Iron\n         Company, we can see a situation in which the conditions for\n         the manufacture of iron were nearly ideal. There was plenty\n         of land for expansion and resources for the manufacture of\n         the iron. The major internal problem faced by the Low Moor\n         Iron Company was that of transportation. External\n         developments, however, caused the final demise of the Low\n         Moor Iron Company.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eLow Moor Iron Company Personnel:\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eExecutive Staff: Managing Director, Colonel H. M.\n         Goodwin: ca. 1881. General Managers: H. G. Merry: ca.\n         1884-1902; E. C. Means: ca. 1905-1915; J. P. Guernsey: ca.\n         1915 (acting General Manager); F. U. Humbert: ca.\n         1916-1929. Assistant General Manager: E. B. Wilkinson: ca.\n         1909-1915. Treasurers and Assistant Treasurers: Edward Low:\n         ca. 1886-1898; Frank Lyman (in New York): ca. 1898-1919; S.\n         G. Cragill (Asst. Treasurer): ca. 1900-1915; H. A. Dalton:\n         ca. 1921-1929; John Lipscomb (Asst. Treasurer): ca.\n         1918-1928.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eFactory and Mine Supervisors: Kay Moor Superintendents:\n         C. C. Cooke: ca. 1918; Ed. D. Wickes: ca. 1906; H. L.\n         Tansell: ca. 1903; A. H. Reed: ca. 1906. Kay Moor Managers:\n         J. W. Monteith: manager of mines. ca. 1918; promoted in\n         1925 to general superintendent in charge of mine plants,\n         coke ovens, shops, repairs, and construction; A. L.\n         Monteith: assistant superintendent of mines, ca. 1918;\n         George T. Wickes: manager of Covington mines, ca.\n         1906-1917; Ross Howell, ca. 1918. Stack Mines\n         Superintendents: J. H. Carpenter: ca. 1906; C. D.\n         Oberschain: ca. 1907; J. L. Harris: ca. 1903; John S. Ham:\n         ca. 1891-1901. Rich Patch Mines Superintendents: John R.\n         Thompson: foreman, ca. 1906. Low Moor assorted other\n         personnel: S. L. Tulley: trainmaster, ca. 1906; B. J.\n         Shenkley: foreman, Low Moor limestone quarries; L. Q. Wood:\n         assistant traffic manager, ca. 1919.\u003c/p\u003e"],"bioghist_heading_ssm":["Biographical/Historical Information"],"bioghist_tesim":["The Low Moor Iron Company, the first producer of pig\n         iron in Virginia according to the company's claims, was a\n         self-contained manufacturing unit producing from its own\n         mines the coal, limestone, and iron ore needed for its iron\n         production. Located in Low Moor near Clifton Forge in\n         Alleghany County in western Virginia, an area rich in\n         mineral deposits, the company was in operation from\n         1872-1930, producing only pig iron; it never attempted to\n         produce finished iron products.","Coal came to the Low Moor furnaces from the Kay Moor\n         Mines at Kay Moor, West Virginia, about thirty miles from\n         Low Moor; limestone was produced from the Low Moor\n         limestone quarries; and iron ore came from the Fenwick,\n         Dolly Ann, Jordan, Rich Patch, Low Moor, and Longdale\n         Mines, most of them within twenty miles of Low Moor at\n         Covington or Clifton Forge.","The towns of Low Moor and Kay Moor were company towns in\n         every respect. Workers lived in company-owned houses,\n         bought food in company stores, worshiped at the company\n         church, saw movies in the company theater, were treated in\n         the company hospital, and were buried in the company\n         cemetery. Workers received part of their pay in scrip that\n         they exchanged for goods and services. According to a\n         statement from the Kay Moor Mines dated November 1904, Kay\n         Moor then employed 338 people, paid them an average wage of\n         $36.26 per month, and issued half of their pay in scrip.\n         Kay Moor had four stores; Low Moor had seven or eight. All\n         of these stores carried large inventories which are\n         detailed in the collection. These inventories are valuable\n         to anyone interested in determining the wants and needs of\n         a coal miner and his family.","In the late 1910's and 1920's Kay Moor had a company\n         theater called the Azure Theater which seated about 300\n         people. There were also plans for a company-owned social\n         center, to have pool tables, a soda fountain, and\n         provisions for dancing and skating. The company was in\n         tough economic straits by the 1920's, however, and there is\n         no evidence that the social center was built. The town of\n         Low Moor was so completely under the company's influence\n         that one of Low Moor Iron Company's assistant managers\n         served as the town sheriff. He often foreclosed on people\n         who did not pay their debts, and drove troublesome people\n         \"out of town on a rail\" as he put it.","The Low Moor Iron Company's fortunes fluctuated during\n         the various business cycles between the years 1880-1930.\n         Low Moor was one of the larger pig iron producers in\n         Virginia, but Virginia pig iron production was not\n         important nationally. Low Moor officials sometimes sold\n         their product themselves, but more often they used agents,\n         the prevalent method at the time. Low Moor Iron Company\n         used a variety of agents through the 1900's. James F. Bryan\n         acted as the exclusive agent for the sale of Kay Moor Coal\n         from September 21, 1903 to September, 1905. From about 1890\n         until about 1910 Dalton Nash and Company were the exclusive\n         eastern agents of Low Moor Iron. After that time the\n         exclusive agency went to Philips Isham and Company located\n         in New York. From about 1890 the western agency was handled\n         chiefly by Thomas Mack and Company. After 1902 Thomas Mack\n         and Company underwent a name change, becoming Walter\n         Wallingford and Company, with offices located in\n         Cincinnati, Pittsburgh, and Chicago.","Perhaps the Low Moor Iron Company's biggest problem over\n         the years was obtaining railroad cars for the\n         transportation of its finished product. Low Moor Iron\n         Company had its own cars for transporting its raw materials\n         among its various facilities. For the long haul necessary\n         for its finished goods, however, it depended upon the\n         services of the Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad, and the\n         relationship was not always a happy one. The Low Moor\n         Company complained many times to the C \u0026 O Railroad\n         about the discrepancies between long-and shorthaul freight\n         rates. Low Moor also had trouble getting cars from the C\n         \u0026 O. In a letter to one of Low Moor Company's agents\n         from an irate customer dated 1898, the customer wrote: \"We\n         wrote you on Saturday and endeavored to question upon your\n         mind the necessity of taking care of us with Low Moor iron.\n         We are on our uppers--there is not a pound of Low Moor iron\n         in the yard. Of the one hundred tons ordered some time ago,\n         not one pound of it has been received.\" This was, according\n         to the Low Moor Iron Company, because they could not get\n         the railroad cars. In a letter from Thomas Mack and Company\n         dated November 26, 1901, to General Manager E. C. Means:\n         \"We are hopeful that the car supply will get better because\n         of the number of orders you have of ours for prompt\n         shipment. Our customers are complaining that they are not\n         getting the iron fast enough. . . . We hope that the\n         railroad will be able to supply you with empty cars.\" In\n         another letter dated 1916 to John B. Guernsey, then acting\n         General Manager of the Low Moor Iron Company, \"We were not\n         supplied with coke cars for today's loading, and\n         consequently we have been practically down of Kay Moor\n         ovens all day.\"","The problem of procuring labor also plagued the Low Moor\n         Company. The company sometimes tried to hire immigrant\n         laborers and send the men directly to Low Moor from New\n         York City. There were problems with this, as is explained\n         in the following letter dated April 7, 1906: \n          To Mr. George Wickes \n             Supt. of Mines \n             Kay Moor, Virginia \n             Dear George, \n             Tony arrived with twenty one men last night. One\n            got away in Jersey two in Washington D.C., four in\n            Charlottesville. Some of the men are very good looking,\n            but taken as a whole they are the worst lot I have ever\n            seen: Irish, German-Jews, and Italians. . . . Our New\n            York transportations to this place have never been a\n            success. Signed, \n             Ed D. Wickes Supt. of Mines Low Moor usually employed labor agencies, one\n         of which was Atwood's Employment Agency. Often the Low Moor\n         Company would request certain nationalities, believing them\n         to be better workers than others. Sometimes the company\n         would request a gang of twenty made up of \"ten Greeks and\n         ten Italians.\" Many of the immigrants fled Low Moor and Kay\n         Moor when they learned that they would have to work\n         underground. There is a fair amount of material on\n         immigrant labor and its procurement in the collection, and\n         it is noted in the description of the box contents.","Low Moor Iron Company not only had trouble procuring\n         labor, but it also had trouble with labor already employed\n         in the mines and at the factory. Labor dissension and\n         strikes troubled the Kay Moor Mines through the 1900's. The\n         great coal strike of 1902 hurt the Low Moor Company's coal\n         mining operation, but by 1903 things were \"nearly back to\n         normal\" according to the mine superintendent. There was\n         still trouble at Kay Moor Mines, however. In a letter dated\n         April 26, 1906, to the treasurer of Low Moor Company, the\n         manager of the mines wrote about the trouble in \"trying to\n         get the agitators out.\" The mines were seventy-five men\n         short of the total labor force needed because many of the\n         coal miners returned to their farms during the spring.\n         There were rumblings of another strike at Kay Moor, the\n         result of which was to be a fourteen percent increase in\n         wages for the Kay Moor Mine workers via an agreement with\n         the United Mine Workers Union in December.","The Low Moor Iron Company grew along with the rest of\n         Virginia industry in the 1890's and 1900's. Starting with\n         only one furnace in the 1870's, it opened a second furnace\n         at Covington, Virginia, in 1891. In 1911 it opened a third\n         furnace, this time at Low Moor. Covington, with its heavy\n         industry, soon became known as the \"Pittsburgh of\n         Virginia.\" Virginia's pig iron production rose from 9,000\n         short tons in 1870 to 544,034 long tons in 1903. Judging\n         from the Low Moor Company's correspondence, the most\n         prosperous period for the company fell between the years\n         1895-1907. In the years between 1907-1917 problems befell\n         the Virginia pig iron industry. In a letter from William W.\n         Hearns, the president of the Virginia based Princess Pig\n         Iron Company, to U. S. Senator Thomas S. Martin, Hearns\n         writes of the problems of the Virginia pig iron industry:\n         \"There is not a blast furnace in Virginia that is making\n         any money from the manufacture of pig iron. The cause of\n         this is there is an exceedingly low price on pig iron in\n         the country at the present time, and the increased cost of\n         manufacturing is due to the increase in wages in all\n         lines.\" With the outbreak of World War I prices rose\n         dramatically, but in a market report to Low Moor dated\n         November 11, 1916, it was stated that: \"In spite of the\n         high prices, it is not a picnic to be in the iron industry.\n         There is a desperate shortage of cars and equipment in the\n         coal and iron districts, and in consequence there are\n         troubles of all kinds to get materials shipped. The\n         situation has grown serious.\"","When America became involved in the First World War, it\n         meant a boost for the Low Moor Iron Company. The government\n         helped it procure labor, and even helped it repair its\n         furnaces. The problem of supplies and cars for their\n         shipments, however, plagued the company more than ever. It\n         had a good deal of trouble getting all the raw materials it\n         needed due chiefly to the \"tight ship\" run by Harry F.\n         Byrd, Sr., U.S. Fuel Administrator for Virginia. After the\n         war very serious problems began to trouble the Low Moor\n         Iron Company. The demand for iron fell precipitously and a\n         short but severe depression ensued from 1919-1922. The\n         depression seemed to hit the iron industry especially hard.\n         Prices took a huge drop due to the lack of demand, and many\n         pre-war contracts had to be revalued. To compound the\n         company's problems, the Kay Moor Mines went on strike in\n         1919. This strike was quickly settled, as the market for\n         coal was so good that the Low Moor Company ceased taking\n         orders temporarily in 1921 as it could not fill the orders\n         it had on hand.","The Low Moor Company furnaces lay idle for some twenty\n         months. Finally, in November 1922 one of Low Moor's\n         furnaces was finally fired up. While prosperity gradually\n         returned to the rest of the country, the Low Moor Iron\n         Company never recovered. Production of pig iron in the\n         Virginia iron industry declined from 544,034 tons in 1903\n         to 148,053 tons in 1923, considered a good year for the\n         industry as a whole. In February 1926 Low Moor officials\n         talked of merging with two other iron companies in order to\n         revive the iron business for the three companies. The\n         merger, however, never occurred. By late 1926 the company\n         was in the process of liquidation. An advertisement in the\n         Charleston, West Virginia, Daily Mail dated April 30, 1927,\n         told of a huge warehouse sale at the Low Moor Iron Company.\n         The advertisement noted \"thousands of screws, pipe\n         fittings, valves, etc.\" The last piece of correspondence\n         from the Low Moor Iron Company in the collection is dated\n         1929. It deals with the sale of a machine.","Why did the iron industry in Virginia decline as it did?\n         Some say that lack of speed, efficiency, and a decent\n         transportation system for Alleghany County caused it. In a\n         letter from C. E. Bertie, secretary of the Virginia Pig\n         Iron Association, to the \n          Manufacturers Record dated 1925, Bertie claimed that it was the\n         tremendous rise in the cost of transportation. Virginia, he\n         claimed, had almost no home market. Over 80% of its normal\n         production was shipped out to other states. The failure of\n         the Interstate Commerce Commission to treat Virginia\n         furnaces as southern furnaces was the cause of much of the\n         trouble. From 1914-1925 there were four blanket increases\n         in freight rates in the country, of which only one applied\n         equally to all localities. Southern furnaces were received\n         only two increases--a 25% increase in 1918 and a 25%\n         increase in 1920--but northern furnaces had had 5%, 15%,\n         25%, and 40% increases in their transportation costs.\n         Virginia furnaces, although recognized as southern\n         furnaces, had had freight rates increased in line with the\n         northern furnaces. Prior to the war Virginia iron reached\n         all points in Ohio, Indiana, Michigan, and Illinois on a\n         competitive basis with southern furnaces. After World War I\n         the advantage was limited to a small portion of\n         southeastern Ohio. All of Indiana, Illinois, and Michigan\n         were now lost to the Virginia producers. The Virginia\n         producer, according to Bertie, felt that the freight rates\n         should be restored to a relationship with southern\n         furnaces. If what Bertie said was true, the other southern\n         states iron industries should not have been in the same\n         desperate economic straits as Virginia's, and statistics\n         should support this. In the 1920's production rose to new\n         heights in Alabama. In Tennessee, however, iron production\n         plunged to new lows during the 1920's. While the south\n         accounted for 10.2% of the entire U. S. production in the\n         years 1919-1924, Virginia accounted for less than 1% during\n         those years. In 1915 Virginia accounted for over 6% of the\n         U.S. iron production. One can see a decline in other areas\n         of the south than Virginia. While the discrepancies in the\n         freight rates may have helped cause the decline, clearly\n         there are other reasons.","During the 1900's there was a discovery of extremely\n         rich iron ore deposits in the mid-west. Much of this ore\n         was on or near the surface, making the mining of it both\n         easy and inexpensive. This in turn lowered production costs\n         of the pig iron. This caused iron production to shift to\n         that region, and resulted in a decline in the Virginia iron\n         industry. There was a sharp increase in iron production in\n         the mid-west through the 1920's. The iron ore in the\n         mid-west may have been of better quality than Virginia, but\n         the iron ore in Virginia was of sufficient quality to\n         produce a good pig iron. The western ore deposits were not\n         as conveniently located as Virginia deposits, but the\n         inexpensiveness of production more than made up for it.","In examining the rise and fall of the Low Moor Iron\n         Company, we can see a situation in which the conditions for\n         the manufacture of iron were nearly ideal. There was plenty\n         of land for expansion and resources for the manufacture of\n         the iron. The major internal problem faced by the Low Moor\n         Iron Company was that of transportation. External\n         developments, however, caused the final demise of the Low\n         Moor Iron Company.","Low Moor Iron Company Personnel:","Executive Staff: Managing Director, Colonel H. M.\n         Goodwin: ca. 1881. General Managers: H. G. Merry: ca.\n         1884-1902; E. C. Means: ca. 1905-1915; J. P. Guernsey: ca.\n         1915 (acting General Manager); F. U. Humbert: ca.\n         1916-1929. Assistant General Manager: E. B. Wilkinson: ca.\n         1909-1915. Treasurers and Assistant Treasurers: Edward Low:\n         ca. 1886-1898; Frank Lyman (in New York): ca. 1898-1919; S.\n         G. Cragill (Asst. Treasurer): ca. 1900-1915; H. A. Dalton:\n         ca. 1921-1929; John Lipscomb (Asst. Treasurer): ca.\n         1918-1928.","Factory and Mine Supervisors: Kay Moor Superintendents:\n         C. C. Cooke: ca. 1918; Ed. D. Wickes: ca. 1906; H. L.\n         Tansell: ca. 1903; A. H. Reed: ca. 1906. Kay Moor Managers:\n         J. W. Monteith: manager of mines. ca. 1918; promoted in\n         1925 to general superintendent in charge of mine plants,\n         coke ovens, shops, repairs, and construction; A. L.\n         Monteith: assistant superintendent of mines, ca. 1918;\n         George T. Wickes: manager of Covington mines, ca.\n         1906-1917; Ross Howell, ca. 1918. Stack Mines\n         Superintendents: J. H. Carpenter: ca. 1906; C. D.\n         Oberschain: ca. 1907; J. L. Harris: ca. 1903; John S. Ham:\n         ca. 1891-1901. Rich Patch Mines Superintendents: John R.\n         Thompson: foreman, ca. 1906. Low Moor assorted other\n         personnel: S. L. Tulley: trainmaster, ca. 1906; B. J.\n         Shenkley: foreman, Low Moor limestone quarries; L. Q. Wood:\n         assistant traffic manager, ca. 1919."],"custodhist_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe Low Moor Iron Company ceased operations in 1930;\n            what happened to the records of the company in the years\n            immediately following is not known, but in 1939, the Green\n            Bookman, a Charlottesville bookshop, sold the records to\n            the University of Virginia Library.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe records arrived at the receiving room door of the\n            new Alderman Library on October 16, 1939, in a trailer\n            truck whose load was estimated to weigh about fourteen\n            tons. As the manuscripts staff dug around in the piles of\n            over 1200 account books, and countless boxes of papers they\n            realized that the company had saved almost all of its\n            papers including checks, invoices, vouchers, and receipts,\n            and certain of these records were destroyed as their\n            information was recorded in other records. Once the bulk of\n            the collection had been reduced, the remaining records were\n            transferred to the stack area of the Division of Rare Books\n            and Manuscripts.\u003c/p\u003e"],"custodhist_heading_ssm":["Provenance"],"custodhist_tesim":["The Low Moor Iron Company ceased operations in 1930;\n            what happened to the records of the company in the years\n            immediately following is not known, but in 1939, the Green\n            Bookman, a Charlottesville bookshop, sold the records to\n            the University of Virginia Library.","The records arrived at the receiving room door of the\n            new Alderman Library on October 16, 1939, in a trailer\n            truck whose load was estimated to weigh about fourteen\n            tons. As the manuscripts staff dug around in the piles of\n            over 1200 account books, and countless boxes of papers they\n            realized that the company had saved almost all of its\n            papers including checks, invoices, vouchers, and receipts,\n            and certain of these records were destroyed as their\n            information was recorded in other records. Once the bulk of\n            the collection had been reduced, the remaining records were\n            transferred to the stack area of the Division of Rare Books\n            and Manuscripts."],"otherfindaid_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eSome 1200 bound accounting record books of the Low Moor\n            Iron Company came into the custody of the Library with the\n            loose papers. When the project staff investigated these\n            volumes in the dormitory attic where they were stored, they\n            found that the volumes had been shelved by size rather than\n            by series. Thus, a letterbook may stand next to a stock\n            report book for a furnace, which is, in turn, next to a\n            store account book for the Kay Moor Mines' store. No series\n            are shelved in order.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMembers of the project staff surveyed the volumes,\n            completing for each volume two copies of a mimeographed\n            survey form, and assigning to each volume a number. One\n            copy of the survey report form was placed in the volume,\n            and the second was returned to the Library.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eFrom the survey report forms, 3 x 5 inch index\n            cards--with a carbon copy of each--were typed. One set of\n            index cards has been kept in order by the numbers assigned\n            to the volumes as they stand on the shelves. This provides\n            a shelf list for the use of the library staff. The other\n            set of cards was sorted into categories as a finding aid.\n            On the list that follows, the researcher will find a number\n            of major headings such as \"Accounts,\" \"Inventories,\"\n            \"Letter Books,\" and \"Shipments-Outgoing.\"\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eInsofar as it has been possible to determine from the\n            data on the survey report forms, the volumes have been\n            assigned to categories. Most of the major categories, or\n            headings, have sub-headings. Within those sub-headings, the\n            volumes have been arranged chronologically. The\n            investigators realize that after careful study of some of\n            these volumes, they will be revealed as belonging to other\n            categories than those in which they have initially been\n            placed. The card index will allow such movement.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAvailable in the Manuscripts/Archives Reading Room in\n            the Library is the sorted card index file. There is a card\n            for every volume in this file whereas, on the pages that\n            follow, volumes have been summarized under the headings and\n            sub-headings. In each case, the number of volumes has been\n            given in the summarized list; the date ranges given are\n            inclusive in most cases, and do not reveal the many gaps in\n            sequences unless the number of volumes is small and the\n            date range wide. Occasional remarks about the content of\n            volumes have been supplied if the contents are not obvious\n            from the heading or sub-heading.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eResearchers wishing to examine any of these volumes will\n            have to use the card index file in order to be able to give\n            to the staff the volume number assigned to the individual\n            volumes that are to be inspected.\u003c/p\u003e"],"otherfindaid_heading_ssm":["Other Finding Aid"],"otherfindaid_tesim":["Some 1200 bound accounting record books of the Low Moor\n            Iron Company came into the custody of the Library with the\n            loose papers. When the project staff investigated these\n            volumes in the dormitory attic where they were stored, they\n            found that the volumes had been shelved by size rather than\n            by series. Thus, a letterbook may stand next to a stock\n            report book for a furnace, which is, in turn, next to a\n            store account book for the Kay Moor Mines' store. No series\n            are shelved in order.","Members of the project staff surveyed the volumes,\n            completing for each volume two copies of a mimeographed\n            survey form, and assigning to each volume a number. One\n            copy of the survey report form was placed in the volume,\n            and the second was returned to the Library.","From the survey report forms, 3 x 5 inch index\n            cards--with a carbon copy of each--were typed. One set of\n            index cards has been kept in order by the numbers assigned\n            to the volumes as they stand on the shelves. This provides\n            a shelf list for the use of the library staff. The other\n            set of cards was sorted into categories as a finding aid.\n            On the list that follows, the researcher will find a number\n            of major headings such as \"Accounts,\" \"Inventories,\"\n            \"Letter Books,\" and \"Shipments-Outgoing.\"","Insofar as it has been possible to determine from the\n            data on the survey report forms, the volumes have been\n            assigned to categories. Most of the major categories, or\n            headings, have sub-headings. Within those sub-headings, the\n            volumes have been arranged chronologically. The\n            investigators realize that after careful study of some of\n            these volumes, they will be revealed as belonging to other\n            categories than those in which they have initially been\n            placed. The card index will allow such movement.","Available in the Manuscripts/Archives Reading Room in\n            the Library is the sorted card index file. There is a card\n            for every volume in this file whereas, on the pages that\n            follow, volumes have been summarized under the headings and\n            sub-headings. In each case, the number of volumes has been\n            given in the summarized list; the date ranges given are\n            inclusive in most cases, and do not reveal the many gaps in\n            sequences unless the number of volumes is small and the\n            date range wide. Occasional remarks about the content of\n            volumes have been supplied if the contents are not obvious\n            from the heading or sub-heading.","Researchers wishing to examine any of these volumes will\n            have to use the card index file in order to be able to give\n            to the staff the volume number assigned to the individual\n            volumes that are to be inspected."],"prefercite_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003ePapers of the Low Moor Iron Company, Accession #662,\n            Special Collections, University of Virginia Library,\n            Charlottesville, Va.\u003c/p\u003e"],"prefercite_tesim":["Papers of the Low Moor Iron Company, Accession #662,\n            Special Collections, University of Virginia Library,\n            Charlottesville, Va."],"processinfo_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eBy 1958, little storage space remained in Alderman\n            Library, and the Rare Books and Manuscripts Division was\n            especially crowded because of the rapid growth of its\n            collections. After an examination of its storage areas, the\n            division's staff decided to move the Low Moor records to\n            the attic of one of the student dormitories. The collection\n            had had little use chiefly because there was no finding\n            aid. There seemed little likelihood of extensive researcher\n            use until the collection could be processed.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIn preparation for the move, the old letter boxes in\n            which much of the collection had arrived in the Library\n            were discarded. The records from each box were placed\n            between sheets of the heavy gray cardboard used to protect\n            unbound newspapers in the Library's stacks, and the spine\n            labels of the old letter boxes were copied onto the\n            cardboard. The resulting bundles were wrapped with brown\n            Kraft paper and tied up with string. The bundles were\n            numbered. Whatever original order the letter boxes may have\n            had was lost by the time they arrived in the Library, and\n            after the bundling, removal to a dormitory attic, and\n            subsequent return to the Library in 1976, all vestiges of\n            the original order were lost.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe bundles remained in the dormitory attic for almost\n            twenty years. Occasional visits were made by the division\n            staff to check on their condition, and on very rare\n            occasions, a researcher was brave enough to ask to be shown\n            the collection. Once the researcher saw the imposing amount\n            of material and the conditions in the attic, interest in\n            using the collection invariably died.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIn late 1976 a grant from the National Endowment for the\n            Humanities was obtained to allow the Library to process the\n            Low Moor Iron Company papers, and the papers of Edward L.\n            Stone and the Borderland Coal Company, another large\n            collection of records stored in the same dormitory attic.\n            All of these records and papers were moved back to the\n            Library where the bundles were cleaned and opened. The\n            contents of each were placed in a Hollinger storage box,\n            and all notes on the paper wrappings and on the gray\n            cardboard sheets were recorded.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe more than 1200 bound accounting records of the Low\n            Moor Iron Company were surveyed by the grant project staff.\n            The contents of each volume were noted on a mimeographed\n            form, and later typed on 3 x 5\" cards to create a\n            readily-accessible file for the Manuscripts Reading Room.\n            This information was also typed on pages to be added to\n            this guide.\u003c/p\u003e"],"processinfo_heading_ssm":["Processing Information"],"processinfo_tesim":["By 1958, little storage space remained in Alderman\n            Library, and the Rare Books and Manuscripts Division was\n            especially crowded because of the rapid growth of its\n            collections. After an examination of its storage areas, the\n            division's staff decided to move the Low Moor records to\n            the attic of one of the student dormitories. The collection\n            had had little use chiefly because there was no finding\n            aid. There seemed little likelihood of extensive researcher\n            use until the collection could be processed.","In preparation for the move, the old letter boxes in\n            which much of the collection had arrived in the Library\n            were discarded. The records from each box were placed\n            between sheets of the heavy gray cardboard used to protect\n            unbound newspapers in the Library's stacks, and the spine\n            labels of the old letter boxes were copied onto the\n            cardboard. The resulting bundles were wrapped with brown\n            Kraft paper and tied up with string. The bundles were\n            numbered. Whatever original order the letter boxes may have\n            had was lost by the time they arrived in the Library, and\n            after the bundling, removal to a dormitory attic, and\n            subsequent return to the Library in 1976, all vestiges of\n            the original order were lost.","The bundles remained in the dormitory attic for almost\n            twenty years. Occasional visits were made by the division\n            staff to check on their condition, and on very rare\n            occasions, a researcher was brave enough to ask to be shown\n            the collection. Once the researcher saw the imposing amount\n            of material and the conditions in the attic, interest in\n            using the collection invariably died.","In late 1976 a grant from the National Endowment for the\n            Humanities was obtained to allow the Library to process the\n            Low Moor Iron Company papers, and the papers of Edward L.\n            Stone and the Borderland Coal Company, another large\n            collection of records stored in the same dormitory attic.\n            All of these records and papers were moved back to the\n            Library where the bundles were cleaned and opened. The\n            contents of each were placed in a Hollinger storage box,\n            and all notes on the paper wrappings and on the gray\n            cardboard sheets were recorded.","The more than 1200 bound accounting records of the Low\n            Moor Iron Company were surveyed by the grant project staff.\n            The contents of each volume were noted on a mimeographed\n            form, and later typed on 3 x 5\" cards to create a\n            readily-accessible file for the Manuscripts Reading Room.\n            This information was also typed on pages to be added to\n            this guide."],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe Low Moor Iron Company papers consist of\n         approximately 280 four-inch Hollinger archives boxes (ca.\n         95 linear feet) of records, ca. 1885-1927, and some 1200\n         bound volumes of the company's accounting records,\n         1873-1927, of this iron producing company located in Low\n         Moor (four miles southwest of Clifton Forge), Alleghany\n         County, Virginia.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThis material consists of records typical of those\n         produced by a firm of this type in the period, but as the\n         company owned its own coal and iron mines and limestone\n         quarries, there is considerable information about the\n         production of these raw materials. Large numbers of the\n         records that deal with the company's employees have\n         survived: time books, payroll books, hands ledgers, and the\n         like. Because these books sometimes include information\n         about the employee's trade or job with the company, and as\n         race is indicated in some of the records, these books\n         should provide date for studies of the structure and upward\n         mobility within the labor force, patterns of\n         ethnic--possibly racial--occupational penetration and\n         mobility, material conditions of the workers, and so on.\n         The papers should permit a range of studies detailing the\n         pattern and evolution of industrial organization in the\n         iron industry, and the evolution of markets and marketing\n         structures for the entire period. Because the company was\n         dependent upon railroads to move its raw materials to the\n         furnaces, and for the marketing of its products, there is\n         considerable information about railroads and their\n         relationship to their customers.\u003c/p\u003e"],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Scope and Content Information"],"scopecontent_tesim":["The Low Moor Iron Company papers consist of\n         approximately 280 four-inch Hollinger archives boxes (ca.\n         95 linear feet) of records, ca. 1885-1927, and some 1200\n         bound volumes of the company's accounting records,\n         1873-1927, of this iron producing company located in Low\n         Moor (four miles southwest of Clifton Forge), Alleghany\n         County, Virginia.","This material consists of records typical of those\n         produced by a firm of this type in the period, but as the\n         company owned its own coal and iron mines and limestone\n         quarries, there is considerable information about the\n         production of these raw materials. Large numbers of the\n         records that deal with the company's employees have\n         survived: time books, payroll books, hands ledgers, and the\n         like. Because these books sometimes include information\n         about the employee's trade or job with the company, and as\n         race is indicated in some of the records, these books\n         should provide date for studies of the structure and upward\n         mobility within the labor force, patterns of\n         ethnic--possibly racial--occupational penetration and\n         mobility, material conditions of the workers, and so on.\n         The papers should permit a range of studies detailing the\n         pattern and evolution of industrial organization in the\n         iron industry, and the evolution of markets and marketing\n         structures for the entire period. Because the company was\n         dependent upon railroads to move its raw materials to the\n         furnaces, and for the marketing of its products, there is\n         considerable information about railroads and their\n         relationship to their customers."],"userestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eSee the \n            \u003cextref type=\"simple\" href=\"https://www.library.virginia.edu/policies/use-of-materials\"\u003e\n            University of Virginia Library’s use policy.\u003c/extref\u003e\u003c/p\u003e"],"userestrict_heading_ssm":["Use Restrictions\n"],"userestrict_tesim":["See the \n             \n            University of Virginia Library’s use policy."],"language_ssim":["English"],"total_component_count_is":1879,"online_item_count_is":0,"component_level_isim":[0],"sort_isi":0,"timestamp":"2026-05-21T12:10:02.328Z"}]}},"label":"Breadcrumbs"}}},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_viu00917_c01_c04_c02"}}],"included":[{"type":"facet","id":"repository_ssim","attributes":{"label":"Repository","items":[{"attributes":{"label":"University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept.","value":"University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept.","hits":98},"links":{"remove":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog.json?f%5Bdate_range%5D%5B%5D=1923\u0026f%5Blevel%5D%5B%5D=Subseries\u0026f%5Brepository%5D%5B%5D=University+of+Virginia%2C+Special+Collections+Dept."}}]},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/facet/repository_ssim.json?f%5Bdate_range%5D%5B%5D=1923\u0026f%5Blevel%5D%5B%5D=Subseries\u0026f%5Brepository%5D%5B%5D=University+of+Virginia%2C+Special+Collections+Dept."}},{"type":"facet","id":"collection_ssim","attributes":{"label":"Collection","items":[{"attributes":{"label":"Blair family papers","value":"Blair family papers","hits":5},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog.json?f%5Bcollection%5D%5B%5D=Blair+family+papers\u0026f%5Bdate_range%5D%5B%5D=1923\u0026f%5Blevel%5D%5B%5D=Subseries\u0026f%5Brepository%5D%5B%5D=University+of+Virginia%2C+Special+Collections+Dept."}},{"attributes":{"label":"Carter Glass Papers","value":"Carter Glass Papers","hits":12},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog.json?f%5Bcollection%5D%5B%5D=Carter+Glass+Papers\u0026f%5Bdate_range%5D%5B%5D=1923\u0026f%5Blevel%5D%5B%5D=Subseries\u0026f%5Brepository%5D%5B%5D=University+of+Virginia%2C+Special+Collections+Dept."}},{"attributes":{"label":"Charles M. 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