Hollister-Stier Laboratories was founded in Spokane by chemist Guy Hollister and Robert E Stier, MD
In 1921, Hollister-Stier Laboratories, located in Spokane, is the oldest name in allergy science. The company was founded…
In 1921, Hollister-Stier Laboratories, located in Spokane, is the oldest name in allergy science. The company was founded…
On Sept. 23, 1920, the Arkansas Societyï¾’s Board of Directors approved a plan to build a Childrenï¾’s Home…
On Mar. 15, 1920, E. Donnall Thomas of the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center and recipient of the…
On Mar. 3, 1920, Hugh Smith Cumming was appointed U.S. Surgeon General. Cumming retired as Surgeon General and…
In 1920’s, Oregon State University (OSU) professor of horticulture Ernest H. Wiegand developed the modern method of manufacturing…
In 1920, H. McLean Evans and Joseph Abraham Long at the University of California announced they had discovered…
In 1920, Dr. Albert C. Broders, a surgical pathologist at the Mayo Clinic, published a description of a…
In 1920, The Portland School of Social Work begins offering courses in public health nursing. The University of…
In 1920, the Virginia Commonwealth University announced the opening of the Dooley Hospital, dedicated to the treatment of…
In 1920, the Virginia Mason was founded as an 80-bed hospital with six physician offices. It was named…
By April 1919, following upticks in influenza over winter, the final tally for New Orleans stood at 54,089…
in 1919, by the end of the influenza epidemic in Omaha, almost 1,200 people had died, with a…
On May 14, 1919, the Executive Committee of the Arkansas Childrenï¾’s Home Society, kicked off a campaign to…
On Apr. 1, 1919, the Stanley Cup playoffs between the Montreal Canadians and the Seattle Metropolitans ended tied…
On Jan. 2, 1919, Denver slowly returned to normal after its flu epidemic, and schools reopened. Schoolteachers came…
In 1919, Konstantin Tretiakoff first used the term ‘corps de Lewy’ (Lewy bodies) and reported the presence of…
By late February of 1919, Louisville experienced a third wave of influenza cases, but finally began to return…
In Jan. 1919, Birmingham experienced a third wave in influenza cases and deaths.
By 1919, after the end of its second winter influenza wave, Boston had experienced an excess death rate…
In April 1917, the Alien Property Custodian, a government agency that administers foreign property, seized Bayer Company’s U.S….
In 1919, Edward Francis extended the earlier observations on tularemia. His other studies, continued into the 1920s, clarified…
In 1919, Washington, D.C. suffered spikes in influenza cases throughout the remainder of 1918, and into early February…
In 1919, English-born pharmacist and chemist Frederick Alfred Upsher Smith started a company in to refine digitalis today…
In 1919, Dr. Louis T. Wright became the first African American physician at Harlem Hospital. Wright earned a…
In 1919, The University of Oregon Medical School moved from downtown Portland to its present location on Marquam…
In 1919, the University of Oregon in Eugene introduced the state’s first professional courses in nursing. The courses…
In 1919, the first building, Mackenzie Hall, was named after Kenneth A.J. Mackenzie, MD, the railroadï¾’s surgeon who…
In 1919, by the end of the influenza epidemic, Philadelphia had suffered a terrible cost of 748 deaths…
In 1919, one of the first municipal milk pasteurization programs in the U.S. was initiated by Charleston Health…
In 1919, influenza cases dwindled through the winter of 1918, yet persisted into April 1919 sporadically. About 9…