New York Pathological Society Explained

New York Pathological Society
Size:175px
Formation:1844 (1886)
Leader Title:President

The New York Pathological Society is a professional organization for pathologists in New York State. It was organized in 1844 and incorporated in 1886. In 1908, its membership was approximately 215.[1] It published the journal Proceedings of the New York Pathological Society at various times from 1875 until 1955.[2] __TOC__

Presidents of the Society

The first president of the society was Dr. John A. Swett in 1844.[3] Other notable presidents include James R. Wood (1848, 1857),[3] William H. Van Buren (1850),[3] Edmund Randolph Peaslee (1858),[3] John C. Dalton (1859),[3] Alfred C. Post (1861),[3] Abraham Jacobi (1864),[3] Gurdon Buck (1865),[3] Lewis Albert Sayre (1869),[3] Alfred L. Loomis (1871, 1872),[3] Hermann Knapp (1874), Francis Delafield (1875),[3] Edward G. Janeway (1877),[3] Edward L. Keyes (1879),[3] George Frederick Shrady, Sr. (1883, 1884),[3] John A. Wyeth (1885, 1886),[3] T. Mitchell Prudden (1887),[3] Hermann Biggs (1891),[3] William H. Park (1903), James Ewing (1921), and Virginia Kneeland Frantz (1949, 1950).

Notes and References

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  2. Web site: OHSU, NCNM, OCOM, and UWS /All Locations . ohsucr11.ohsu.edu:2082 . 3 February 2022 . https://archive.today/20121212225053/http://ohsucr11.ohsu.edu:2082/search?/tProceedings+of+the+International+Symposium+on+Orga/tproceedings+of+the+international+symposium+on+organ+preservation/-3,-1,0,B/frameset&FF=tproceedings+of+the+new+york+pathological+society&1,1, . 12 December 2012 . dead.
  3. .