John Berton Carnett

John Berton Carnett (1890–1988) was an American surgeon remembered for Carnett's sign. He was Professor of Surgery at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, and was Director of American Base Hospital No. 20 in Chatel-Guyon, France during the First World War.

First World War

Carnett organized the University of Pennsylvania's Base Hospital No. 20. He helped secure finances for the equipment and recruited the medical staff. In April 1917, he became director of the Hospital, when the United States entered the War.[1] After arriving in France in June, he and a few other personnel were detached from the Base Hospital to form Surgical Operating Team No. 62. Carnett and the other members of his team received a letter of commendation for their work from Gen. Pershing.[2]

gollark: Which one, the orbital lasers or rules?
gollark: *Or* precommit to using orbital lasers to destroy anyone who dares violate the pact.
gollark: You could... make this agreement on Switchcraft, which would make them bound by the rules (apparently) to follow through?
gollark: REAL men send a specially crafted set of data and stall it until precisely the right time so that the random number generator will pick them.
gollark: just use the ANALYTICSpanel™

References

  1. Philadelphia War History Committee (1922). Philadelphia In The War, 1914-1919. New York: Wynkoop Hallenbeck Crawford Co. pp. 206–08.
  2. Philadelphia War History Committee (1922). Philadelphia In The War, 1914-1919. New York: Wynkoop Hallenbeck Crawford Co. pp. 209.

John B. Carnett at Who Named It?


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