New York Pathological Society

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]

New York Pathological Society
1894 seal displaying the society's name in Latin, "Societatis Pathologicae Novi Eboraci," its motto "Mors Gaudet Succubrere Vitae," and a portrait of Giovanni Battista Morgagni
MottoMors Gaudet Succubrere Vita
Formation1844 (Inc. 1886)
Websitewww.nypathsociety.org

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).

gollark: They're not rare.
gollark: Honestly, if they actually had to *state clearly and obviously* the rules they're enforcing, what next? Pagination? That way lies only madness.
gollark: It's traditional.
gollark: The average interweb person doesn't really agree with sensible stuff.
gollark: Well, no, this is DC.

References

  1. Thompson, James David (June 1908), Handbook of Learned Societies and Institutions: America, Washington, D.C.: Carnegie Institution of Washington, p. 280, OCLC 2455381.
  2. Society, New York Pathological (1893), "Presidents Of The Society", Proceedings of the New York Pathological Society for the Year 1893, New York: New York Pathological Society: v, OCLC 7891627.
 



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