Solomon Solis-Cohen correspondence
Collection
Identifier: MSS 2/049
Scope and Contents
Four typescript letters signed, 1911, from James Tyson and T. Mellor Tyson, concerning costs of patient
care at Country Branch of Rush Hospital for Consumption and Allied Diseases, Malvern, Pa.
Dates
- 1911
Creator
- Solis-Cohen, Solomon (Person)
Biographical / Historical
Solomon SolisCohen,
Philadelphia physician, was born in Philadelphia on 1 Sept. 1857. He was a
younger brother of J. Solis Cohen. He married Emily Grace da Silva Solis in 1885; they had four children.
Solomon SolisCohen
died on 12 July 1948. SolisCohen
received his M.D. from Jefferson Medical
College in 1883. From 1884 to 1887, he was Chief Clinical Assistant in the OutPatient
Medical
Department at Jefferson Medical College. He was then Lecturer on Special Therapeutics, Clinical
Lecturer on Medicine, Assistant Professor of Clinical Medicine, and Professor of Clinical Medicine. From
1902 to 1927, SolisCohen
was also Physician to the Hospital of Jefferson Medical College. From 1887 to
1902, he was Professor of Clinical Medicine and Therapeutics at the Philadelphia Polyclinic and College
for Graduates in Medicine. He was Physician to Philadelphia General Hospital, the Jewish Hospital, and
the Rush Hospital for Consumption and Allied Diseases. In 1904, SolisCohen
helped to establish the
National Tuberculosis Association. He became a Fellow of the College of Physicians of Philadelphia in
1888.
Extent
1 folder
Language of Materials
English
Physical Location
Small collections
Creator
- Solis-Cohen, Solomon (Person)
- Title
- Solomon Solis-Cohen correspondence
- Description rules
- Describing Archives: A Content Standard
- Language of description
- English
- Script of description
- Latin
Repository Details
Part of the Historical Medical Library of The College of Physicians of Philadelphia Repository