Oral history of Thomas Turner
General
Abstract
Thomas Bourne Turner was born in Frederick, Maryland. He completed his undergraduate work at St. John's College in Annapolis, Maryland, and went on to receive his medical degree from the University of Maryland. Turner joined the faculty at Johns Hopkins Medical School in the late 1920s and became a dean in 1957. He is best known for his work in infectious disease and microbiology. Turner left his position at the medical school during World War II in order to head up the Army's syphilis eradication program. He returned to his professorship afterward. In this history, Turner recounts his education and his career. This oral history is part of the Mame Warren oral histories series.
Title Language
Dates
Date Published
1999-02-15
Publisher
Digital Publisher
Publisher Country
Language
Identifiers
Collection Number
MS.0404
DSpace Item ID
4710850a-f7a0-4e69-bb58-a7c4b34047b6
Resources
Resource Type
Sound
Extent
01:21:34 hh:mm:ss
Subject
Contributor
Interviewer (ivr): Warren, Mame, 1950-
Interviewee (ive): Turner, Thomas Bourne, 1902-2002
Copyright and Use
Copyright and Use
Copyright Not Evaluated
System
Access Rights
Public digital access
Model
Audio
Unique ID
99c44a1e-bbef-420f-a3d5-78b2e057252c