"An enduring monument": Philadelphia's contributions to The Medical & Surgical History of the War of the Rebellion (1870-1888) by Michael Rhode
A Brief History of the Numbering Systems of the National Museum of Health and Medicine and the Armed Forces Institute Of Pathology (2001)
Foreword to Photographic Atlas of Civil War Injuries by Bradley P. Bengston & Julian E. Kuz (Grand Rapids: Medical Staff Press 1996), pps. iv-ix. by Michael G. Rhode.
The Army Medical Museum in Washington by Louis Bagger: (pp. 294-297) in Appletons' Journal: a magazine of general literature. Volume 9, Issue 206. 1873. New York. D. Appleton and Company.
Shooting Soldiers: Civil War Medical Images,
Memory, and Identity in America - "Invisible Culture: An Electronic Journal for Visual Culture"
Hospital Ships material in the Museum
Report to the John F. Kennedy Assassination Records Review Board, 1997 - In the wake of the movie JFK, Congress required federal agencies to report on any information held relating to President Kennedy's assassination. This is the report submitted for the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology, the Museum's parent agency. The Board turned its findings over to the National Archives and ceased to exist in September 1998.
Civil War Medicine Bibliography - A brief listing of the books we have found helpful for conducting research on the Civil War.
Health Campaign Posters, World War II - A sample from our collection.
Armed Forces Institute of
Pathology Oral History Program - Oral history interviews conducted by Charles Stuart Kennedy (Georgetown University) with over 23 AFIP directors and staff members. Most are recorded
on videotape; some on audiotape.
Includes
transcripts and curriculum vitae. The interviews discuss the
subjects' backgrounds, their fields, and the history and staff
of the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology.
Annual Reports - Otis Archives annual reports. 1989 through 2008.
Photography and the Army Medical Museum, 1862-1945
History of photography and the Museum. Word Document or PDF
Chronology of events with the museum and Surgeon General's Library
Record of events from 1818 to 1989. Word Document or PDF
Hermann Faber, Army Medical Museum medical illustrator during the Civil War.