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The Dean's Lecture Series 2002-2003
The Cartwright Lectures
The Cartwright lectureship was established in the late 1870s through a bequest from Benjamin A.
Cartwright of Newark, NJ to the Alumni Association of the College of Physicians and Surgeons
(P&S). In his will, Mr. Cartwright stated that he wished to institute a course of lectures
"modeled after the Lettsonian or Croonian Lectures of England"-formal occasions that featured
important summaries of existing medical knowledge or, in some cases, reports of cutting-edge
investigations in medicine or surgery. The lectures were given regularly from 1881 until World
War I, at which time they were discontinued indefinitely.
In 1928, the P&S Alumni Association transferred the Cartwright fund directly to the College,
with the recommendation that the bequest remain untouched until the fund could accrue enough
to support a lecture series of the highest quality and distinction-in keeping with what Mr.
Cartwright had originally indicated and envisioned. Five decades later-and nearly a century
after Mr. Cartwright's passing-this long-deferred dream was finally realized with the
reinstatement of a new and improved lecture series in 1974.
The Cartwright lecture series has since become a major forum for the exchange of scientific
knowledge-attracting scholars, researchers, and clinicians from the world's premier medical,
scientific, educational, and policymaking institutions to speak and participate (among them:
top officials from the National Academy of Sciences and the National Institutes of Health,
one United States Senator, and nine Nobel Laureates).
PAST CARTWRIGHT LECTURERS
1881 Prof. Robert Bartholow, Jefferson Medical College
1882 Prof. John C. Dalton, College of Physicians and Surgeons
1883 Prof. W.T. Belfield, Rush Medical College, Chicago
1884 Prof. Burt G. Wilder, Cornell University
1886 Prof. William Osler, University of Pennsylvania
1888 Prof. William H. Welch, Johns Hopkins University
1890 Dr. John S. Billings, United States Army
1892 Prof. Henry Fairfield Osborne, Columbia University
1894 Prof. Russell H. Chittenden, Yale University
1896 Prof. George H. Huntington, Columbia University
1898 Prof. William W. Keen, Jefferson Medical College
1900 Prof. John G. Curtis, Columbia University
1902 Dr. Richard Cabot, Boston
1904 Baron Kanehiro Takaki, Surgeon General, Japanese Navy
1906 Baron Kanehiro Takaki, Surgeon General, Japanese Navy
1908 James Ewing, Cornell University
1910 Dr. Adolf Magnus Levy, University of Berlin
1912 Dr. Ludwig Aschoff, Freiburg, Germany
1916 Prof. Richard Mills Pearce, Philadelphia
1974 Dr. Paul B. Beeson, Oxford University
1975 Dr. Charles B. Huggins, University of Chicago
1976 Sir George White Pickering, Oxford University
1977 Dr. George L. Engel, University of Rochester
1978 Dr. John R. Hogness, University of Washington
1979 Dr. DeWitt Stetten, Jr., National Institutes of Health
1980 Sir Peter Medawar, Clinical Research Center, Harrow
1981 Dr. Joshua Lederberg, Rockefeller University
1982 Dr. D. Carleton Gajdusek, National Institutes of Health
1983 Dr. Arnold Relman, New England Journal of Medicine
1984 Dr. Matthew Stanley Meselson, Harvard University
1985 Dr. George Palade, Yale University
1986 Sir Bernard Katz, University College, London
1987 Dr. Michael J. Bishop, Univ. of California, San Francisco
1988 Dr. Luc Montagnier, Pasteur Institute
1989 Dr. David Baltimore, The Whitehead Institute
1990 Dr. Daniel E. Koshland, Jr., University of California, Berkeley
1991 Dr. W. French Anderson, National Institutes of Health
1992 Dr. Joseph L. Goldstein, University of Texas, Dallas
1993 Dr. Anthony S. Fauci, National Institutes of Health
1995 Dr. Bruce M. Alberts, National Academy of Sciences
1996 Dr. Norman E. Shumway, Stanford University
1997 Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan, State of New York
2000 Dr. Judah Folkman, Harvard Medical School
2001 Dr. Elizabeth Blackburn, University of California at San Francisco
2002 Dr. Elaine Fuchs, University of Chicago
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