Abstract

The London School of Tropical Medicine

Highlights

  • Sir Patrick Manson, in briefly recounting the history of the school, said that he would take advantage of the opportunity to make public acknowledgement of two obligations that those who were interested in the study and practice of tropical medicine laboured under

  • The first of these was to Mr Chamberlain, of whom it might be truly said that he had been the mainspring in the movement for education in tropical medicine

  • As London was concerned, tropical medicine would have had no suitable habitation. Their intelligent appreciation of their responsibilities as administrators of a great public trust, their catholic interpretation of their duties could not have been better evidenced than by the support they had given to Mr Chamberlain in his desire to foster tropical medicine

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Summary

Introduction

Sir Patrick Manson, in briefly recounting the history of the school, said that he would take advantage of the opportunity to make public acknowledgement of two obligations that those who were interested in the study and practice of tropical medicine laboured under. On the 7fch inst., Sir Patrick Manson gave sn address at the London School of Tropical Medicine on what the school has done, is doing, and hopes to do.

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