Obituary note for Dr. Amar Nath Mukerjee
Obituary announcing the death of Dr. Amar Nath Mukerjee, one of the first students from India to earn a medical degree in the United States. Dr. Mukerjee was massacred, along with all the members of his family except a sister, during a caste uprising shortly after he returned to India.
Sambhu Chandra Mukhopadhya
Biographical note about Dr. Sambhu Chandra Mukhopadhya, corresponding member of the American Institute of Homeopathy and editor of the weekly journal Reis and Rayyet. The note states that Dr. Mukhopadhya’s enthusiasm for homeopathy was a consequence of his search for relief from a chronic malady that had confined him to his bed for years.
Biographical Note about Dr. Sambhu Chandra Mukhapadhya
Biographical note about Dr. Sambhu Chandra Mukhopadhya by P.C. Majumdar, M.D. Majumdar writes that Dr. Mukhopadhya was a high-caste Brahmin best known for his editorship of the weekly English-language journal, Reis and Rayyet.
Biographical Note about Dr. Sambhu Chandra Mukhapadhya
Biographical note about Dr. Sambhu Chandra Mukhopadhya by B.N. Banerjee, corresponding member of the American Institute of Homeopathy. Banerjee claims that Dr. Mukhopadhya was not a credentialed homeopathic doctor and how he came to be associated with the American Institute of Homeopathy was a mystery. Dr. Mukhopadhya died in February 1894.
Information Card on Dr. Anandibai Joshee
Special congratulatory letter from Queen Victoria reads, “Queen Victoria expressed her interest and appreciation when the first Hindu woman to receive a medical degree in any country -- Dr. Anandibai Joshee -- graduated from the Woman’s Medical College of Pennsylvania in 1886.”
From Dr. Alsop's Article "The Art of Healing"
Excerpt from an article title “The Art of Healing” mentioning Dr. Maya Das, one of the first women from India to earn her degree in medicine in the United States. “Miss Maya Das was a Hindoo girl, very slim, with clear-cut, aristocratic features, who went through her medical training side by side with us, never missing an answer, never absent, never slighting a piece of work, always perfect.”