Harsen Prize - Recipients

Recipients

  • George Frederick Shrady, Sr. 1861
  • Allan McLane Hamilton 1870
  • Charles Henry May, 1st prize Clinical Reports, 1st prize Proficiency in Examination 1883
  • George Sumner Huntington, 1st prize Clinical Reports, 1st prize Proficiency in Examination 1884
  • L. S. Manson, 2nd prize Clinical Reports 1884
  • G. W. Weld, 3rd prize Clinical Reports 1884
  • George Roe Lockwood, Jr., 2nd prize Proficiency in Examination 1884
  • E. K. Morton, 3rd prize Proficiency in Examination 1884
  • Ervin Alden Tucker for Proficiency in All Branches of Medical Teaching 1885
  • William Gilman Thompson for an essay 1885
  • Edward Wight Clarke 1887
  • Levi Olmstead Wiggins circa 1889
  • Austin Wilkinson Hollis 1890
  • William Van Valzah Hayes 1893
  • Albert Ashton Berg in Clinical Reports 1894
  • Archibald Henry Busby, 1st prize Clinical Reports 1898
  • Edward A. Rosenberg, 2nd prize Clinical Reports 1898
  • R. J. Held, 3rd prize Clinical Reports 1898
  • Victor C. Peterson, 1st prize Proficiency in Examination 1898
  • Philip Schieffelin Sabine, 2nd prize Proficiency in Examination 1898
  • Hughes Dayton, 3rd prize Proficiency in Examination 1898
  • William W. Vibbert, honors in Proficiency in Examination 1898
  • George A. Saxe, honors in Proficiency in Examination 1898
  • John M. Taylor, honors in Proficiency in Examination 1898
  • Emil A. Rundquist, honors in Proficiency in Examination 1898
  • Charles M. Williams, honors in Proficiency in Examination 1898
  • Burton J. Lee, honors in Proficiency in Examination 1898
  • Stanley O. Sabel, honors in Proficiency in Examination 1898
  • Haven Emerson, 1901

Read more about this topic:  Harsen Prize

Famous quotes containing the word recipients:

    The proclamation and repetition of first principles is a constant feature of life in our democracy. Active adherence to these principles, however, has always been considered un-American. We recipients of the boon of liberty have always been ready, when faced with discomfort, to discard any and all first principles of liberty, and, further, to indict those who do not freely join with us in happily arrogating those principles.
    David Mamet (b. 1947)