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Bildersammlung SNOM
SNOM, 2008

14 Fotos / 1 Video ca. 10 min.
29.90 € inkl. gesetzl. MwSt.

ID: 999661  EAN: 999661


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"""""""BILDLINK=999661_1.jpg>Übersicht aller Bilder!

MIT ALLEN LIZENZRECHTEN!
“Osteopathy’s Beginnings” COLLECTION OF 14 PHOTOS + 1 VIDEO OF A.T.STILL (ca. 10 sec)
Still National Osteopathic Museum
Kirksville, Missouri
(660) 626-2359


1. Andrew Taylor Still: Founder of Osteopathy [PH 692 ] – Taken from a well-known, imposing portrait of Still by Floyd Horton, ca. 1900.

2. Birthplace Cabin [PH 812] – of Andrew Taylor Still – the Still family log home. A. T. Still was born in 1828 in this log cabin in Lee County, Virginia. The cabin was moved to Kirksville, Missouri in 1926 in preparation for the centennial celebration of A. T. Still’s birth. The cabin is currently housed inside Heritage Hall, just outside the Museum in the Tinning Education Building (on the campus of the Kirksville College of Osteopathic Medicine). It is available to visitors.

3. Sketch of A. T. Still as a boy (taken from his autobiography) – When Andrew Taylor Still was only a boy of 10, he made what he later called his first discovery in the science of osteopathy.
I suffered from a headache. I made a swing of my father’s plowline between two trees, but my head hurt too much to make swinging comfortable, so I let the rope down to about eight or ten inches off the ground, threw the end of the blanket on it, and I stretched on my back, with my neck across the rope. Soon I became easy and went to sleep, got up in a little while with headache all gone.” (Still, Autobiography of Andrew T. Still, 1908 p. 32)
At the time, he only knew that his headache stopped, but years later, he remembered the experience when doing research.

4. Andrew Taylor Still examining a femur bone [PH 446] – This well recognized photograph was taken in approximately 1910 and widely distributed as a postcard.

5. First School of Osteopathy [ PIC ASO 6] – The American School of Osteopathy opened in October of 1892. The two room schoolhouse was quickly outgrown, and in 1894 a much larger building was built to accommodate the rapidly growing ASO. Only three classes began their instruction in this structure. The restored school is currently housed indoors at the Tinning Education Building, just outside the Museum. This image is from a postcard in the Museum permanent collection.

6. A. T. Still talking with Dr. William Smith [PH 92] – The first school had a faculty of two: Dr. Still and Dr. William Smith, a Scotsman and graduate of the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons in Edinburgh. Smith, who happened to be in Kirksville, became interested in Dr. Still’s work. The two agreed that Smith would attend the school and in exchange would teach the anatomy portion of the curriculum.

7. A. T. Still with bones [PIC STAT 12] – He was widely known for carrying a bag full of bones of all kinds around with him, to pull out and examine at odd moments of the day. He also used them frequently as hands-on illustrations while teaching students.

8. First Class of Osteopathy [PH 1260] – The first class graduated in 1894. This is one of two known photographs of the first class, whose composition shifted throughout their course of study. This shot was taken near the beginning of the school year, during the fall term of 1892. Eventually there were 18 graduates (3 women and 15 men), although this picture shows 21 students, not including Dr. Still and Dr. Smith. The skeleton in the center, fondly named “Columbus,” was the teaching skeleton of the school. (NOTE: The dog in the center is fake!)

9. The A. T. Still Infirmary and the A.S.O. Building – By the fall of 1895 the brand new, much larger Infirmary was in operation. The annexes were added during 1896 as the school continued to experience phenomenal growth. This photograph is taken from a colorized postcard advertising the school, part of the permanent collection.

10. A. T. Still “and friends” sitting on the front porch of the Still mansion [PH 454] – This photograph is identified in our collection as “Dr. Still and the group who boarded with him. Dr. Still is using one of his favorite quips, ‘My highest ambition is heaven and an automobile.’ ” Several of those shown are actually family members. Still’s daughter, Blanche Still Laughlin. Blanche is sitting right beside her father. Her husband, George M. Laughlin, D.O., is in the middle of the back row.

11. A.T. Still Home [PH 891] – The Still family home broke ground in April of 1989 and was completed in March of 1899. It was considered one of Kirksville’s landmarks at the time. Later is was deeded to the City of Kirksville for a nursing home and torn down in the late 1960’s.

12. Faculty of the American School of Osteopathy 1989 [PH 112 B] —Includes image of the Drs. Littlejohns, Dr. William Smith, Dr. A.T. Still and others.

13. Photo of Cabin and School located in Heritage Hall at the Still National Osteopathic Museum on the campus of A.T. Still University, Kirksville College of Osteopathic Medicine.

14. Dr. William Sutherland [PH 1751] – Graduate of the American School of Osteopathy 1900, Founder of the Sutherland Teaching Foundation."""""""

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18.05.2012 - 08:20 - www.osteokompass.de/de-produkte_services-jolandos-346-13597.html

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