The Thomas A. Scott Fellowship in Hygiene was a competitive academic grant made at the University of Pennsylvania for the study of scientific hygiene and sanitary science, the precursors of the modern science of pathology. It was established in 1892[1] in the name of late railroad executive and financier Thomas Alexander Scott by his widow.[2]

Recipients

  • Mazÿck Porcher Ravenel, 1893[3]
  • Fellowship vacant 1899[4]
  • John Jeremiah Wenner, 1915[5]

See also

References

  1. Nitzsche, George Erasmus (1918), University of Pennsylvania: Its History, Traditions, Buildings and Memorials; Also a Brief Guide to Philadelphia (7th ed.), Philadelphia: International Printing Company, p. 238, OCLC 65488397
  2. Pennsylvania, University of (1899), Catalogue of the University of Pennsylvania 1899-1900, Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania, p. 299, OCLC 183432992
  3. Pennsylvania, University of (1893), Catalogue of the University of Pennsylvania 1893-1894, Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania, p. 335, OCLC 183432992
  4. Pennsylvania, University of (1899), Catalogue of the University of Pennsylvania 1899-1900, Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania, p. 296, OCLC 183432992
  5. Catalogue of the University of Pennsylvania 1915-1916, Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania, 1915, p. 495, OCLC 183432992



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