Abraham Jacobi (6 May 1830 – 10 July 1919) was a German physician and pioneer of pediatrics. He was a key figure in the movement to improve child healthcare and welfare in the United States[2] and opened the first children's clinic in the country.[3] To date, he is the only foreign-born president of the American Medical Association. He helped found the American Journal of Obstetrics. He is regarded as the Father of American Pediatrics.[4]
^Nachkommen von Abraham Jacobi (in German)
^Cite error: The named reference ActaPaediatrica was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
^"Dr. Abraham Jacobi Dies Suddenly At 89". The New York Times. 12 July 1919. Retrieved 2012-11-17.
^"Jacobi Medical Center". City of New York. Archived from the original on April 18, 2006. Retrieved April 6, 2006.
AbrahamJacobi (6 May 1830 – 10 July 1919) was a German physician and pioneer of pediatrics. He was a key figure in the movement to improve child healthcare...
the Bronx, New York City. It is named in honor of German physician AbrahamJacobi, who is regarded as the father of American pediatrics. Founded in 1955...
introduced in English in 1859 by AbrahamJacobi. In 1860, he became "the first dedicated professor of pediatrics in the world." Jacobi is known as the father of...
current title in 2013. The journal's founding editor-in-chief in 1911 was AbrahamJacobi. The articles in that first volume of the journal were mostly observational...
at the age of seven. Abraham and Mary had only one child who survived to adulthood, their daughter Marjorie Jacobi McAneny. Jacobi educated her daughter...
together to found the German Dispensary. Physicians Ernest Krackowizer and AbrahamJacobi were among the founders. Its purpose, according to the constitution...
prison terms of up to six years. Heinrich Burgers Hermann Wilhelm Haupt AbrahamJacobi Frederick Lessner Peter Nothjung Adolph Bermbach Revolution and Counter-Revolution...
book publisher m. Victorine Haven Mary Corinna Putnam Jacobi (1842–1906), physician m. AbrahamJacobi (1830–1919), physician George Haven Putnam (1844–1930)...
Northwest Bay on Lake George, New York which was built by his good friend AbrahamJacobi. Schurz died at age 77 on May 14, 1906, in New York City, and is buried...
The condition was first described by pioneer American pediatrician AbrahamJacobi in 1906. PVA causes areas of affected skin to appear speckled red and...
Dial 116 1955 Cavalcade of America That They Might Live Story of Dr. AbrahamJacobi (Booth Colman), founder of American pediatrics, and his second wife...
Gorgas, 1909–10 William H. Welch, 1910–11 John Benjamin Murphy, 1911–12 AbrahamJacobi, 1912–13 John A. Witherspoon, 1913–14 Victor C. Vaughan, 1914–15 William...
(1909–1910) William H. Welch (1910–1911) John Benjamin Murphy (1911–1912) AbrahamJacobi (1912–1913) John A. Witherspoon (1913–1914) Victor C. Vaughan (1914–1915)...
Although Carl Gustav Jacobi preceded him (by three decades) as the first Jew to obtain a math professorial chair in Germany, Jacobi's family had converted...
Marjorie Jacobi McAneny. Her father was a newspaperman, politician, and urban planner. Her maternal grandparents, AbrahamJacobi and Mary Putnam Jacobi, were...
(1909–1910) William H. Welch (1910–1911) John Benjamin Murphy (1911–1912) AbrahamJacobi (1912–1913) John A. Witherspoon (1913–1914) Victor C. Vaughan (1914–1915)...
like dogma of any kind. An important early influence was the avuncular AbrahamJacobi, his mother's brother-in-law and a friend of Karl Marx, who was to advise...
was arrested in 1916 for circulating birth control information, and AbrahamJacobi unsuccessfully tried to persuade the New York medical community to push...
(1909–1910) William H. Welch (1910–1911) John Benjamin Murphy (1911–1912) AbrahamJacobi (1912–1913) John A. Witherspoon (1913–1914) Victor C. Vaughan (1914–1915)...
(1909–1910) William H. Welch (1910–1911) John Benjamin Murphy (1911–1912) AbrahamJacobi (1912–1913) John A. Witherspoon (1913–1914) Victor C. Vaughan (1914–1915)...