ARTHUR DEAN BEVAN

1861-1943

A.D. Bevan and F. Billings

Arthur Dean Bevan (left) posing with Frank Billings, 1905
Image courtesy of Rush University Medical Center Archives, Photograph Collection #44000

Surgeon Arthur Dean Bevan was born in Chicago, Ill., 1861. Bevan graduated from Rush Medical School in 1883. He became a professor of anatomy at Rush Medical College, 1887; associate professor of surgery, 1889; and professor of surgery, 1902. He succeeded Nicholas Senn as head of the surgical department at Rush and Presbyterian Hospital in 1907. He held these positions until his retirement from medicine in 1934.  Bevan held many positions in several medical organizations. From 1904 through 1928, he was chairman of the American Medical Association's Council on Medical Education. Through his leadership the council did much to standardize medical education in the country. Bevan wrote a number of professional papers on a wide range of surgical procedures, medical education, anesthesiology, and prohibition. He was the first surgeon to use ethylene-oxygen clinically as an anesthesia, 14 march 1923. Bevan died 10 June 1943.  

Biography provided by Rush University Medical Center Archives

The following repositories have collections related to Arthur Dean Bevan:

Rush University Medical Center Archives

View the Finding Aids

Collection name:  Arthur Dean Bevan Papers (1894-1953)

Repository:  Rush University Medical Center Archives

Creator:  Bevan, Arthur Dean, (1861-1943)

Call Number:  329

Language:  English

Extent
Items:  About 250 items
Linear feet:  5.0

Collection Overview

The Arthur Dean Bevan Papers include biographical information, correspondence, writings, organizational records, and miscellaneous material. Biographical information includes clippings and bibliographies related to Bevan.  Correspondence includes letters to, from, and about Bevan. A few of the letters relate to medical matters. Writings include articles, addresses, and course lectures written by Bevan concerning his medical research, medical education, medical history, and prohibition. Also included are a few articles written by others, including an interview with Bevan. Organizational records include club by-laws and membership lists for country clubs and other organizations of which Bevan was a member.

 

 

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Page last updated on 08/25/2009 by dwidmer@chicagoarchivists.org