Copy Letter Book of Albert Grünbaum, Professor of Pathology and Bacteriology
Details
Type of record: Archive
Title: Copy Letter Book of Albert Grünbaum, Professor of Pathology and Bacteriology
Classmark: LUA MED/8/4
Original reference: Box 21 item 1 [Handlist 3a item 10
Creator(s): Leyton, Albert Sidney Frankau (1869-1921)
Date(s): 21 Oct 1910-21 Jan 1914
Size and medium: 1 volume
Persistent link: https://explore.library.leeds.ac.uk/special-collections-explore/628779
Collection group(s): University Archive | Medical Collections
Description
Copies of outgoing correspondence of Albert Sidney Grünbaum, whilst Professor of Pathology and Bacteriology.
Alphabetical index by correspondents name at the front of the volume. 1000 pages in total, pp. 298-998 are unused. The letters are mostly typescript. Labels on the front cover and spine.
Biography or history
Albert Sidney Frankau Leyton (1869-1921) was born with the surname Grünbaum in London. He changed his name to Leyton in 1915. He undertook his medical training at St Thomas's Hospital, London, then worked at a number of institutions before joining the University of Leeds as Professor of Pathology in 1904. He was Dean of the School of Medicine between 1907 and 1913.
Source:
Royal College of Physicians, Lives of the Fellows, Munk's Roll Volume IV: http://munksroll.rcplondon.ac.uk/Biography/Details/2744 [accessed 1 Jun 2017]
Access and usage
Reproduction
Access
This material is not subject to restrictions under Data Protection or other relevant legislation that might limit access. However, other protections, such as donor conditions or conservation considerations, may still apply where advised.
Material may be unavailable on conservation grounds. Access is at the discretion of the Conservation Officer.
Material in this collection may remain in copyright but further details are unknown. Photocopies or digital images can only be supplied by the Library for research or private study. It is the responsibility of the researcher to obtain the copyright holder's permission to reproduce for any other purpose. Guidance is available for tracing copyright status and ownership.
Physical and technical conditions
Spine cover has become detached, red rot on covers.