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Sir Henry Soloman Wellcome 1853-1936 WI336 |
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 Sir Henry Soloman Well come, key figure in the development of pharmaceutics and the promotion of medical research, was born to Yankee settlers on a hardscrabble farm in the vicinity of Almond, Wisconsin, where he spent the first eight years of his life. Wellcome moved to Minnesota with his family in 1861 and was later educated in pharmacy schools in Chicago and Philadelphia. In 1880 he went to London, England, where he and Silas Mainville Burroughs formed a business partnership creating Burroughs Wellcome and Company to manufacture and market a new, compressed form of American medicine: pills. Sir Henry later established the Well come Chemical and Physiological laboratories, among the first medical research institutes in the pharmaceutical industry. Eventually, Wellcome researchers helped discover new treatments for diseases such as diphtheria, yellow fever, malaria, leprosy, and sleeping sickness. Wellcome's collection of rare medical manuscripts form the basis for the Well come Institute for the History of Medicine in London. A naturalized British citizen, Sir Henry was knighted in 1932. The Well come Trust, established in England after Sir Henry's death in 1936, is recognized as one of the world's great benefactors of medical research and the Burroughs Wellcome Fund in the United States has supported medical research since 1955. Erected 1996. Hwy. J, 2 mi. S of Almond. Waushara County Wisconsin
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