Collections
Name: Lily May Caldwell Papers
Dates: 1910-1983
Extent: 2.5 cubic feet
Historical Note: Lily May Caldwell was born in Houston, Texas, in 1898 and grew up in Hattiesburg, Mississippi, where as a child she wanted to work for a newspaper. She began work for the Birmingham News-Age Herald in 1921. Her duties included the classified advertising section and the Miss Alabama Pageant, then sponsored by the newspaper. Working within the state, Caldwell raised a tremendous amount of scholarship money for the Miss Alabama Pageant. Caldwell's efforts produced a number of successful Miss Alabama contestants including Yolande Betzbe who became Alabama's first Miss America in 1951. In the 1950s and 1960s, Caldwell was promoted to the newspaper's arts and entertainment section within a few years. When performers visited Birmingham, Caldwell interviewed the individual and wrote stories for the newspaper. She gained a wide acquaintance with individuals in the performing arts and especially maintained contact with Alabamians who had achieved stardom. Through the years, Caldwell's dedication led to numerous promotions and at the time of her retirement in 1966, she was editor of the entertainment section of the Birmingham News. Caldwell traveled considerably in her role as entertainment and amusements editor. She went to Europe to cover the filming of motion pictures, to New York to review plays and concerts, and to Hollywood to interview performers and visit old friends.
Working for the newspaper also allowed Caldwell to pursue her interest in politics, she became especially interested in the career of President Franklin D. Roosevelt and maintained a correspondence with Roosevelt's secretaries. Caldwell never married and spent her retirement years maintaining contact with the many people with whom she had developed friendships through her newspaper work. Lily May Caldwell died in Birmingham on June 15, 1980, she was 82 years old.
Scope & Contents: Includes correspondence, news clippings, tickets and passes, and phonograph albums.
Arrangement: Organized into three series: 1. Correspondence; 2. Certificates, Clippings, Etc.; and 3. Phonograph Records.
Accession Number: M94-05
Provenance: These materials were donated to the UAB Archives by a bequest of the James F. Hatcher Estate, and executrix Norma Warren transferred the materials to the archives in January 1994. After Caldwell’s death in 1980, her nephew had given the material to Hatcher for display in his entertainment museum in UAB's Town and Gown Theater. While processing the Hatcher donation, Archivist William Harris chose to separate the Caldwell papers into their own discrete collection.
Copyright: Many items within this collection may be governed by applicable copyright laws. Please consult the University Archivist for copyright information.
Finding aid: Printed descriptive guide by William A. Harris – revised by Tim L. Pennycuff – available in repository.
Access Points:
Entertainers.
Birmingham News Company.
Caldwell, Lily May, d 1898-1980.
Jordan, Irene, d b. 1919.
MacDonald, Jeanette, d 1907-1965.
Miss America Pageant.
Motion picture actors and actresses.
Newspaper employees z Alabama z Birmingham.
Presidents z United States x Staff.
Reporters and reporting z Alabama z Birmingham.
Television actors and actresses.
Theatre critics z Alabama z Birmingham.
Document Types:
Certificates.
Clippings.
Correspondence.
Phonograph records.
Telegrams.
Tickets.
Location: Manuscript Stacks
Related Series: PMC15, Lily May Caldwell Photograph Collection
University Record Group 45: Town and Gown Theatre
Physical Condition: Acid free folders and acid free boxes
This page created 1995 and last updated on 17 October 2018.
Copyright: The University of Alabama Board of Trustees.
Name Robert Sterling Teague Papers
Dates 1892-1979
Extent .75 cubic foot
Historical Note Robert Sterling Teague was born in Alabama in 1913. He earned degrees from the University of Alabama, Northwestern University, and the University of Chicago. From 1939 until 1943 Dr. Teague, a pharmacologist, held a position at Tulane University in New Orleans. In 1943 he became an assistant professor of physiology and pharmacology at the medical school in Tuscaloosa. He moved to Birmingham with the school in 1945 and headed the pharmacology section until 1948 when he was named first chair of the Department of Pharmacology. He remained as chair until his retirement from UAB in 1978. Dr. Teague died in Birmingham on September 23, 1980.
Oscar Teague, uncle of Dr. Robert Sterling Teague, was born on January 8, 1878, and obtained degrees from the University of Alabama, Vanderbilt University, and the University of Berlin. In 1911 Dr. Oscar Teague traveled to Manchuria, China, to investigate an epidemic of pneumonic plague. As a result of his work, he later received the Red Cross Medal from U.S. President William Howard Taft. During World War I, Dr. Teague, then a major in the armed forces, directed laboratories in the Panama Canal Zone. After the war, Dr. Oscar Teague obtained a position with the College of Physicians and Surgeons in New York City. Oscar Teague died September 22, 1923, his death the result of an automobile accident in New Jersey.
Scope & Contents Includes correspondence, festschrift for Dr. R. S. Teague, certificates, reprints of research articles, master's thesis, dissertation, and notes.
Arrangement Organized into two series: 1. Robert S. Teague Materials and 2. Oscar Teague Materials.
Accession Number M93-08
Provenance Materials donated to the UAB Archives in 1993 by the widow of Dr. Robert S. Teague.
Finding aid Printed descriptive guide by William A. Harris in repository; revised by Tim L. Pennycuff.
Access Points China x Description and travel x 1901-1948.
Manchuria (China).
Plague z China.
Teague, Oscar, d 1878-1923.
Teague, Robert Sterling, d 1913-1980.
University of Alabama. b Medical College of Alabama.
Document Types Certificates.
Correspondence.
Dissertation.
Masters thesis.
Notes.
Location Manuscript Stacks
Related Series PMC12, Robert Sterling Teague Photograph Collection
MC51, (see also for folders on Oscar and Robert Sterling Teague)
Physical Condition Acid free folders and acid free boxes
This page created 1999 and last updated on 27 November 2007.
Copyright: The University of Alabama Board of Trustees.
Name: Memoirs of Dr. William Groce Harrison, Sr.
Dates: circa 1950
Extent: .25 cubic foot
Historical Note:
The son of Dr. John Tinsley and Sarah Simmons (Groce) Harrison, William Groce Harrison was born on 29 April 1871 in Talladega County, Alabama. Harrison received his undergraduate education at Alabama Polytechnic Institute (now Auburn University), and earned a medical degree from a one-year course at the University of Maryland. Harrison then matriculated in the first class of the new Johns Hopkins Medical School in 1893. There, he worked with Dr. William Osler. In 1895, Dr. Harrison returned to Alabama and established his practice in Talladega County. While attending a class reunion in Auburn, he met Louisa Marcia Bondurant whose father was a professor of agriculture at API and a Virginia plantation owner. Louisa Bondurant and Harrison were married in Auburn on 16 August 1896. They had five children including Dr. Tinsley Randolph Harrison. In 1905-1906, Dr. Harrison studied medicine in Vienna and returned to establish a practice in Birmingham where he remained the rest of his life. A man of many interests, Dr. Harrison taught a weekly class in medical history at the original Vanderbilt Medical School. Dr. Harrison continued to practice medicine for a number of years in Birmingham and died there on July 28, 1955.
Scope & Contents: One spiral bound notebook containing a typed transcript.
Accession Number: M1993-03
Provenance:
This memoir was given to the UAB Archives in 1993 by Dr. James A. Pittman, Jr., dean of the School of Medicine. A grandson of Dr. Groce Harrison had given the memoir to Dean Pittman. In 2000 the grandson executed a signed deed of gift after discussions with and approval by several other grandchildren of Dr. Harrison.
Copyright: UAB owns the copyright and proprietary rights to this memoir.
Finding aid: Printed descriptive guide by William A. Harris and Tim L. Pennycuff available in repository.
Access Points:
Harrison family.
Harrison, Tinsley Randolph, d 1900-1978.
Harrison, William Groce, d 1871-1955.
Medicine z Alabama x History.
Physicians z Alabama z Birmingham x Personal narratives.
Osler, William, Sir, d 1849-1919.
Document Types: Notebooks.
Location: Manuscript Stacks
Related Series: MC03, Tinsley Randolph Harrison Papers; MC07, Tinsley Randolph Harrison Collection
Physical Condition: Acid free folder and acid free box
Biographical Note
William Groce Harrison was born on 29 April 1871 in Talladega County, Alabama, the son of Dr. John Tinsley, Jr., and Sarah Simmons (Groce) Harrison. Groce's father was born in Madison County, Alabama, in 1834, the younger of two sons of Dr. John T., Sr., and Melinda (Stone) Harrison. J. T., Jr., earned his degree from the medical school at the University of Nashville, practiced medicine in Alabama, and died in Talladega in 1915. Groce's mother, Sarah, was the daughter of Jared E. and Sarah (Simons) Groce, and was born in Talladega in 1846. She died in 1919.
The young Groce Harrison received his undergraduate education at Alabama Polytechnic Institute (now Auburn University), receiving a B.S. degree in 1890. He earned a medical degree in 1892 from his father's alma matter, the medical school of the University of Nashville, one of the predecessors of the current medical school at Vanderbilt University. Feeling that he needed additional education, he enrolled in the Medical College of Baltimore, where he earned a second medical degree in 1893. In Baltimore, he met Sir William Osler who later persuaded the young Dr. Harrison to enroll in the new medical school at Johns Hopkins University. It would have been Harrison's third medical degree. Harrison was accepted as a member of the first medical class but a trip home to Alabama changed his plans. While attending a class reunion in Auburn, he met Louisa Marcia Bondurant, whose father was a professor of agriculture at the University, and he decided to forgo Johns Hopkins in order to earn a living. Although he never attended medical school at Hopkins, Dr. Harrison returned each summer until 1905 to work with his friend Dr. Osler, who he often said "influenced his life more than any other single man."
Dr. Groce Harrison and Louisa Bondurant were married on 16 August 1896 in Auburn, Alabama. They soon purchased a home in the city of Talladega, where Harrison had recently established his practice in general medicine. The large house offered a home to the family and provided enough space for Dr. Harrison's office, clinic, and operating room. Harrison would practice in Talladega for ten years, and with his father would eventually open the city's first hospital. After a series of illnesses, brought on in part by repeated exposure to the elements while making medical rounds in his buggy, Harrison decided to retire from general practice and to enter the field of ear, eye, nose, and throat specialty.
He studied in Vienna from 1905 until 1906 and returned to Alabama to establish a practice in Birmingham. A man of many interests, from 1931 until 1941 Dr. Groce Harrison taught a weekly class in medical history at the original Vanderbilt medical school, making the weekly trip at his own expense. Dr. Harrison practiced medicine for a number of years in Birmingham and eventually served as the president of the Jefferson County Medical Society. He also served as president of the Medical Association of the State of Alabama from 1930 until 1931.
In 1910 Dr. and Mrs. Groce Harrison moved their family into a newly constructed home at 4142 Cliff Road. The house served as the home to the Harrisons for the remainder of their lives and, at their deaths, would be inherited by their eldest son, Dr. Tinsley R. Harrison. Groce and Louisa Harrison would eventually have a family consisting of six children: Emily Bondurant Harrison (Mrs. John Calvin Wilson), 1897-1938; Dr. Tinsley Randolph Harrison, 1900-1978; William Groce Harrison, Jr., 1902-1988; Louisa Dabney Harrison (Mrs. Walter Davis), 1907-1965; Alexander Bondurant Harrison, 1909-1926; and Sarah Elizabeth Harrison (Mrs. Arthur Merrill), 1912-1983.
Dr. W. Groce Harrison died in Birmingham on July 28, 1955. His wife had died on March 5, 1951.
Bibliographic Sources
Pittman, James A., Jr., "Tinsley R. Harrison, M.D.: Teacher and Paragon of Internal Medicine," MASA Review. 1997 Spring/Summer, p. 14-55.
Material in this collection (MC08).
Various other material found in the collections of the UAB Archives (MC003, MC007, MC51, 7.2.1, etc.)
Scope and Content Note
A spiral bound, typed transcript entitled "Memoirs of Dr. William Groce Harrison, Sr." The volume is undated, but was probably written later in Dr. Harrison's life. The "Memoirs" consist of sixty-five chapters in which Dr. Harrison outlines his youth, medical education, and experiences as a physician. In the "Memoirs," Dr. Harrison describes his parents and siblings. He also offers vivid descriptions of rural Alabama during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. The "Memoirs" provide a valuable source of information about the Harrison family and about Dr. W. Groce Harrison's life.
One of Dr. Harrison's grandsons gave this item to Dr. James A. Pittman, Jr., dean of the School of Medicine. Dr. Pittman later presented it to the UAB Archives in 1993. The grandson executed a deed of gift for the item in June 2000 after consultation with other descendants of Dr. Groce Harrison. UAB owns the copyright and proprietary rights to this memoir.
This page created 1999 and last updated on 18 September 2018.
Copyright: The University of Alabama Board of Trustees.
Name Spies Nutrition Clinic Collection
Dates 1937-1967
Extent 1.5 cubic feet
Historical Note The Spies Nutrition Clinic was operated out of Birmingham’s Hillman Hospital by Dr. Tom D. Spies from 1936 until 1960. Dr. Spies -- [pronounced Spees, rhymes with keys] -- was a native Texan and was at the time a noted researcher from the University of Cincinnati. He was first invited to Birmingham in 1935 by Dr. James S. McLester, physician-in-chief of the Hillman Hospital and the then-president of the American Medical Association. Dr. Spies’ treatment of pellagra sufferers was successful in Birmingham and he was persuaded to establish a clinic in the Hillman Hospital, the city's charity hospital facility that was operated by the Jefferson County Commission. In 1945 Spies and six social workers, including Martha Hutchinson, began a project to determine the effects of daily supplements of milk on the growth and development of malnourished children. This study, which was successfully completed in 1950, was done in cooperation with the American Dry Milk Institute. In 1947 Dr. Spies was appointed to the faculty of the medical school at Northwestern University; he would retain this appointment until his death. After the four-year Medical College of Alabama was installed in the Jefferson and Hillman hospitals in 1945, Dr. Spies retained his faculty appointment at Northwestern but was appointed as a visiting professor at the medical college. Despite being located within the facilities of the new medical school, Spies was never a member of the full-time faculty in Birmingham. Research continued in the clinic until the death of Dr. Spies in 1960 in New York. He left no provisions for the continuation of his clinic and the university was in desperate need of additional space, so the clinic was closed soon after his death.
Scope & Contents Includes correspondence, research case histories, news clippings, administrative and financial materials of the clinic, and reprints of research papers.
Arrangement Organized into three discrete series: 1. Correspondence of Martha Hutchinson and Dr. William Niedermeier, 1945-1967; 2. Clinic Administrative Files, 1940-1950; 3. Printed Matter, 1937-1960.
Accession Number M92-05
Provenance These materials were donated in the late 1980s by Dr. William Niedermeier and Martha Hutchinson to the Jefferson County Medical Society/UAB Health Sciences Archives. In 1992 the materials were transferred from the disbanded health sciences archives to the new UAB Archives at the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB).
Copyright Researchers should note that the University does not own copyrights to all the materials contained within this collection.
Finding aid Descriptive guide by William A. Harris available in repository.
Access Points
American Dry Milk Institute.
Dairy products in human nutrition.
Hillman Hospital (Birmingham, Ala.).
Hutchinson, Martha.
Jefferson-Hillman Hospital (Birmingham, Ala.).
Malnutrition.
Niedermeier, William, d b. 1923.
Nutrition x Research x Alabama.
Spies Nutrition Clinic (Birmingham, Ala.).
Spies, Tom Douglas, d 1902-1960.
University of Alabama. b Medical College of Alabama.
Vitamins in human nutrition.
Document Types
Clippings.
Correspondence.
Manuscripts.
Notes.
Reports.
Location Manuscript Stacks
Related Series PMC5, Spies Nutrition Clinic Photograph Collection
MC115, William P. Niedermeier Papers
Physical Condition Acid free folders and acid free boxes
This page created 1999 and last updated 2021
Copyright: The University of Alabama Board of Trustees.