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In-person class cancellation and work-from-home / Annulation des cours en présentiel et télétravail

Updated: Tue, 03/10/2026 - 17:14
In-person class cancellation and work-from-home / Annulation des cours en prĂ©sentiel et tĂ©lĂ©travail. McGILL ALERT! Due to freezing rain all in-person classes and activities on Wednesday, March 11, will be cancelled. Staff are asked not to come to campus tomorrow unless they are required on site by their supervisor to perform necessary functions and activities. See your ɬŔď·¬ email for more information.
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ALERTE McGILL! En raison de la pluie verglaçante, tous les cours et activitĂ©s en prĂ©sentiel prĂ©vus pour le mercredi 11 mars sont annulĂ©s. Nous demandons au personnel de ne pas se prĂ©senter sur le campus demain, Ă  moins que leur superviseur ne leur demande d’être sur place pour accomplir des fonctions ou activitĂ©s nĂ©cessaires au fonctionnement du campus. Pour plus d’informations, veuillez consulter vos courriels de ɬŔď·¬.

War, Bones and Books

The carnage of the American Civil War...
Fire at the ɬŔď·¬ Faculty of Medicine...
Unconventional verse of the mid-19th century...
A worldwide association of pathologists...
A celebrated library...

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This seemingly disparate group of events and institutions and the individuals associated with them—including William Hammond, Maude Abbott, Walt Whitman, James Carroll and William Osler—are in fact linked in a complex series of associations that extend from the 1860s to the beginning of the 20th century to the present time.

The exhibit War, Bones and Books was first displayed in 2005 at the ɬŔď·¬ Osler Library of the History of Medicine. It focuses on a small collection of skeletal specimens derived from soldiers of the American Civil War. The specimens were donated to the ɬŔď·¬ Medical Museum by the United States Army Medical Museum in 1907. In addition to the specimens, the exhibit includes a number of poems related to the wartime experience of Walt Whitman—who was a patient of William Osler—as well as illustrations of the battlefield injuries and detailed medical histories taken from the monumental six-volume The Medical and Surgical History of the War of the Rebellion.

The fragments of bones—many shattered or disfigured by attempts at healing—are mirrored by the harrowing stories of the soldiers from whom they came and are a lasting tribute to the horror of war.

ɬŔď·¬ Museum and IAMM

Meetings held in Washington, D. C. and Baltimore in 1906.

Army Medical Museum

The Army Medical Museum was established in Washington, D. C. in 1862.

Specimens

Skeletal remains of soldiers from the American Civil War.

Civil War Medicine

Battlefield injuries were common during the American Civil War.

William Osler and Walt Whitman

Osler first met Whitman in 1885.

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