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  1. May 13, 2024 · During World War I, Fleming had a commission in the Royal Army Medical Corps and worked as a bacteriologist studying wound infections in a laboratory that Wright had set up in a military hospital housed in a casino in Boulogne, France.

  2. Fleming serves as Captain of the Army Medical Corps during World War I, spending most of his time in battlefield hospitals. 1918: Fleming returns to St. Mary's. After the war, Fleming returns to St. Mary's and continues his research; focusing primarily on anti-bacterial agents after witnessing so many deaths from infection during the war. 1921 ...

    Date
    Event
    August 6, 1881
    Fleming is born. Alexander Fleming is ...
    1900
    Served in the military (1900-1914).
    1903
    Fleming enrolls in medical school. After ...
    1906
    Fleming graduates with distinction. After ...
  3. Apr 2, 2014 · During World War I, Fleming served in the Royal Army Medical Corps. He worked as a bacteriologist, studying wound infections in a makeshift lab that had been set up by Wright in Boulogne,...

  4. During World War I, Fleming with Leonard Colebrook and Sir Almroth Wright joined the war efforts and practically moved the entire Inoculation Department of St Mary's to the British military hospital at Boulogne-sur-Mer.

  5. During World War I, Fleming worked at a special wound-research laboratory in Boulogne, France, headed by Wright. There he began research that produced results more in keeping with Wright’s thinking.

  6. In 1928, at St. Mary's Hospital, London, Alexander Fleming discovered penicillin. This discovery led to the introduction of antibiotics that greatly reduced the number of deaths from infection.

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  8. Sep 27, 2013 · As Dr. Fleming famously wrote about that red-letter date: “When I woke up just after dawn on September 28, 1928, I certainly didn’t plan to revolutionize all medicine by discovering the world’s...