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  1. Howard Taylor Ricketts (February 9, 1871 – May 3, 1910) was an American pathologist after whom the family Rickettsiaceae and the order Rickettsiales are named. He was born in Findlay, Ohio. In the early part of his career, Ricketts undertook research at Northwestern University on blastomycosis.

  2. Howard Taylor Ricketts (1871-1910) was a native Midwesterner and a Northwestern University medical graduate. Fascinated by the study of disease but unwilling to restrict himself to traditional research methods, Ricketts sometimes injected himself with pathogens as a way of measuring their effects.

  3. In the early twentieth century, the pathologist Howard Taylor Ricketts gained fame by isolating the wood tick as the carrier of the pathogen that causes Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever.

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  4. Howard T. Ricketts. (9 Feb 1871 - 3 May 1910) American pathologist who discovered the role of ticks in the transmission of Rocky Mountain spotted fever. He died at age 39 from contracting typhus, the disease he was then investigating. Short biography of Howard T. Ricketts >>.

  5. Apr 30, 2024 · Howard Ricketts was an American pathologist who discovered the causative organisms and mode of transmission of Rocky Mountain spotted fever and epidemic typhus.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
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  7. Howard Taylor Ricketts was an American pathologist after whom the family Rickettsiaceae and the order Rickettsiales are named.

  8. Jan 1, 2011 · The US American pathologist and microbiologist Howard Taylor Ricketts died 100 years ago. He is renowned for discovering the causative organism and the transmission route of Rocky Mountain spotted fever and of tabardillo – an epidemic louse-borne typhus occurring especially in Mexico.

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