Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Brigadier General George Miller Sternberg (June 8, 1838 – November 3, 1915) was a U.S. Army physician who is considered the first American bacteriologist, having written Manual of Bacteriology (1892).

  2. sources to definitively examine the life and career of George Miller Sternberg. He probed and dissected the amazing relationship between Sternberg and one of the most iconic figures in Army Medicine and international health: Major Walter Reed. Serving as The Army Surgeon General during the Spanish-American War,

  3. Jun 8, 2022 · 6882. Source citation. United States Army Brigadier General, Medical Pioneer. He was born at Hartwick Seminary, Otsego County, New York, the eldest of ten children of a Lutheran clergyman, Levi Sternberg. Levi would later became principal of Hartwick Seminary. He was educated at the seminary where his maternal grandfather, George B. Miller,...

  4. George Sternberg was appointed an Assistant Surgeon in the United States Army on May 28, 1861 and served with the Army of the Potomac. He was with General Sykes Division the first Battle of Bull Run, and was captured by the Confederates on July 21, 1861, when he stayed behind to treat the wounded (Sternberg, M.L. 1920).

    • George Miller Sternberg1
    • George Miller Sternberg2
    • George Miller Sternberg3
    • George Miller Sternberg4
    • George Miller Sternberg5
  5. Aug 2, 2006 · Learn about the life and achievements of George Miller Sternberg, a surgeon who served in the American West during the 19th century. He treated wounded soldiers, fought diseases, and studied the natural and cultural history of the region.

  6. George Miller Sternberg (stûrn´bərg), 1838–1915, American bacteriologist and surgeon-general of the U.S. army, b. Hartwick, N.Y., M.D. Columbia, 1860. He was assistant surgeon in the U.S. army during the Civil War, was breveted for bravery in the Civil War and the Nez Percé conflict, and became surgeon-general in 1893.

  7. People also ask

  8. Sternberg escaped and made his way back to Washington, where he was to become Surgeon-General of the United States Army and a very distinguished bacteriologist, teacher, and scientist. First Page Preview View Large

  1. People also search for