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- Q6284343 subject Q5837492.
- Q6284343 subject Q6645975.
- Q6284343 subject Q8243233.
- Q6284343 subject Q8246712.
- Q6284343 subject Q8757610.
- Q6284343 subject Q8870051.
- Q6284343 abstract "Lieutenant Colonel Joseph Janvier Woodward (1833–1884), commonly known as J. J. Woodward, served in the U.S. Civil War as Army Assistant Surgeon and produced several publications on war-related diseases. He was also a microscopist known worldwide and an instrumental pioneer in photo-microscopy. A collection of his photo-micrographs are preserved at the Royal Microscopical Society in the UK. Woodward performed and wrote reports on the autopsies of both Abraham Lincoln and John Wilkes Booth. He also attended to president Garfield after he was shot. A collection of bulletins on Garfield's condition issued by the attending physicians is held at the National Library of Medicine in Bethesda, Maryland.According to a website run by the National High Magnetic Field Laboratory: "Woodward was the first scientist to establish photomicrography as a tool for both scientific and medical investigations." According to an article in the Archives of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine: "In addition to collecting specimens for the museum's archive, he co-authored the definitive medical history of the Civil War in the 6-volume 1870 publication of the MSHWR.4 Woodward's technique using aniline dyes for staining thin sections of tissue, along with his pioneering work in photomicroscopy, helped prepare the groundwork for modern surgical pathology."He was also a curator of certain sections of the Army Medical Museum.".
- Q6284343 wikiPageExternalLink woodward-joseph-j.pdf.
- Q6284343 wikiPageExternalLink ?request=get-document&doi=10.1043%2F1543-2165(2005)129%5B1313:SPITEO%5D2.0.CO%3B2.
- Q6284343 wikiPageExternalLink tm.pl?idx&8_Woodward~JosephJanvier.
- Q6284343 wikiPageExternalLink woodward.html.
- Q6284343 wikiPageExternalLink Lincoln60.html.
- Q6284343 wikiPageExternalLink Lincoln83.html.
- Q6284343 wikiPageExternalLink siris_arc_259450.
- Q6284343 wikiPageExternalLink query.fcgi?db=PubMed&term=Woodward+JJ.
- Q6284343 wikiPageWikiLink Q180914.
- Q6284343 wikiPageWikiLink Q2154134.
- Q6284343 wikiPageWikiLink Q493898.
- Q6284343 wikiPageWikiLink Q5837492.
- Q6284343 wikiPageWikiLink Q6645975.
- Q6284343 wikiPageWikiLink Q6806465.
- Q6284343 wikiPageWikiLink Q6973069.
- Q6284343 wikiPageWikiLink Q72533.
- Q6284343 wikiPageWikiLink Q7374479.
- Q6284343 wikiPageWikiLink Q8243233.
- Q6284343 wikiPageWikiLink Q8246712.
- Q6284343 wikiPageWikiLink Q8676.
- Q6284343 wikiPageWikiLink Q8757610.
- Q6284343 wikiPageWikiLink Q8870051.
- Q6284343 wikiPageWikiLink Q902624.
- Q6284343 wikiPageWikiLink Q91.
- Q6284343 type Thing.
- Q6284343 comment "Lieutenant Colonel Joseph Janvier Woodward (1833–1884), commonly known as J. J. Woodward, served in the U.S. Civil War as Army Assistant Surgeon and produced several publications on war-related diseases. He was also a microscopist known worldwide and an instrumental pioneer in photo-microscopy. A collection of his photo-micrographs are preserved at the Royal Microscopical Society in the UK. Woodward performed and wrote reports on the autopsies of both Abraham Lincoln and John Wilkes Booth.".
- Q6284343 label "Joseph Janvier Woodward".