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    Dr. John Lambert Sommer, 93.

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    Dr. John Lambert Sommer, a Palo Alto resident, has died. He was 93. Sommer, who died on Sept. 1, was born to Nora Sommer Lambert and O.J. Sommer on Jan. 23, 1927, near Pekin, Ill

    John Lambert Sommer, January 23, 1927 - September 1, 2020

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    John Lambert Sommer, M.D. (93) died on September 1, 2020, from the effects of a stroke, at his home in Palo Alto

    Engraved portrait of John Lambert [Lambart] (bap. 1619, d. 1684)

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    Engraved portrait of John Lambert [Lambart] (bap. 1619, d. 1684). Line and stipple engraving by unknown artist after a painting by Robert Walker

    Mr. and Mrs. John Lambert and son John Lambert Jr.

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    It\u27s a date - Mr. and Mrs. John Lambert accept with pleasure the invitation of their son, John Lambert Jr., to visit his school, W. C. Stripling Junior High, during Public School Week. Mrs. Lambert, president of the Fort Worth Council of Parents and Teachers, is one of the members of a committee planning the get-acquainted week, March 2 to 8.https://mavmatrix.uta.edu/specialcollections_startelegram1950s/17915/thumbnail.jp

    John Lambert Cabin

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    The John Lambert Cabin is located in the Diamond Gulch area on Diamond Mountai

    John Lambert Richmond monument

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    Reverse reads "Monument to Dr. John Lambert Richmond on Church St., Newtown, Ohio" Plaque reads "In Memory of John Lambert Richmond M.D. who performed the first Caesarian Section in America at Newtown, Ohio April 22, 1827. Erected by the McDowell Medical Society. Cinci., O., 1912" John Lambert Richmond was both a clergyman and physician. He was born on a farm near Chesterfield, Massachusetts on April 5, 1785, the son of Nathaniel and Susannah Lambert Richmond. Shortly after his birth, his family moved to Herkimer, NY where he worked as a laborer on farms and forests. In 1806, he married Lorana Sprague Patchin of Milton, NY. Ten years later he was ordained as Baptist minister. The Richmonds moved to Cincinnati, Ohio in 1817, where John worked again as a laborer during the week, and as a minister on Sundays. One position was a janitor at the Medical College of Ohio, where he persuaded Dr Daniel Drake to accept him as a medical student. He received his medical diploma in 1822 and served as a physician and minister in Newtown, Ohio. On April 22, 1827, Dr Richmond performed the first recorded successful Ceasarian Section in the United States. This was done in a backwoods cabin near Newtown, Ohio. Richmond was among the physicians treating the cholera epidemic in Cincinnati in 1831. He was stricken with the disease and never fully recovered. He died in Covington, Indiana on October 12, 1855 in the home of his children

    John Lambert and descendants manuscript, MSS.0150

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    Abstract: Manuscript of Bethea's and Austin's book about this Revolutionary War soldier and his family. The book was published in 1978.Scope and Content Note: The collection contains the manuscript of Bethea's and Austin's book "John Lambert and Descendants" about this Revolutionary War soldier and his family. The book was subsequently published in 1978.Biographical/Historical Note: John Lambert was a soldier in the Revolutionary War

    Mrs. John Lambert

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    Mrs. John Lambert was elected president of the Fort Worth City Council of Parents and Teachers at the Public Library. Mrs. Lambert succeeds Mrs. J. A. Kastle. Published in Fort Worth Star-Telegram Morning edition March 2nd, 1950.https://mavmatrix.uta.edu/specialcollections_startelegram1950s/2399/thumbnail.jp

    CD reviews: music by Colin Matthews and John Lambert

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    Reviewed recordings: Colin Matthews: Fourth Sonata; Suns Dance; Broken Symmetry, London Sinfonietta/Oliver Knussen DG 447 067-2; John Lambert: 'Tread Softly...'; Slide; Meditations; Toccata; Extracts from Family Affairs; Second String Quartet, various performers, NMC D026

    John Lambert Richmond home

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    Reverse reads "Historic home of Doctor John Lambert Richmond, 31 Main Street, Newtown, Ohio. The rear section was slightly damaged by the big flood of January, 1937. Photo by Federal Writers' Photographer, February 2, 1937" The address number 31 can be seen in the photograph, to the left of the door. The home of Dr. John L. Richmond, located at 29 Main Street in Newtown, Ohio. The home is described as being a plain two story gray frame house. Dr. Richmond performed the first professional cesarean section in the United States, in the house in 1827. The home at 31 Main Street was that of Judson Harmon, 45th Governor of Ohio and United States Attorney General under President Cleveland
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