James Bennett McCord (April 5, 1870 – October 5, 1950) was an American medical missionary and physician who founded the McCord Zulu Hospital and spent over three decades treating mostly African, Native, and mixed race patients in Durban, South Africa. He pioneered the training program for the first African nurses, worked towards the establishment of a medical school dedicated to training black doctors, and shared his life story in his autobiography titled My Patients Were Zulus.
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| - James Bennett McCord (en)
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| - James Bennett McCord (April 5, 1870 – October 5, 1950) was an American medical missionary and physician who founded the McCord Zulu Hospital and spent over three decades treating mostly African, Native, and mixed race patients in Durban, South Africa. He pioneered the training program for the first African nurses, worked towards the establishment of a medical school dedicated to training black doctors, and shared his life story in his autobiography titled My Patients Were Zulus. (en)
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| - James Bennett McCord (en)
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name
| - James Bennett McCord (en)
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death place
| - Oakham, Massachusetts, United States (en)
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| - Toulon, Illinois, United States (en)
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| - James B. and Margaret McCord, circa 1935 (en)
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| - Oberlin College
Northwestern University
Royal College of Surgeons (en)
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| - Physician, Medical Missionary, Founder and First Superintendent of McCord Zulu Hospital (en)
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| - James Bennett McCord (April 5, 1870 – October 5, 1950) was an American medical missionary and physician who founded the McCord Zulu Hospital and spent over three decades treating mostly African, Native, and mixed race patients in Durban, South Africa. He pioneered the training program for the first African nurses, worked towards the establishment of a medical school dedicated to training black doctors, and shared his life story in his autobiography titled My Patients Were Zulus. (en)
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