Percy L. Jones
Percy L. Jones | |
---|---|
Born |
Percy Lancelot Jones May 26, 1875 |
Died | August 9, 1941 66) | (aged
Resting place | Arlington National Cemetery |
Occupation | Army Medical Corps officer |
Colonel Percy Lancelot Jones (26 May 1875 - 9 August 1941) was a Army Medical Corps officer who served in the Spanish American War and World War I, where he was instrumental in modernizing battlefield casualty evacuation.[1] Jones was the commander of an ambulance service which served the French Army during World War I.[2] In 1925, he headed a team assisting in the flood relief for Newton, Georgia and organised an anti-typhoid immunisation program. Three years later, following a hurricane in Florida, he was appointed sanitation adviser to West Palm Beach.[3] On 1 August 1942, the Battlecreek Sanitarium, Michigan, was renamed the Percy L. Jones General Hospital for casualties of war.[4]
References
- ↑ Glazer, Lawrence M. (2010). Wounded Warrior: The Rise and Fall of Michigan Governor John Swainson. MSU Press. p. 24.
- ↑ "Percy Lancelot Jones". ArlingtonCemetery.Net (an unofficial website).
- ↑ Textbooks of Military Medicine: Military Preventive Medicine, Mobilization and Deployment, V. l, 2003. Government Printing Office. p. 88. ISBN 978-0-16-087311-9.
- ↑ Hospitals: The Journal of the American Hospital Association, XVI (Ju.-Dec. 1942), 61.
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