Charles William Mayo (July 28, 1898 – July 28, 1968) was an American surgeon and a member of the board of governors of the Mayo Clinic beginning in 1933. He was the son of Mayo Clinic co-founder Charles Horace Mayo and Edith (Graham) Mayo.
Activated in January 1943, the 71st Army General Hospital personnel were commanded by Drs Charles W. Mayo and James T. Priestley II. The 2 Mayo army hospital units were sent to New Guinea in January 1944. The 233rd station hospital was positioned in Nadzab and the 237th at Finschafen. These hospitals provided the first treatment for casualties evacuated by air from the campaign against Japanese occupation in this area. In 1945, the hospitals were moved to the Philippines to treat casualties from the Okinawa campaign.[7]
He and his wife Alice had six children. He died in a motor vehicle accident on his 70th birthday, near Rochester, Minnesota.[8]
Selected works
Mayo, Charles William. Surgery of the Small & Large Intestine, Year Book Medical Publishers, 1962.
Mayo, Charles William. Mayo: the Story of My Family and My Career, Doubleday, 1968.
References
^Kaszuba, Mike (July 15, 1990). "Mayo grandson sets own goals far from family throne", Star Tribune, p. A1.
^'Dr. Charles Mayo Dies in Car Crash,' Winona Daily News,' July 29, 1968, pg. 1
Further reading
Encyclopædia Britannica. Online edition. Retrieved on 2009-02-18.
Encyclopedia Americana. p. 550. Grolier, 1993.
Statement by the President on the death of Charles W. Mayo. John T. Woolley and Gerhard Peters, The American Presidency Project [online]. Santa Barbara, CA: University of California (hosted), Gerhard Peters (database). Retrieved on 2009-02-18.
Eckman, J. and J. Berkson (December 1968). "Charles William Mayo, M.D., 1898–1968: as we remember him." J Lancet. 88 (12):319–21.