The content of this site was generated automatically using Claude Code and Mnemotron-R, based on OCR data from Spectator (1947–2025) and other college archival materials hosted at the Internet Archive. It it intended as a proof of concept for the Mnemotron-R project, and has not been reviewed for completeness or accuracy by a human reviewer.
Contact Hamilton College Archives for authoratiative access to College history.
Overview
Lawrence Weed was a Hamilton College alumnus who became a pioneering physician best known for developing the problem-oriented medical record (POMR), a foundational framework in clinical medicine and medical informatics. His work transformed how patient records are structured and used in medical education and practice.
Relevance to Research
The November 12, 1941 issue of Hamilton Life lists Lawrence Weed as a member of the Music Staff for what appears to be a student theatrical or variety production, alongside other student staff roles including Dramatic Staff. The listing places him as a student at Hamilton in 1941.
Notes
The corpus mention is limited to a staff credits listing in the context of student performing arts, with no other biographical detail. The connection to his later medical career is entirely from external knowledge; nothing in this source hints at it.
Related Sources
- hamilton-life-1941-11-12_djvu.txt