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  1. 14 de sept. de 2010 · When Elizabeth Hughes Gossett was laid to rest in 1981 at the age of 73, few people knew that, by all rights, she should never have lived long enough to enter high school, much less graduate college, marry, and have children.

    • Thea Cooper, Arthur Ainsberg
  2. Elizabeth Hughes Gossett (Q5363005) From Wikidata. Jump to navigation Jump to search. first American treated with insulin for diabetes. Elizabeth Hughes;

  3. Elizabeth Hughes Gossett was born on August 19, 1907 in the Executive Mansion in Albany, New York while her father, Charles Evans Hughes, was serving as the state's Governor. In 1919, at age 11, Elizabeth developed juvenile diabetes, and, by the age of 14, her health had deteriorated significantly.

  4. 24 de ago. de 2021 · The impact of insulin is summed up by the story of Elizabeth Hughes Gossett, a young girl with diabetes who was able to live to adulthood. 5 She was born in 1907 in New York where her father, Charles Evans Hughes, was the state’s governor.

  5. Elizabeth Evans Hughes Gossett (née le 19 août 1907 et morte le 21 avril 1981) est la première Américaine et l'une des premières personnes au monde à être traitée à l'insuline pour le diabète de type 1 [2]. Elle fonde la Supreme Court Historical Society en 1972.

  6. 30 de jul. de 2021 · Elizabeth would settle in Washington D.C. to complete high school before moving back to New York, graduating from Barnard College in 1929. A year later, she married William T. Gossett, a lawyer who worked in her father’s law firm. Eventually, they settled in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan and had three children.

  7. Her name was Elizabeth Hughes Gossett. Although most of the mourners would likely claim to have known Elizabeth well, only a few people in the church knew just how remarkable her life really was. Dr. Lowell Eklund, dean of continuing education at Oakland University in Rochester, Michigan, rose to the pulpit to deliver the eulogy.