Register of the Henry Dukso Moon Papers, 1944-1974
Processed by Special Collections staff; machine-readable finding aid created by
Brooke Dykman Dockter
UCSF Library & CKM
Archives and Special Collections
530 Parnassus Ave.
San Francisco, CA 94143-0840
Phone: (415) 476-8112
Fax: (415) 476-4653
Email: http://www.library.ucsf.edu/collections/archives/contact
URL: http://www.library.ucsf.edu/collections/archives
© 1998
The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved.
Note
History --History, California
--General
Biological and
Medical Sciences --Biological Sciences --Bacteriology
Register of the Henry Dukso Moon Papers, 1944-1974
Collection number: MSS 77-8
UCSF Library & CKM
Archives and Special Collections
University of California, San Francisco
Contact Information:
- UCSF Library & CKM
- Archives and Special Collections
- 530 Parnassus Ave.
- San Francisco, CA 94143-0840
- Phone: (415) 476-8112
- Fax: (415) 476-4653
- Email: http://www.library.ucsf.edu/collections/archives/contact
- URL: http://www.library.ucsf.edu/collections/archives
- Processed by:
- Special Collections staff
- Encoded by:
- Brooke Dykman Dockter
© 1998 The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved.
Descriptive Summary
Title: Henry Dukso Moon Papers,
Date (inclusive): 1944-1974
Collection number: MSS 77-8
Creator: Moon, Henry Dukso, 1914-1974
Extent: 20 folders
Repository:
University of California, San Francisco. Library. Archives and Special Collections.
San Francisco, California 94143-0840
Shelf location: For current information on the location of these
materials, please consult the Library's online catalog.
Language:
English.
Administrative Information
Provenance
Received October 1977.
Access
Collection is open for research.
Preferred Citation
[Identification of item], Henry Dukso Moon Papers, MSS 77-8, Archives & Special
Collections, UCSF Library & CKM
Biographical Data
Henry Dukso Moon was born on September 28, 1914, in San Francisco, California. His
father, Yang Mock Moon, a scholar and activist for Korean independence, had emigrated to
the United States from Korea in 1903; his mother, Chan Sung Lee, had come to the United
States from Korea as a "picture bride" in 1913. Henry Moon graduated from Galileo High
School in San Francisco in 1931, and went to the University of California, Berkeley,
where he received his A.B. degree in Medical Sciences in 1935, upon his completion of the
first year of the curriculum of the University of California School of Medicine. From
1935-1937 he was a graduate student in Anatomy (M.S., 1937). While at Berkeley's
Department of Anatomy and the Institute of Experimental Biology, he came under the
influence of Professors William R. Lyons and Herbert M. Evans, and in Professor Lyons'
laboratory he did much important work in studying ACTH that had been isolated and
purified there from prolactin derived from sheep pituitary glands. His brother, Dr.
William H. Moon, has noted that "Henry [Moon] was the first second-generation Korean to
be born in San Francisco, and the first San Francisco-born Korean to graduate from U. C.
Berkeley and U.C. Medical School in San Francisco."
Following his 1940 graduation from medical school, Dr. Moon served his internship and
residency at San Francisco General Hospital, and completed his specialty training in
pathology in 1944. His first faculty appointment at UCSF, as an instructor in pathology,
came in 1943. From 1944 until 1947 he was on active duty in the U. S. Army Medical Corps
at Letterman General Hospital, leaving the service with the rank of major. In 1947 he
became chief pathologist for the San Francisco Coroner's Office and Chief of the
Pathology Service at the Veterans' Administration Hospital. In 1956 he became a full-time
faculty member at the University of California's Medical Center at San Francisco as
associate professor of pathology (he was promoted to the full professorship in 1958) and
as chairman of the Department of Pathology, a position he held until his retirement in
1974. He also served as professor and chairman of the Division of Forensic Pathology and
Medicine.
Dr. Moon's research, begun at Berkeley in the 1930s, continued throughout his life. He
authored or co-authored approximately 100 original scientific papers. His research
covered many fields but he maintained an interest in anterior hypophyseal hormones; in
the early 1950s, he co-authored with H. M. Evans, C. H. Li and M. E. Simpson a series of
approximately ten papers dealing with neoplasms developing in rats chronically treated
with hypophyseal growth hormone. He published extensive studies of arteriosclerosis both
in man and in experimental animals, and also discussed the lysis of homologous cells by
sensitized lymphocytes in a series of some ten papers that have been described as "ahead
of their time."
Dr. Moon was past president of the American Society of Experimental Pathology, the
International Academy of Pathology, the American Association of Pathologists and
Bacteriologists, the California Society of Pathologists and the UC Faculty Alumni. He
served on four different committees of the National Institutes of Health and on the
Scientific Advisory Board, Armed Forces Institute of Pathology. He was twice a visiting
professor as specialist for the U. S. State Department --first serving in Korea (1957)
and then in the U.S.S.R. (1958).
Dr. Moon died in San Mateo, California, on August 2, 1974.
Scope Note
Includes correspondence, biographical material and employment data.
Folder 2
Employment data
Access Information
[RESTRICTED ACCESS]
Folder 3
Correspondence re: appointments, etc., 1954-73 (I)
Folder 4
Correspondence re: appointments, etc., 1954-73 (II)
Folder 5
Requests for medical opinion, etc.
Folder 6
Medico-legal lectures, correspondence
Folder 15
Correspondence, 1947-51, Veteran's Hospital