Conditions Governing Access
Conditions Governing Reproduction and Use
Preferred Citation
Immediate Source of Acquisition
Processing Information
UCLA Catalog Record ID
Biographical / Historical
Scope and Contents
Contributing Institution:
UCLA Library Special Collections
Title: Margaret H. Jones papers
Source:
University of California, Los Angeles. Brain
Research Institute
Identifier/Call Number: Biomed.0493
Physical Description:
.1 Linear Feet
(1 folder)
Date (inclusive): 1955-1960
Physical Location: Stored off-site. All requests to access
special collections material must be made in advance using the request button located on
this page.
Language of Material: Materials are in
English.
Conditions Governing Access
Open for research. All requests to access special collections materials must be made in
advance using the request button located on this page.
Conditions Governing Reproduction and Use
Property rights to the physical objects belong to the UCLA Library Special Collections. All
other rights, including copyright, are retained by the creators and their heirs. It is the
responsibility of the researcher to determine who holds the copyright and pursue the
copyright owner or his or her heir for permission to publish where The UC Regents do not
hold the copyright.
Preferred Citation
[Identification of item], Margaret H. Jones Papers (Collection 493). Louise M. Darling
Biomedical Library History and Special Collections for the Sciences, University of
California, Los Angeles.
Immediate Source of Acquisition
Transferred by UCLA Brain Research Institute, 2012.
Processing Information
Collections are processed to a variety of levels depending on the work necessary to make
them usable, their perceived user interest and research value, availability of staff and
resources, and competing priorities. Library Special Collections provides a standard level
of preservation and access for all collections and, when time and resources permit, conducts
more intensive processing. These materials have been arranged and described according to
national and local standards and best practices.
UCLA Catalog Record ID
Biographical / Historical
Margaret H. Jones, M.D., was born June 3, 1904, in Portland, Maine. She received an A.B.,
Radcliffe Coll., 1925, Yale Univ., an M.A., Vassar Coll., 1927, an M.D., Cornell Univ. Med.
Center, 1933-34, Babies Hosp., 1934-36, did a residency at Mary Imogene Bassett Hosp., 1936,
and received an M.P.H., Harvard Grad. School of Public Health, 1940. She was instructor,
Dept. of Physiology, Vassar Coll., 1926-28, research chemist, Reed and Carnick Co., N.J.,
1928-29, director, Div. of Maternal and Child Health, Crippled children, Public Health
Nursing, Wyo. State Dept. of Health, 1936-43, and pediatrician, Holleran Med. Group, L.A.,
1943-49. She was on the staff, Childrens Hospital, L.A., 1943-49, and Queen of Angels Hosp.,
L.A., 1943-54. She taught in the Dept. of Pediatrics, USC School of Medicine, 1943-54, had a
private practice, Glendale, Calif., 1949-54, and taught in the UCLA Dept. of Pediatrics,
1954-72. She joined the American Academy of Cerebral Palsy and Developmental Medicine at
their second annual meeting in 1949 and became their sixth president in 1956. She married
Adrian C. Kanaar in 1989 and became Margaret Jones-Kanaar. Dr. Jones-Kanaar died at her home
in Pacific Palisades, Los Angeles, in 2001.
Scope and Contents
This collection documents a portion of Margaret H. Jones's involvement with the American
Academy for Cerebral Palsy's Brain Registry. It includes: "Infantile spastic hemiplegia", a
ten-page pamphlet reproducing (in a different format) the Academy's brain registry exhibit
at the American Medical Association's June, 1955 meeting -- Annotated typescript,
"Submission of brains in connection with 'Project Cerebral Palsy'" (27 June 1956) -- Typed
letters signed (December 1959) and her affirmative response (January 1960), inviting Jones
to serve on the Academy's Brain Registry Committee and the Committee for Evaluation of
Treatment.
Subjects and Indexing Terms
University of California, Los Angeles. Brain
Research Institute