Ernest Sachs was born on January 25, 1879, in New York City.[2][3] His father, Julius Sachs, was an educator. His mother, Rosa Goldman, was the daughter of Goldman Sachs's founder Marcus Goldman. He grew up in New York City, where he learned to play the cello from the age of six.[3]
Sachs resigned from Washington University in 1949, and he became professor emeritus at the Yale School of Medicine.[3][7]
Personal life and death
Sachs married Mary Parmly Koues, a playwright and poet, in 1913.[2] They had two sons, Ernest Sachs, Jr. and Thomas Dudley Sachs, and a daughter, who died in 1927.[2]
Sachs died on December 2, 1958, in New Haven, Connecticut.[5][7]
Works
Sachs, Ernest (1909). On the Structure and Functional Relations of the Optic Thalamus. London, U.K.: John Bale, Sons & Danielsson. OCLC42636011.
Sachs, Ernest (1945). The Care of the Neurosurgical Patient Before, During and After Operation. St. Louis, Missouri: The C.V. Mosby Company. OCLC3180504.
Sachs, Ernest (1949). Diagnosis and Treatment of Brain Tumors and Care of the Neurosurgical Patient. St. Louis, Missouri: Mosby. OCLC1133529.
Sachs, Ernest (1952). The History and Development of Neurological Surgery. New York: Hoeber. OCLC6739979.
Sachs, Ernest (1954). Prerequisites of Good Teaching & Other Essays. Hamden, Connecticut: Shoe String Press. OCLC1548260.
Sachs, Ernest (1958). Fifty Years of Neurosurgery: A Personal Story. New York: Vantage Press. OCLC547712.
References
^Witters, Lee A. (Winter 2007). "A Diligent Effort". Dartmouth Medicine. p. 3. Retrieved May 31, 2016.