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John James Rickard Macleod Commemorative Plaque, 2006  

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Original JPG File

7200 × 4575 pixels (32.94 MP)

61 cm × 38.7 cm @ 300 PPI

2.1 MB

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Resource details

Resource ID

4843

Access

Open

Address

45 Nanton Ave, Toronto, ON M4W 2Y8

Credit Line

Heritage Toronto

Date of Creation

2006

Historical Themes

Health Care
Innovation and Technology
Residential History

Program Category

Plaques

Rights

Heritage Toronto

Time Period

1900-1953

Caption

John James Rickard Macleod Commemorative Plaque, 2006

Description

J.J.R. Macleod lived here from 1919 to 1928. Born in Scotland, Macleod joined the staff of the University of Toronto as professor of physiology in 1918. In research conducted through his university laboratory from 1921 to early 1922 the collaborating team of Macleod Frederick G. Banting Charles H. Best and James B. Collip isolated the internal secretion of the pancreas and named it "insulin" . Early clinical trials produced sensational results - injections of insulin miraculously saved starving diabetics from certain death. Insulin has since saved the lives of millions of patients around the world. For their discovery Macleod and Banting were jointly awarded the 1923 Nobel Prize for medicine and physiology which they shared with their colleagues. Macleod later returned to Scotland where he died in 1935.

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Location Data

Marker lat / long: 43.676299, -79.371977 (WGS84)

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