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Courtenay Felix Bartholomew (1931 – 7 May 2021) was a Trinidad and Tobago physician, scientist, and author. [1] [2] He was the founder and director of the Medical Research Foundation of Trinidad and Tobago. [1] He was active in HIV/AIDS research, and was notable for diagnosing the first case of AIDS in the English-speaking Caribbean.
After studying at the Pasteur Institute in France he returned to Trinidad in 1913, first as an Assistant Surgeon at the Colonial Hospital in Port of Spain, and later as the District Medical Officer in Tobago and Cedros, in southwestern Trinidad. In 1923 he was appointed as the sole bacteriologist to the government of Trinidad and Tobago.
It includes Trinidad and Tobago scientists that can also be found in the parent category, or in diffusing subcategories of the parent. Pages in category "Trinidad and Tobago women scientists" The following 9 pages are in this category, out of 9 total.
John Arnott Spence (15 July 1929 – 6 March 2013) was a Vincentian-born Trinidadian politician, botanist, and professor emeritus. Spence served as an independent Senator in the Senate of Trinidad and Tobago from 1987 to 2000. [1] Spence was born on 15 July 1929, on the island of Saint Vincent. He moved to Trinidad when he was 11 years old. [2]
A young Capildeo (third from the left on the bottom row) with his mother and siblings. Rudranath Capildeo was born on 2 February 1920 into a Brahmin Hindu Indo-Trinidadian family at Anand Bhavan (translation: Mansion of Eternal Bliss; aka Lion House) on the Main Road in the city of Chaguanas in Caroni County in the then British-ruled Trinidad and Tobago. [3]
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Howard Nelson is a Trinidadian ecologist and wildlife biologist.Nelson earned his bachelor's and master's degrees at the University of the West Indies and his doctoral work at the University of Wisconsin–Madison under the guidance of Stanley Temple.