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Dr Angus Malcolm Cameron

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Dr Angus Malcolm Cameron

Birth
Minneapolis, Hennepin County, Minnesota, USA
Death
29 Apr 1979 (aged 54)
Alameda, Alameda County, California, USA
Burial
Minot, Ward County, North Dakota, USA GPS-Latitude: 48.2226237, Longitude: -101.287602
Plot
11.2.22
Memorial ID
View Source
Courtesy of Nancy Zeltinger Austin (FAG #47321269)
A memorial service will be held Friday at 10:30 a.m. in First Presbyterian Church, Minot, for Dr. A. Malcolm Cameron, 54, 318 8th Ave. SE, Minot surgeon, who died Sunday. A private burial ceremony will be held at Rosehill Memorial Park.
The family prefers memorial to the United Ostomy Association, Minot area chapter, Post Office Box 2215, Minot.
Born Feb. 4, 1925, in Minneapolis, Minn., Dr. Cameron was reared in Minot, coming here with his parents in 1925. He was graduated from Blake Academy in Minneapolis and earned an undergraduate degree from Haverford (Pa.) College. He received a medical degree from the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, took his surgical residency at the University of Delaware Hospital in Wilmington, held a surgical fellowship and studied thoracic surgery at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor.
In 1959 he returned to Minot and opened a practice in general and thoracic cardiovascular surgery in the Trinity Professional Building. The facility once housed the Northwest Clinic, of which his father, Dr. Angus L. Cameron, was a founder.
Dr. Malcolm Cameron was one of an original group of North Dakota physicians responsible for establishing a four-year medical school in North Dakota, and served as vice chairman of a planning committee for the Northwest Area Health Education Center at Minot. He was a member of the North Dakota Medical Association, the Northwest District Medical Society and the American Medical Association. He was a founding member of the Society of Thoracic Surgeons. He was a member of the Presbyterian Church and a former member of the Minot Rotary Club.
In 1975 Dr. Cameron started work on the establishment of the Minot Indoor Tennis Club and a structure to house it, recalling then how he grew up on a homemade backyard tennis court in Minot in the early 1930’s and later played team tennis in high school and college. He later revived and managed the Minot Tennis Club in the 1940’s. His efforts were brought to fruition in 1976 with the opening of the half-million-dollar tennis club in Minot’s Industrial Park, which he had continued to operate.
He married Elizabeth E. Meyer in Runnemede, N.J., May 2, 1953. She survives as do sons, David M., Loveland, Colo., Robert B., a student at Stanford (Calif.) University, Steven T. and Paul S., both at home; sisters, Mrs. Beatrice Harmon, Cincinnati, Ohio, Jean and Mary Cameron, both of New York City; and a brother, Dr. A. Bruce Cameron, Castro Valley, Calif.
Friends may register at Thompson-Larson Funeral Home from noon to 5 p.m. Wednesday and Thursday.
From the scrapbook of Lillian Lundgren Zeltinger who passed away in 1997

48483631-sent links to parents
Courtesy of Nancy Zeltinger Austin (FAG #47321269)
A memorial service will be held Friday at 10:30 a.m. in First Presbyterian Church, Minot, for Dr. A. Malcolm Cameron, 54, 318 8th Ave. SE, Minot surgeon, who died Sunday. A private burial ceremony will be held at Rosehill Memorial Park.
The family prefers memorial to the United Ostomy Association, Minot area chapter, Post Office Box 2215, Minot.
Born Feb. 4, 1925, in Minneapolis, Minn., Dr. Cameron was reared in Minot, coming here with his parents in 1925. He was graduated from Blake Academy in Minneapolis and earned an undergraduate degree from Haverford (Pa.) College. He received a medical degree from the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, took his surgical residency at the University of Delaware Hospital in Wilmington, held a surgical fellowship and studied thoracic surgery at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor.
In 1959 he returned to Minot and opened a practice in general and thoracic cardiovascular surgery in the Trinity Professional Building. The facility once housed the Northwest Clinic, of which his father, Dr. Angus L. Cameron, was a founder.
Dr. Malcolm Cameron was one of an original group of North Dakota physicians responsible for establishing a four-year medical school in North Dakota, and served as vice chairman of a planning committee for the Northwest Area Health Education Center at Minot. He was a member of the North Dakota Medical Association, the Northwest District Medical Society and the American Medical Association. He was a founding member of the Society of Thoracic Surgeons. He was a member of the Presbyterian Church and a former member of the Minot Rotary Club.
In 1975 Dr. Cameron started work on the establishment of the Minot Indoor Tennis Club and a structure to house it, recalling then how he grew up on a homemade backyard tennis court in Minot in the early 1930’s and later played team tennis in high school and college. He later revived and managed the Minot Tennis Club in the 1940’s. His efforts were brought to fruition in 1976 with the opening of the half-million-dollar tennis club in Minot’s Industrial Park, which he had continued to operate.
He married Elizabeth E. Meyer in Runnemede, N.J., May 2, 1953. She survives as do sons, David M., Loveland, Colo., Robert B., a student at Stanford (Calif.) University, Steven T. and Paul S., both at home; sisters, Mrs. Beatrice Harmon, Cincinnati, Ohio, Jean and Mary Cameron, both of New York City; and a brother, Dr. A. Bruce Cameron, Castro Valley, Calif.
Friends may register at Thompson-Larson Funeral Home from noon to 5 p.m. Wednesday and Thursday.
From the scrapbook of Lillian Lundgren Zeltinger who passed away in 1997

48483631-sent links to parents


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