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  1. Henrietta Elizabeth Banting or "Lady Banting" (March 4, 1912 – July 26, 1976) was a Canadian physician and the second wife of Sir Frederick Banting. Banting was the Director of Women's College Hospital's Cancer Detection Clinic from 1958-1971.

  2. Henrietta Banting, or Lady Banting, if you prefer, was born in 1912. She lived her youth in Stanstead close to the Lee Farm, which was renowned for its fine pure-bred livestock. Her parents met in Stansted. Her father, Henry Ball, was in charge of the Customs Office in Rock Island.

  3. 8 de mar. de 2019 · Dr. Henrietta BantingBanting House. Plan Your Visit. First referred to as the birthplace of insulin in 1923, Banting House commemorates the life and career of the co-discoverer of insulin. View More. Sir Frederick G. Banting. Known primarily for his role in the discovery of insulin, Banting was also an. artist, scientist, and war hero.

  4. Dr. Henrietta Ball Banting died of cancer in the brain at the age of 64 in Women’s College Hospital and is buried alongside her national hero-husband, Dr. Frederick Banting at Toronto’s Mount Pleasant Cemetery.

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  5. The collection consists of correspondence, research notes and papers, articles, speeches, travel journals, drawings, memorabilia, photographs, film, awards and prizes. Includes some papers from his widow, Henrietta Banting (d. 1976), Howard Banting, and the Canadian Diabetes Association.

  6. In March 1963, WCH’s Dr. Henrietta Banting (nee Ball) and Dr. Elizabeth Forbes started a new clinical study at the CDC. They wanted to discover if mammography could be used in the early detection and diagnosis of breast cancer.

  7. Henrietta Ball Banting, or Lady Banting, if you prefer, was born in 1912 and died in Toronto in 1976. She was married to Frederick Banting, who, along with a colleague, earned the Nobel Prize in Medicine for discovering insulin.