User:AmericanLemming

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Hello all! As my username suggests, I live in the United States (Wisconsin, to be precise), and I like lemmings. Having admired Wikipedia from afar for many years, I finally decided to get in on the action back in 2013.

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I'm a medical student at the Medical College of Wisconsin in Milwaukee. I graduated as a German/Spanish/pre-med triple major at the University of Oklahoma in May 2017. As far as my editing goes, I generally fix typos and other such mistakes as I read Wikipedia (I use Wikipedia a lot). I also maintain the GA stats page and the FA stats page.

My three pet peeves are words that are capitalized that shouldn't be, extra white space at the top of articles, and biographies that don't have the current age/age at time of death in the info box. My interests include history, foreign languages, commercial aviation, and medicine.

In case you didn't notice, I like lemmings.

What I've done around here

My relationship to Treblinka extermination camp is rather complex. I'll just state the facts:

1. I copy-edited and reviewed the article during its GAN in late October 2013 (48 edits to the GAN page and 76 comments).
2. I copy-edited and reviewed the article during its first run at FAC in early November 2013 (76 edits to the FAC review page and 15 new comments).
3. I copy-edited and reviewed the article immediately after its FAC was archived in mid-December 2013 (126 edits to the article talk page and 60 more comments).

Thus, I've copy-edited the article three times and made 837 edits to the article proper, bringing me to a total of 1,087 Treblinka-related edits, along with 151 comments. AmericanLemming (talk) 05:43, 16 May 2014 (UTC)

Movie plots I've worked on

Articles expanded

Barnstars

The Copyeditor's Barnstar
Thanks tremendously for pitching in on Jelena Balšić; your edits and suggestions improved the article substantially. -- Khazar2 (talk) 03:10, 7 May 2013 (UTC)
Feel free to ping me when you start doing GA reviews; I'd be glad to offer assistance if you ever want any. I owe you one! -- Khazar2 (talk) 03:10, 7 May 2013 (UTC)
The Copyeditor's Barnstar
Thanks for your helping in Dragon Warrior II!--113.200.212.68 (talk) 06:38, 23 June 2013 (UTC)
The Good Article Barnstar
For your contributions to bring International emergency medicine to Good Article status. Thanks, and keep up the good work! -- Khazar2 (talk) 02:19, 20 August 2013 (UTC)


I just realized this was your first GA, so you definitely deserve one of these. Congrats-- I hope it's the first of many. -- Khazar2 (talk) 02:19, 20 August 2013 (UTC)

The Copyeditor's Barnstar
Thanks for your help at Treblinka extermination camp--your diligence and thoroughness have already made this a better article! I really appreciate your stepping in on short notice to lend a hand. Cheers, -- Khazar2 (talk) 16:54, 19 October 2013 (UTC)
The Mediator Barnstar
Your mediation attempts, though perhaps not entirely successful, have not gone unnoticed. Don't be discouraged from continuing to be a neutral voice in other disputes on Wikipedia. Cheers, Ma®©usBritish{chat} 19:42, 11 January 2014 (UTC)

All pages in my userspace

Odds and ends

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Treblinka articles

Size of Wikipedia

Another way to measure the size of Wikipedia is by looking at the total number of pages, which includes pages in other namespaces like Talk, User, or Wikipedia as well as articles. As of 18 March 2026, there are 65,309,811. The size of the database is difficult to measure because it varies depending on how you define it and how much the data is compressed. One way to define it is to just include the current version of all 7,153,655 articles; another way is to include the current version of all articles and their edit history (that is, all previous versions of each article), which is much bigger. Including the current version of all 65,309,811 pages (with or without their edit history) makes the size of the database even larger.

Adding paragraph to the lead about the total number of pages and the size of the database

Canniesburn Hospital

Canniesburn Hospital was a plastic surgery hospital that existed from 1967 to 2003 and served Greater Glasgow.[1] John Scott Tough was the principal driver behind the hospital's creation, while Thomas Gibson obstructed its construction out of his dislike of Tough.[2]

Predecessor

The predecessor to what would become Canniesburn Hospital was the West of Scotland Plastic Surgery and Jaw Unit,[3] which opened in October 1940 in Ballochmyle Hospital, an Emergency Medical Service hospital in Ayrshire. It was closed in 1943 on the recommendation of Harold Gillies. It reopened in 1944 with John Scott Tough in charge.[4] Thomas Gibson worked in the Burns Unit of the Glasgow Royal Infirmary from 1942 to 1944, where he researched burn management for the Medical Research Council.[4][5] Gibson was drafted in 1944 and served in the Royal Army Medical Corps until 1947.[5] Upon his return to Glasgow he fully expected to be put in charge of the Plastic Surgery and Jaw Unit at Ballochmyle Hospital, and was disappointed when he discovered that Tough was in charge. Although Gibson had as much experience in plastic surgery as Tough, Tough treated him as a subordinate, which was the beginning of a mutual dislike between the two that intensified throughout their careers.[4] They were quite different; Tough was a far better surgeon than Gibson was, but Gibson was an innovative thinker and was willing to challenge existing medical beliefs.[6]

Design and construction

In 1958, Tough selected Canniesburn as the site for a formal plastic surgery specialist unit (specialist hospital).[7] Gibson was not the only one opposed to a dedicated plastic surgery hospital; Charles Illingworth, Regius Professor of Surgery at Glasgow University and member of the Greater Glasgow Health Board, strongly objected to the idea of specialist hospitals of any kind, and he used his influence and prestige to block the construction of Canniesburn. Illingworth's preferred alternative was to have an individual plastic surgeon in each of the main hospitals in Glasgow. The neurosurgeons in Glasgow also wanted a dedicated neurosurgery hospital, but since they were unanimously in favor of one, Illingworth had to let construction proceed. Though all of the plastic surgeons except Gibson were in favor of a plastic surgery hospital, Gibson's dissenting vote allowed Illingworth to obstruct construction.[8]

After Illingworth came off the Greater Glasgow Health Board, Tough received permission to begin drawing up plans for Canniesburn Hospital. This was formally granted on December 24, 1962. While the decision to build Canniesburn was acrimonious, the neurosurgery hospital was built more smoothly and included a large academic component. Canniesburn was not granted any academic component, making it difficult to retain someone with an academic bent like Robert Acland, who eventually left for Louisville, Kentucky.[9]

Tough designed Canniesburn in consultation with the architect with little to no input from the other plastic surgeons. Canniesburn Hospital officially opened on September 1, 1967. Tough hoped that he would be able to have total control over the Canniesburn, and he was the administrative director of the unit, but in practice each plastic surgeon carved out his own niche, meaning that Tough was just another consultant.[10] He appeared to lose interest in the Plastic Surgery unit and retired in January 1970[11] after only two years as director; he was 60 years old at the time. His poor health contributed significantly to this decision; he was a diabetic and suffered attacks of angina due to emotional upset.[10]

Early years (1967-1986)

Thomas Gibson became the director of Canniesburn Hospital after Tough retired in 1970[10] and remained in that position until 1980, when he retired. He was replaced as director by Ian McGregor, who himself retired in 1986.[12] Canniesburn became internationally known for its innovations in plastic surgery.

Closure

Canniesburn Hospital was closed in 2003.[13] A new Canniesburn Plastic Surgery Unit was built in the Jubilee Building of the Glasgow Royal Infirmary.[3]

Notes

References

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