Jasmine High has been managing the Medical Illustration Service Library since last April, and handling the quality assurance on our large scanning project. She’s leaving us for the Smithsonian’s Natural History museum and we’ll miss her.
An unofficial blog about the National Museum of Health and Medicine (nee the Army Medical Museum) in Silver Spring, MD. Visit for news about the museum, new projects, musing on the history of medicine and neat pictures.
Thursday, January 28, 2010
Archives staff member departs
Wednesday, January 27, 2010
Code of Public Local Laws, City of Baltimore, 1882
"A Note on Experimental Cranioplasty"
Have you seen this man?
Med School
An anatomy class handbook and grade sheet from the University of Toronto, 1892. It's not shown here, but the only thing in bold inside the green-ish pamphlet is something like "No tobacco permitted in the dissection room." For anyone that has looked through Blast Book's Dissection pictures, Toronto seems pretty advanced in that respect.
From the HDAC reprint collection
Letter of the Day: January 27 UPDATED
Six months after the establishment of the Museum, Civil War hospital doctors were saving material for it.
U.S.A. General Hospital No. 1,
Frederick, MD., Jany 27 1863
Doctor.
I will endeavor to pl[ea]s[e] also [illegible] to take Davis place & at any rate the specimens “shall be preserved”. Enclosed please find corrected bill.
Respectfully,
R.F. Weir
Asst Surgeon, USA
Dr. J.H. Brinton, USA
Surg. Gen’l Office
Washington, DC
Curiosity over this letter leads me to transcribe the earlier one:
U.S.A. General Hospital No. 1,
Frederick, MD., January 25 1863
Doctor.
Enclosed find your vouchers for expenditures for whiskey to preserve pathological specimens. Will you please have them settled as the money had been advanced by Dr. Davis who has recently left for England & me, heir to bones & [illegible – whiskey?] collections. When may we expect to see the new Catalogue[?]
Respectfully,
R.F. Weir
Asst Surgeon, USA
Dr. J.H. Brinton, USA
Surg. Gen’l Office
Washington, DC
Tuesday, January 26, 2010
Letter of the day: January 26th
The Museum’s eventual transformation into a pathology institute is foreshadowed…
Numbered Correspondence 1956
January 26, 1897
Captain John L. Phillips,
Assistant Surgeon, U.S. Army,
Fort Walla Walla, Wash.
Dear Doctor:
The specimen of testicle referred to in your letter of January 9th has been embedded and examined microscopically, with the following result: Marked fibroid thickening of the normal covering of the testicle together with such extensive interstitial change in the structure of the testicle proper as to render it extremely difficult to even make out any of the remains of the spermatic tubules, which are here and there seen as narrow crevices lined by low epithelium. The diagnosis, therefore, would be chronic interstitial orchitis, which may have had a syphilititic origin. There is no appearance, whatever, of any malignant disease.
A slide will be forwarded by to-day’s mail.
Very sincerely yours,
Walter Reed
Surgeon, U.S. Army,
Curator
Monday, January 25, 2010
...and what are we doing?
Stats for: Your account
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Your most viewed photos and videos
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Photos and Videos 20,917 78%
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Why we do this
So many of our images have no or very little information, but in this case his mother's name was spelled out in the caption to all four!!! photos of her. I have often said to myself, as I am posting this kind of detail, that someone is going to be trolling the internet, looking for their mom or dad, and may very well find one of the things we've tossed up there.
It's exactly this reason that we do what we do, with the hope that we're the connection between today and yesterday. Have I said I love my job?
Letter of the day: January 25
This letter followed immediately after one thanking a Colonel C. Sutherland for his donation of two Indian arrowheads.
January 25, 1869
General:
It appears to me right that the contributors to the section of Indian Curiosities etc., should be notified of the transfer of their donations to the Smithsonian Institution, and I would therefore respectfully submit the enclosed “Memorandum,” and suggest that it be printed, or some modification of it, and distributed in the form, if you approve, of the Memorandum of Sept. 1868.
Very respectfully,
Your obd’t servant,
[George A. Otis]
Ass’t Surgeon, U.S.A.
Curator, A.M.M.
Bvt. Brig Gen’l C.H. Crane,
Ass’t Surg. General, US Army
NY Times expose on medical radiation injuries
Sunday, January 24, 2010
Brunswig Mausoleum, Metairie Cemetery, New Orleans
I have no idea why he's buried in New Orleans and not Los Angeles.
Follow the picture to close-ups of the two statues flanking the door.
Some things never change
Letter of the day: January 24
Smithsonian Institution
U.S. National Museum
Washington City, Jan. 24, 1878
Sir:
In accordance with the arrangement between the Smithsonian Institution and the Army Medical Museum, I have the honor to transmit the collections mentioned below,t he receipt of which please acknowledge.
Very respectfully, yours,
Spencer F. Baird
Asst. Secretary S.I.
Collection human bones from Indian graves in Santa Barbara Col, Col., gathered in 1875 by the expedition of Lt. Geo. M. Wheeler.
Saturday, January 23, 2010
Covetousness, a deadly sin
Goddess of Evils
Theater of War
Letter of the day: January 23
Fort Riley, Kansas
Jan: 23rd, 1868
General
I have the honor to send herewith for microscopic examination (if desired) the kidneys of Pvt: James Garrode Co “G” 10th U.S. Cavalry, who died at this hospital of Brights disease on the 19th inst:
I have a full record of this case, which I will transmit with my next monthly report of Sick and Wounded.
I also transmit a fibrous polypus, removed from the pharynx of Pvt David Young Co “K” 10 US Cavalry.
Very respectfully
Your obt: servt
G.M. Sternberg
Asst. Surg: & Bvt. Maj
US Army
Bvt. Maj. Genl. J.K. Barnes
Surgeon Genl: US Army
Washington, DC
[an accompanying note written on the reverse says “Receipt acknowledged 1-30-68, and statement that kidneys were too much decomposed and were thrown away. Request for history of polypus.]
Friday, January 22, 2010
That Old-Time Gonorrhea Treatment
I went to a dusty, off-the-beaten-track museum in New Orleans last weekend - the New Orleans Pharmacy Museum. I have a lot of very neat stuff from there, but have to lead off with A Safe and Speedy Remedy for the Cure of Gonorrhea and Gleet. I have never heard of Gleet.