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.
Sunday, January 31, 2010
Letter of the day: January 31 (2 of 2)
January 31, 1887
Dear Sir:
Your letter of the 30th instant has been received. If you will have the kindness to send the man on a fair day, at an early opportunity, I shall be please to have a photograph taken of one side on an enlarged scale to show the supplementary nipple to better advantage.
Thanking you for your kind offer, I remain,
Very sincerely yours,
(Signed) John S. Billings
Surgeon U.S. Army
Curator Army Medical Museum
Byrne Major C.C.
Surgeon U.S. Army
Attending Surgeon Soldiers’ Home
Near Washington, D.C.
Letter of the day: January 31 (1 of 2)
Sir:
I am instructed by the Surgeon General to acknowledge the receipt of your letter of January 18th with the accompanying special surgical reports.
The bone specimen from the case of Pt. M.P. Johnson, 4th Cavalry, amputation on account of shot fracture of ankle joint, and the bullet and piece of exploded shell from the case of Pt. F.E. Sloat, 4th Cavalry, have also been received.
The Surgeon General desires me to thank you for these additions to the Museum collection.
Very truly yours,
(Signed) John S. Billings
Surgeon U.S. Army
Curator Army Medical Museum
Brown Captain Paul R.
Assistant Surgeon U.S. Army
Post Surgeon Fort Huachuca
Arizona Territory
Saturday, January 30, 2010
WRAMC campus plan debate in Post
By Lisa Rein
Washington Post Staff Writer
Saturday, January 30, 2010
The article contains the intriguing "District officials said Thursday night that the September 2011 closing date had been pushed back, although it is not clear to when."
Smithsonian American Art Museum has a lovely blog
Letter of the day: January 30
Surgeon General’s Office
Washington City D.C.
Jany 30th 1866
Sir,
About 12th September 1865, there was received from you, from Santa Fé, a cranium which has been given the number 4385, in the surgical section of the Army Medical Museum. The specimen shows a discolored surface of six inches by four over the superior anterior portion of the frontal bone. This spaa is also cribriform – No history accompanied the case, and it has been suggested it was one in which scalping had been practiced without immediately fatal results. You are earnestly desired to transmit such notes of the matter as you may possess.
Very respectfully,
Your obedt. servant,
By order of the Surgeon General
[George A. Otis]
Surgeon & Bvt. Lt. Col, U.S. Vols. Curator, A.M. Museum
Bvt Major H.E. Brown,
Assistant Surgeon U.S. Army at Hart’s Island, N.Y.H. [New York Harbor]
Care of Medl. Dir. Dept East, New York
Friday, January 29, 2010
Letter of the Day: January 29 (5 of 5)
Swift and Company
Kansas City Stock Yards
Kansas City
Address All Mail To Station ‘A’
1/29/96.
Dr. Sternberg,
Bacterialogical (sic) Dept.,
Washington, D.C.
Dear Sir:-
Referring to our favor of recent date, we enclose herewith memorandum invoice covering 2 Sour Hams, shipped [to] you.
Will appreciate a copy of your report when completed on these two hams. Shipment made at the request of Dr. D. H. White.
Yours respectfully,
Swift and Company,
Per, JAH
Letter of the Day: January 29 (4 of 5)
Numbered Correspondence 1215
January 29, 1896
Mr. Wayland F. Reynolds,
Clarksburg, W. Va.
Dear Sir:
In answer to your letter of the 28th inst., I would state that there is in this Museum a microscopic slide which contains the Lord’s prayer, 227 letters, in a space 1/294 x 1/441 of a square inch.
Very respectfully,
D.L. Huntington
Deputy Surgeon General, U.S. Army,
In charge of Museum and Library Division.
Letter of the Day: January 29 (3 of 5)
Dr. Fred Pettersen
Comfort, Texas.
January 29, 1881
Surgeon General, U.S.A.
Washington, D.C.
Sir:
By to-day’s mail I have forwarded a piece muscle (biceps) taken from a girl aged 8, who died from trichinosis, the same is remarkably full with trichinae spiratis in the second stages.
Very respectfully
Your Obt. Servt.
Fred Pettersen
M.D.
Letter of the Day: January 29 (2 of 5)
Fort Larned, Kansas
Jan. 29 1878
Surgeon General
U.S. Army
Sir
I have the honor to enclose copy of receipt issued this day to me by Post Quartermaster for one box addressed to the Army Medical Museum.
The contents are,
1) One Golden Eagle – shot near here Dec 2, 1877. I have roughly dressed it so as to leave the plumage on the skeleton, that the curator may use it as preferred, applying salt or alum.
2) One skull & bal. [balance] of skeleton of a male Raccoon found dead here Dec 2, 1877.
3) I also send in behalf of Asst. Surg. W.E. Whitehead the skin & extremities of one whooping crane (I believe) shot near here in fall of 1877 – arsenic and Plaster of Paris were used.
I am, Sir, with great respect
Your Obt Servt
Francis H. Atkins
A.A. Surgeon
U.S. Army
Letter of the Day: January 29 (1 of 5)
The photographs he refers to have not been catalogued and may no longer exist. Darn it.
County Clerk’s Office
John C. Johnston,
County Clerk
Newton, Kas. Jan 29, 1885
David Flynn
Army Medical Museum
Washington City DC
Dear Sir
If you remember I was in your Department last May (1884) and you had me photographed. I am the original of Cast No 1401 Shell wound in right side of my face, Battle of Spotsylvania CH [Court House] May 10 1864. You gave me several phots. But you said if I would write you would sand me some better ones when you had more leisure to get them up. If it is not asking too much I wish you would please send me ½ doz. of each side. I had both sides of my face taken etc.
Yours Truly
John C. Johnston
Newton PO
Harvey Co.
Kansas
[1 doz Photographs sent April 9, 1885]
New copy of South Africa's Adler Museum Bulletin has arrived
The world of medical museums is pretty small today, but there are still ones spread around the world. Our new copy of South Africa's Adler Museum Bulletin arrived today. Topics include disease detectives, British colonial nurses in Concentration Camps of the Anglo-Boer War, world’s first in vitro fertilisation of a gestational surrogate mother and “Do museum objects speak for themselves?” among others.
Thursday, January 28, 2010
Letter of the Day: January 28
Selected by Kathleen this time.
ND [immediately following letter of January 28 1864]
Specification of jars, for Army Medical Museum
Best pure glass, ground stoppers (extra with Emory) – stopper with glass knob, as in pattern. Each stopper to be provided with a hook inside. This hook to be attached as in figure 1, & not on the bottom of stopper as in sample, the object of the change to being to gain room for suspension of object. The mouths of the jars to be as wide as possible. In case it is not possible to make stoppers to the larger jars (24 in by 10 in; 18 in by 9 in; 16 in by 8 in) then these jars must be made as in figure 2, the top edge of the jar ground level so that a plate of glass or lead may be laid over it, & tied on with bladder.
The sizes and number of the jars required by the museum are as follows
12 jars 24 inches high by 10 inches wide
12 jars 18 inches high by 9 inches wide
48 jars 16 inches high by 8 inches wide
72 jars 12 inches high by 6 inches wide
72 jars 10 inches high by 4 inches wide
144 jars 7 inches high by 2 inches wide
---
360
Gentlemen, I desire to know the price per pound at which these jars can be delivered in Washington, and also the approximate number of pounds in all. As the funds at the command of the museum are somewhat limited the number of jars ordered must depend on this information. Is the government tax included in the prices as specified?
Yrs respectfully
JH Brinton
Surgeon, USA & Curator, A.M. Museum
Mssrs Muzzey & Munro
419 Commerce St.
Philadelphia, PA
Archives staff member departs
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.
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