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, November 20, 2025
Mutter Museum launches massive expansion
Thursday, October 9, 2025
Family Destinations Guide recommends the NMHM
The Bizarre Museum In Maryland You've Probably Never Heard Of
By: Author Joshua Campbell
Posted on July 2, 2025
Saturday, September 27, 2025
Military medicine displays at the Canadian War Museum
Wednesday, August 20, 2025
Walter Reed Forest Glen Annex painting
From Girls' School to Army Hospital: Retired U.S. Army Col. Donald E. Hall, Ph.D. Explores the Legacy of the Walter Reed Forest Glen Annex
Thursday, July 24, 2025
“Carry On:” The History and Innovation of Physical and Occupational Therapy in Military Medicine Exhibit
Wednesday, June 25, 2025
Mutter Museum articles
A Medical-History Museum Contends with Its Collection of Human Remains
From Spectacle to Stewardship
What Ethical Leadership Looks Like When Museums Are Entrusted With the Dead
Friday, August 16, 2024
Curator Anna Dhody resigns from the Mütter Museum
Longtime curator Anna Dhody resigns from the Mütter Museum
Tuesday, July 30, 2024
Aug 7: Military Medicine and the Hidden Costs of War lecture at Library of Congress
Join the John W. Kluge Center and University of Minnesota Political Science Professor Tanisha M
Fazal for an event examining the effect improvements in medical care in conflict zones
on the long term costs of war. Fazal is the author of State Death: The Politics of Geography and
Conquest, Occupation, and Annexation, and Wars of Law: Unintended Consequences in the
Regulation of Armed Conflict. This event will be available to watch live, virtually as well as in person in room LJ-119 of the Thomas Jefferson Building at the Library of Congress.
202-707-6362 or ADA@loc.gov
August 7, 2024
4:00pm
Thomas Jefferson Building,
Room LJ-119
FOR MORE INFORMATION
Michael Stratmoen - 202-707-3751
Wednesday, February 28, 2024
Swann Fellow Lecture, Tuesday, March 12 in Library of Congress
12:00-1:00 pm Tuesday, March 12, 2024
Swann Fellow Lecture
surgery's so-called "torturous" past to legitimize the practices of elite, university-trained medical men, reducing the once valued work of middling and lower-class practitioners to quackery. Drawing from the Library of Congress's eighteenth- and nineteenth-century caricatures, her research traces changes in the public perception of surgery and how visual media across disciplines would transform the surgeon (and his tools) into powerful metaphors of European and American modernity. This event will be recorded.
Graphic Art, sduk@loc.gov
Monday, February 26, 2024
WaPo articles on Smithsonian human remains collections
Smithsonian should speed up return of human remains, task force says
The Collection
1/9
Sunday, August 20, 2023
Monday, August 14, 2023
Anatomical collections under attack
Revealing the Smithsonian's 'racial brain collection'
'Macabre curiosities': top US medical museum confronts skeletons of its past
Mütter Museum in Philadelphia at centre of ethics dispute over provenance of its collection of skulls, fetuses and body parts
A Museum of 'Electrifying Frankness' Weighs Dialing It Down
The Mütter Museum, a beloved 19th-century collection of medical curiosities and human remains in Philadelphia, wants to adopt a more "respectful" approach. Some fans won't have it.
By Franz Lidz
Friday, June 9, 2023
NMHM featured in WaPo
Get bitten by bug fever this Saturday at the medical museum
Friday, March 31, 2023
Wednesday, February 1, 2023
Exhibit at Walter Reed Highlights African Americans in Civil War Medicine
Exhibit at Walter Reed Highlights African Americans in Civil War Medicine
https://www.dvidshub.net/news/437560/exhibit-walter-reed-highlights-african-americans-civil-war-medicine
Monday, January 30, 2023
Scott Schoner, former Army Medical Dept. Museum curator has passed away
Tuesday, January 24, 2023
Hunterian museum removes Irish Giant from display
London Museum Removes 'Irish Giant' Skeleton From Display
The remains of Charles Byrne, a 7-foot-7 man who died in 1783, will no longer be on public view, an effort to address what one official at the Hunterian Museum called a historical wrong.
By Claire Moses
Sunday, January 15, 2023
Monday, December 12, 2022
The former AFIP in the news
The founding as the Army Medical Museum is mentioned in passing, AFIP's name is not, and the museum's continuing existence as a separate entity isn't either.
Inside Google's Quest to Digitize Troops' Tissue Samples
Friday, December 3, 2021
Centers for Disease Control Museum on Atlas Obscura podcast
Visit a museum inside the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta, Georgia, which documents how public health officials have slowed the spread of disease through history.
Dec 2 2021