Osler Came to Boston

Osler Came to Boston

Harvard University, engraving made from a water color by Richard Rummell (1848–1924). Courtesy of Arader Galleries New York City, via www.iconiccollegeviews.com. Osler came to Boston Charles T. Ambrose, MD The author was elected to AΩA as a faculty member at Montreal, Philadelphia, Baltimore, and Oxford. Osler did the University of Kentucky in 1980. He is a professor in postgraduate research for a year or so in London, where he the Department of Microbiology and Immunology at the reportedtheroleofplateletsinbloodclotting.Heoftencame University of Kentucky in Lexington. Besides teaching toNewYorkCity,mostlytoboardshipsforpassagetoEurope. pathogenic microbiology, he is a longtime instructor in the He frequented Boston professionally and during his middle history of medicine and the history of microbiology. yearsvisitedtherethefamilyofhiswife,GraceLinzeeRevere Gross(“theWidowGross,”asOslersometimescalledher),the oston can lay claim to being the home of many no- great-granddaughterofBoston’sPaulRevere. tablefiguresinmedicinebutnotthatofWilliamOsler Duringthefourdecadesbetween1876and1913Oslermade B(1849–1919). He was the preeminent English-speaking atleastninetripstoBostontolearnaboutadvancesinmedi- physician at the turn of the twentieth century but is not so caleducation,tosharehisclinicalexpertise,andtorelatehis widely recognized today among younger physicians in spite humanisticviewsonmedicineintalksbeforevariousgroups. of the efforts of a small international society dedicated to his memory, the American Osler Society. Born in Canada, 1875: Boston medicine Osler taught successively at McGill University (1870–1884), In 1875 Osler was twenty-six years old and a young pro- the University of Pennsylvania (1884–1889), and the Johns fessor at the McGill Medical School. In August of that year HopkinsMedicalSchool(1889–1905).Hespenthisfinalyears he traveled down to Boston, as Harvey Cushing wrote, “to as the Regius Professor of Medicine at Oxford (1905–1919) familiarize himself with its medical traditions” and to do andwasknightedin1911.Thushelivedmainlyinfourcities: some library research.1p142 He had a letter of introduction 18 The Pharos/Summer2011 Sir William Osler at the bedside at Johns Hopkins Hospital, circa 1903-1904. Courtesy of the Osler Library of the History of Medicine, McGill University. The Pharos/Summer2011 19 Osler came to Boston William Osler and his wife, Grace Revere Osler, in Oxford, probably 1894. Courtesy of the Osler Library of the History of Medicine, McGill University. John Collins Warren, Henry Pickering Bowditch, and William Osler on Bowditch’s front steps in Boston, 1909. Courtesy of the Osler Library of the History of Medicine, McGill University. to the foremost physician in Boston, the venerated Henry 5. A three-year-long sequence of courses running nine IngersollBowditch(1808–1892).Bowditchhadstudiedunder months each year and involving written examinations was PierreLouisinFranceandhadtranslatedLouis’monograph instituted.2p33 ontyphoid.YoungOslerspentamemorableeveningwiththe AttheNorthGroveStreetschool,Oslerwasimpressedwith elderlyphysiciananduponleavingwasgivenabundleofDr. the physiology course taught by Henry Pickering Bowditch Bowditch’sreprintswiththispartingadvice:tokeepareprint (1840–1911), whom he had previously met when visiting his ofeverythinghe,Osler,shouldwrite. uncle, the elderly Dr. Bowditch. The younger Bowditch had studiedunderPaulBrocaandJeanCharcotandhadspenttime 1877: Harvard Medical School withClaudeBernardandthehistologistPaulRanvier.Osler Twoyearslater,inApril1877,OslerstayedaweekinBoston admired the school’s three student physiology labs, all well visitingHarvardMedicalSchool,whichwasthenlocatedon equipped with microscopes, microtomes, and kymographs. NorthGroveStreetneartheMassachusettsGeneralHospital. Hejudgedtheinstructionofferedthereinchemistryandpa- The medical school had been undergoing major educational thologyequallysuperior.Butperhapsaboveall,Oslerenvied changesfollowingtheinaugurationofCharlesEliotaspresi- theautopsysuiteattheMassachusettsGeneralHospital.Inan dentofHarvardin1869.Eliothadbeenappalledatthepoor articlewrittenlaterthatyearheurgedallAmericanmedical qualityofincomingHarvardmedicalstudents.Three-fourths schoolstofollow“thegoodexampleofHarvard.”3p274Osler’s ofthemhadonlyahighschooldiploma.Whilethelaterclinical interest in medical education dated from the two Boston trainingwasgoodinBoston’sseveralhospitals,thepreclinical visits. instructionlastedonlytwoyearsandconsistedoffivemonths oflecturesrepeatedinthesecondyear.Examsweregivenorally 1883: Harvard Medical School centennial andwereverycursory.Professorswerepaidbystudentfees, During the fall of 1883, while still at McGill, Osler made which invited popular courses over rigorous ones. But these his third trip to Boston to attend the centennial celebration conditionscharacterizedmostotherU.S.medicalschools. of Harvard Medical School at its new location on Boylston Eliotintroducedthefollowingchanges: Street.OliverWendellHolmes,aformerdeanandtheemeri- 1. Theuniversitycollectedstudentfees tusprofessorofAnatomy,gavealongaddress,reviewingthe 2. Instructorswereplacedonaregularsalary medical school’s history. The first classes in 1783 had been 3. Admissionstandardswereraised taughtinthebasementofHarvardHallinCambridge;in1810 4. Thebasicsciencecurriculumwasreformed,withteach- themedicalschoolbeganitsmovesthroughasuccessionof erstrainedinEuropeanresearchmethods locationsinBoston.ButforOsler,moreimportantthanthe 20 The Pharos/Summer2011 On the Quad with Harvard Medical School faculty, April 30, 1913. From left to right: Drs. John L. Bremer, Theobald Smith, Walter B. Cannon, J. Collins Warren, Milton J. Rosenau, David Linn Edsall, Charles S. Minot, Sir William Osler, Harvey Cushing, William T. Councilman, Henry A. Christian, and S. Burt Wolbach. Courtesy of the Brigham and Women’s Hospital Archives. school’shistorywasitsnewdean,whowasHenryPickering TothealumniaudienceOslerlamentedthatcoeducation Bowditch. He had expanded the new curriculum to include atHopkinsactuallyhadbeenafailurebecauseattheendof laboratorycoursesinhistology,bacteriology,andembryology. the first year one-third of the female students had dropped out for marriage.1p399 The truth of the matter was that only 1894: Harvard Alumni Association threewomenhadbeenadmittedtothefirstclassofeighteen In June of 1894, Osler, then in Baltimore for five years, students.1p388Later,anotherfemalestudentwaslostbecause came up to Boston to speak before the Harvard Medical she became a Christian Scientist.1p399 The next Hopkins Alumni Association. A few weeks before, the initial class at medicalclassincludedeightwomenamongthefortystudents theHopkinsMedicalSchoolhadjustcompleteditsfirstyear admitted. of basic sciences. At the alumni meeting, Osler described Hopkins’variouspreclinicalcourses.HeaddedthatHopkins 1901: Boston Medical Library differed from most other American medical schools in the In1901OsleragaintookthetrainupfromBaltimore—this controversialissueofadmittingwomentoallclasses.* time to speak at the dedication of a new building for the Boston Medical Library.1p544 During his very first visit to *Initially,OslerandWilliamHenryWelchhadnotfavoredthe Bostonin1875,hehadspenttimeintheoldlibrarysearching intrusionofwomenstudentsintotheirteachingprograms,butboth themedicalliteratureonhemorrhagicsmallpoxandthushad ultimatelyacceptedthembecauseofanendowmenttothemedical 5p133 schoolofhalfamilliondollarsbyagroupofBaltimoreladies,who greatrespectforthelibrary’scollection. Itwasinthistalk stipulatedadmissionofwomentoallclasses.Themedicalschoolwas in1901thatOslerdeclared,“Tostudythephenomenaofdis- finallyabletoopenin1893onlybecauseoftheirhalf-million-dollar easewithoutbooksistosailanunchartedsea,whiletostudy bequest.Severalyearsbefore,theBaltimoreladieshadmadeover- bookswithoutpatientsisnottogotoseaatall.”1p545 turesaboutcoeducationtoHarvardMedicalSchoolbuthadbeen rebuffedbytheconservativemedicalfacultythere. 1904: The Ingersoll Lecture AnotherprofessoratHopkins,Dr.WilliamT.Councilman,had beenmoreinflexiblethanOslerandWelchbecauseofastronglyheld In 1904 Osler was invited by President Eliot of Harvard theologicalbiasconcerningwomen.Howhisobjectionwasover- to give the Sixth Ingersoll Lecture, an annual address on 4pp199–201 comeiswelltoldbybothCushingandMichaelBliss but “TheImmortalityofMan.”Itwasaformidableundertaking, bearsrepeatingbrieflyhere.TheproblemofCouncilman’sintran- sigenceattheHopkinsMedicalSchooldisappearedwhenhewas sinceanearlierspeakerhadbeenWilliamJames,thefamous recruitedbacktohisalmamaterHarvardasprofessorofpathological pragmatic,agnosticphilosopher.Thelecturewasdeliveredin anatomy.Therehebecameasuccessfuldepartmentchairandlater Harvard’s intimidating Memorial Hall. Osler’s wife and her animportantfigureinlocalmedicalpolitics.AsOslerrelatedtohis Bostonfamily,theReveres,attended. HarvardMedicalAlumniaudience,“Wetookthemoney,andyou Oslerwasreluctanttodisclosepubliclyhisinnermostbe- tooktheman.Wehaveco-educationwithoutCouncilman,andyou [have]Councilmanwithoutco-education.”1p399 liefs,particularlywithhisin-lawspresent.Yearsbefore,when askedabouthisownreligion,hereplied,“I’mofthereligion The Pharos/Summer2011 21 Osler came to Boston With the staff of the Peter Bent Brigham Hospital, April 30, 1913, scarcely two months after the first patients had been received. Seated in the center row are Charles Sedgwick Minot, W. T. Councilman, H. A. Christian, Sir William Osler, John Collins Warren, Harvey Cushing, H. B. Howard, L. H. Burlingham W. B. Connor. Courtesy the Brigham

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