Repository Guide to the Personal Papers Collections of
Alan Mason Chesney Medical Archives
Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions

The Samuel James Crowe Collection

 

Samuel James Crowe by Jacques Maroger; oil on canvas, 33 by 29.5 inches, 1954.

 

 

Collection Summary 

Creator
Crowe, Samuel James

Dates
16 Apr 1883-13 Nov 1955

Institutional Affiliation(s)
Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
1908-1955

Johns Hopkins Hospital
1908-1952 

Date Range of Collection
1905-1920

Volume of Collection
5 linear feet

 

 

Biography

Samuel James Crowe was born in Washington County, Virginia. He received his A.B. from the University of Georgia in 1904. Upon the urging of his father to pursue a career in medicine, Crowe entered the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in 1904, obtaining his M.D. in 1908. After graduating from medical school, he was appointed assistant in surgery under Harvey W. Cushing in the Hunterian Laboratory. He worked with Cushing for four years as an assistant and resident, and when Cushing left Johns Hopkins for Harvard University, Crowe planned on accompanying him. William S. Halsted persuaded Crowe to accept directorship of the new division of otolaryngology at Johns Hopkins. To prepare for the new post, Crowe spent time training in Germany. He met the challenges of the new field and is credited with establishing the first modern clinic of otolaryngology in the United States. He was also the first to recognize that lymphoid tissue blockage of the eustachian tube was responsible for hearing loss in children and that such a loss could be prevented or reversed by the removal of the excess tissue through surgery or radon therapy. Crowe foresaw the role that the audiometer would play in the medical field and used the instrument in studies correlating functional performance of the ear with the histological sections of the middle and inner ear. 

Scope and Content

The Samuel James Crowe Collection focuses on the first half of his career at Johns Hopkins. Series include correspondence, notes from experiments, miscellaneous ENT papers, and reprints. Patient files and photographs are primarily concerned with physical deformities. The collection also contains some personal memorabilia, including a notebook that Crowe kept while in Germany during the summer of 1905.



Policy on Access and Use

This collection may contain some restricted records. Materials pertaining to patients, students, employees, and human research subjects, as well as unprocessed collections and recent administrative records, carry restrictions on access. For more information about the policies and procedures for access, see Policy on Access and Use.


Permissions and Credits

When citing material from this collection, credit The Alan Mason Chesney Medical Archives of The Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions. For permission to reproduce images, contact the holder of the copyright.

For permissions contact:
archives@jhmi.edu
 


Copyright © 1999

The copyright to the entire content of this guide, including text, image source files, HTML and SGML source codes, and presentation, is owned by The Johns Hopkins Health System and The Johns Hopkins University.  All rights reserved. 
 

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