Chronology of the
Life of William Henry Welch
(8 April 1850 - 30 April 1934)
|
Early Years
1850 - 1866
|
William Henry Welch was born on April 8, 1850 in Norfolk, Connecticut to William Wickham
Welch and Emeline Collin Welch. Six months later on October 29, Emeline Welch died leaving
her newly born son and three-year old daughter, Emeline Alice without a mother. While his
sister was sent to live with maternal relatives, Welch was reared by his father and
paternal grandmother. His father, who came from a long line of physicians, practiced
medicine in Norfolk. In 1866 Welchs father married Emily Sedgwick.
|
Schooling
1856 - 1866 |
In Norfolk Welch first attended the Misses Nettletons School and
then the Norfolk Academy. At the age of 13 he went to the Winchester Institute, a boarding
school. In the spring of 1866 he completed his studies at the Winchester Institute.
|
Higher Education and Professional Beginnings
1866 - 1885
|
1866 Entered Yale University where he concentrated on Greek and the
classics. The four-year curriculum offered very few courses in the sciences. Welch had no
interest in becoming a physician; his primary ambition was to become a tutor of Greek. At
the end of his junior year he was elected to Skull and Bones, a senior honorary
fraternity.
|
1870 Received the A.B. degree from Yale University
|
1870-1871 Helped to organize a new school in Norwich, NY and taught there
for an academic year. German and Cicero were among the courses he taught. At the end of
the school term, he decided to follow family tradition and become a physician. He returned
to Norfolk and served as an apprentice to his father.
|
1872 Enrolled for several months in a post-graduate course in chemistry at
Sheffield Scientific School of Yale University.
|
1872 - 1875 Entered the College of Physicians and Surgeons in New York
City. While at Physicians and Surgeons, Welch attended a summer session at Bellevue
Medical College and took a course in physical diagnosis at University Medical College.
During his second year, Edward Seguin awarded Welch a microscope for the best report on
nervous diseases. In his last year he won the colleges coveted thesis prize for a
comprehensive study of goiter in the English, German, and French medical literature.
|
1875 Received the M.D. degree from College of Physicians and Surgeons
|
1875-1876 Served an internship at Bellevue Hospital, where Abraham Jacobi
engendered his interest in the German medical sciences and Francis Delafield encouraged
his study of French medicine. Delafield, a teacher of pathological anatomy, promoted the
autopsy as a major source of medical knowledge. Rather than becoming a practitioner, Welch
chose to become a researcher of pathological anatomy.
|
1876 Sailed for Europe, on April 19th, where he studied at the
universities of Strasbourg, Leipzig, Breslau, Vienna, and Berlin.
|
| Strasbourg
May - July 1876 Studied gross anatomy with von Recklinghausen (pupil of
Virchow), normal pathology with Waldeyer, physiological chemistry with Hoppe-Seyler, and
heart disease with von Leyden.
|
| Leipzig
Aug 1876 - Mar 1877 Enrolled in Ernst Wagners pathological
institute; entered the physiology laboratory of Carl Ludwig; attended Rudolf
Leukorts daily lectures in comparative anatomy.
|
| Breslau
Apr 1877 Studied physiological pathology with Julius Cohnhein, where he
developed a special interest in bacteriology. He also took a course in general botany in
Ferdinand Cohens laboratory.
|
| Vienna
Oct 26 - Dec 8 1877 Took courses on the skin taught by Hebru, courses on
psychiatry and neurology by Meynert, and on embryology by Waldeyer.
|
| New
York
1878 - 1884 Taught pathological anatomy and general pathology at Bellevue
Hospital Medical College. Developed the first laboratory course in pathology in America
and founded the first pathological laboratory. The course became very popular, attracting
medical students from other schools.
|
1884 Interviewed in early March by Daniel Gilman, President of the Johns Hopkins
University, and offered the professorship of pathology. Finally on March 31, Welch
accepted the position. The offer included another year of travel and study in Europe and
funding to set up a pathological laboratory at Johns Hopkins.
|
Sep 1884 - Aug 1885 While in Europe, Welch studied the organization and instrumentation of
the most renowned laboratories, including those of Koch, Bollinger, Kitt, von Pettenkofer,
von Ziemssen, Weigert, Ludwig, Flugge, and Pasteur. There he collected cultures to take to
Johns Hopkins and also purchased laboratory instruments and equipment.
|
| Johns
Hopkins
1884-1934
In addition to organizing the pathological laboratory, Welch was instrumental in
planning the new medical school. He helped to raise funds and recruit faculty, and served
as the first dean of the School of Medicine.
|
1884-1916 First Baxley Professor of Pathology, The Johns Hopkins University
|
1889-1916 First Pathologist-in-Chief, The Johns Hopkins Hospital
|
1893-98 First Dean, The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
|
1916-26 First Director, Johns Hopkins University School of Hygiene and
Public Health
|
1926-29 In the latter years of his career, Welch turned his focus to the
history of the health professions. He proposed an institute modeled on the Institute of
the History of Medicine at the University of Leipzig. During this time Welch was
also involved in planning a new medical library, intended to serve all of the health
divisions at Johns Hopkins. He embarked on a sabbatical in Europe, where he visited the
University of Leipzig's Institute and several other universities, as well as libraries and
booksellers. He recruited faculty for the proposed institute and acquired books for the
new library. In October 1929, the Johns Hopkins University Institute of the History of
Medicine and the William H. Welch Medical Library were dedicated, sharing the same
building.
|
1928-34 Member, Advisory Board, Johns Hopkins University, Institute for
Biological Research.
|
1929-30 First Director, The Johns Hopkins University, Institute of the
History of Medicine.
|
| Military
Service, United States Army
1917-1921
Like many members of the Johns Hopkins faculty, Welch went to Europe with
the U.S. Army Medical Corps during World War I.
|
1917 Commanding Major, Medical Reserve Corps, July 16. Awarded
Distinguished Service Medal
|
1918 Lieutenant Colonel, February 20 Colonel, July 24.
Honorable Discharge, December 31
|
1919 Colonel, Medical Section, Officers Reserve Corps, February 24
|
1921 Brigadier General, Officers Reserve Corps, December 31
|
| Rockefeller
Foundation Affiliations
1901-1934
Welch gave many years of service to the Rockefeller Foundation. He was
instrumental in planning and developing the Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research and
served on various committees and boards concerned with matters of international public
health. Welch also served on the Foundations China Medical Board, whose mission was
to bring western medical education and practice to China. In 1915, Welch went to China
with the China Medical Commission (a subcommittee of the China Medical Board) in order to
visit hospitals and medical schools and evaluate worthy candidates for Rockefeller
funding. The Commission decided to fund the Peking Union Medical College, including a
reformed curriculum, new faculty, and several new buildings. In 1921, Welch returned to
China with the China Medical Board to attend the dedication of the new Peking Union
Medical College.
|
1901-33 First President of the Board of Scientific Directors, Rockefeller
Institute for Medical Research
|
1909-14 Rockefeller Sanitary Commission
|
1913-15 International Health Commission
|
1913-18 Rockefeller Health Commission
|
1913-32 General Education Board
|
1914-28 China Medical Board
|
1914-15 China Medical Commission
|
1916-27 International Health Board
|
| Appointments
at Other Institutions
1896-1934
As a result of his work at Johns Hopkins and with the Rockefeller
Foundation, Welch quickly became a widely-respected figure in the fields of pathology,
education, and public health. He was called upon to share his expertise with a wide range
of public and private institutions. The following is a selection of posts Welch held.
|
1896 Founding editor of the Journal of Experimental Medicine.
Welchs article on gas bacillus appeared in the first issue.
|
1898-1922 President, Maryland State Board of Health
|
1906 U.S. Department of Agriculture Meat Inspection Commission
|
1906-34 Trustee, Carnegie Institution of Washington
|
1907-34 Advisory Board, Hygienic Laboratory, U.S. Public Health Service
|
1913-22 Trustee, Hooper Foundation for Medical Research (University of
California)
|
1915-31 Trustee, Peking Union Medical College
|
1917 Trustee, Shanghai Medical College
|
1921 Advisory Board, Gorgas Memorial Institute, Panama
|
1922 Chairman, Health Advisory Committee, American Red Cross
|
1922 First President of the Board, Happy Hills Convalescent Home for
Children
|
1922-34 Advisory Committee on the Education of Sanitarians, U.S. Public
Health Service
|
1924-34 League of Nations Health Section
|
1930 Trustee, American School of Damascus
|
1931 National Institute of Health, Health Advisory Council
|
| Professional
Associations
1891-1934
Welch's active involvement in numerous professional associations,
reflected his diverse interests. The following list is a selection of the offices Welch
held in professional associations.
|
1891-92 President, Medical and Chirurgical Faculty of the State of Maryland
|
1897 President, Congress of American Physicians and Surgeons
|
1897 First President, Maryland Public Health Association
|
1901 President, Association of American Physicians
|
1901 President, Society of American Bacteriologists
|
1906 President, American Association of Pathologists and Bacteriologists
|
1906-07 President, American Association for the Advancement of Science
|
1910-11 President, American Medical Association
|
1910-11 President, National Tuberculosis Association
|
1913-16 President, National Academy of Science
|
1916-19 President, American Social Hygiene Association
|
1920 Founding member, History of Science Society
|
1920 President, All-America Conference on Venereal Diseases
|
1923 Organizing Committee, International Committee for Mental Hygiene
|
1927 President, American Association of the History of Medicine
|
1928-34 Honorary President, American Foundation for Mental Hygiene
|
1930 Vice President, International Congress on Mental Hygiene
|
1931 President, History of Science Society
|
| Later
Years
1931-1934
1932 Continued to lecture, write, and take an active interest in medicine
and education, with a special focus on the history of medicine. In 1932, he recalled his
experiences in a documentary film entitled "Reminiscences of the Early Days of the
Medical (J.H.U.) School and Some Developments of a Most Significant Period in Medical
Sciences."
|
Feb 1933-Apr 1934 Entered the Johns Hopkins Hospital as a patient; he
remained there until his death from prostate cancer on April 30, 1934.
|
| Awards
and Special Recognition
Throughout his life, and posthumously, Welch was the recipient of many
awards and honors.
|
1911 Royal Order of the Crown of Prussia
|
1927 Kober Medal, American Association of Physicians
|
1928 On March 5 the Trustees of The Johns Hopkins University moved that
the new library under construction be named the William H. Welch Medical Library
|
1931 Harben Medal, Royal Institute of Public Health William H. Welch
Professorship in the History of Medicine
|