Jump to content

User:Joseph0618/John Shaw Billings

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
John Shaw Billings
John Shaw Billings ca. 1896
President of the American Library Association
In office
1901–1902
Preceded byHenry James Carr
Succeeded byJames Kendall Hosmer
Personal details
Born(1838-04-12)April 12, 1838
Allensville, Indiana, US
DiedMarch 11, 1913(1913-03-11) (aged 74)
New York City, US
Resting placeArlington National Cemetery
Spouse
Kate M. Stevens
(m. 1862; died 1912)
Children5
Education
Occupation
Military service
AllegianceUnited States United States
Branch/serviceUnion Army
Rank First lieutenant
UnitArmy of the Potomac
Battles/warsAmerican Civil War
Surgeon General's Library developed by John Shaw Billings
Portrait in the National Library of Medicine by Cecilia Beaux 1895.

John Shaw Billings (April 12, 1838 – March 11, 1913) was an American librarian, building designer, and surgeon.[1] However, he is best known as the modernizer of the Library of the Surgeon General's Office of the Army. His work with Andrew Carnegie led to the development and his service as the first director of the New York Public Library. Because of his approach to improving public health and hospitals, Billings headed the U.S. Census Bureau's division of Vital Statistics and oversaw statistical compilation of censuses. With Robert Fletcher, Billings developed Index Medicus, a monthly guide to contemporary medicine that ran for 16 months until his retirement at the Medical Museum and Library.[2] At the latter end of his work with the military, Billings aided the United States' Secretary of the Treasury in adjusting the organization of the military hospitals. With his growing credibility in the medical field, Billings also oversaw work done to aid those struggling with yellow fever. He also served as Johns Hopkins Hospital's medical advisor, authored reports regarding criteria for medical and nursing curricula, and hospital design.[3]

Biography

[edit]

Early Life

[edit]

John Shaw Billings was born on April 12, 1838 in Allensville, Switzerland County in Indiana. In the century before, his father's family moved to Syracuse, New York after leaving England in 1654. His father was born in Saratoga, New York and was kin of William Billings. Billings' mother, Abby Shaw Billings, was born in Raynham, Massachusetts.[4] In 1843, Billings' family moved to Rhode Island and later returned to Allensville, Indiana in 1848 due to the father's relocation of career as a postmaster.[5] During his childhood, Billings received education in both Providence, Rhode Island and Indiana. He inherited his mother's love for reading and learned Latin and Greek. Due to his love for learning and education, he agreed to renounce any inheritance if his father allowed him to attend college. In 1852, at the age of fourteen, Billings entered Miami University in Oxford, Ohio.[6] Through his five years at the university, he spent most of his time reading in the library. In 1857, Billings graduated from Miami University second in his class and was admitted a year later to Cincinnati's Medical College of Ohio, today the University of Cincinnati College of Medicine. Billings received his medical degree in 1860.[4] His thesis on "The Surgical Treatment of Epilepsy" drew attention from the faculty as it provided accurate indications of the operations implemented at the time.[7]

Civil War Medical Career

[edit]

Settling in Cincinnati, Billings decided to continue surgical practice. Hoping to improve hospital service on the battlefield, he became the anatomy demonstrator at the Cincinnati's Medical College. However, in 1861, he declined an offer to become a surgeon assistant.[6] Instead in 1861, Billings went in for an examination for the regular army, becoming first of his class. However, no vacant spots were available in the regular corps, so he was appointed to be an assistant surgeon in Union Hospital in Georgetown. [6] The year after, on April 16, Billings was commissioned first lieutenant, and then took charge of Cliffburne Hospital's development in Georgetown as Union Hospital's operations relocated to Cliffburne. In August of that year, he was transferred to Satterlee General Hospital, a new hospital in West Philadelphia. After serving as the Executive Officer at the hospital for several months, he was directed to the Army of the Potomac in March 1863 and was assigned to Sykes' Division of Meade's Corps in the 11th Infantry.[6]

Post Civil War Medical Career

[edit]

After the Civil War, Billings assumed direction of the Army Surgeon General's library from about 1867 to 1895. During this time, Billings expanded the library from 2,300 to 124,000 volumes, making it the largest medical library in the Americas. When Billings inherited the library, its contents were listed primarily by author and secondarily by subject. Billings redesigned the catalog with author and subject indexes. However, his catalog could not meet the demands of increased publications, so he created a separate indexing system for medical periodicals, which became known as the Index Medicus.[8]

Billings supervised the 1880 and 1890 U.S. Censuses and worked with the compilation of statistics. He played an important role as he introduced the punch-card system of calculating vital statistics with electro-mechanical methods, which was then implemented into the 1890 census.[6]

After he left the Surgeon General's Office, he united the libraries of New York to form the New York Public Library from 1896 to 1913. The punch-card system he introduced in the U.S. Censuses was further used in the New York Public Library construction. It was Billings who inspired Andrew Carnegie to provide $5 million for the construction of sixty-five branch libraries throughout New York and 2509 libraries in cities and towns across North America and Britain. During the library's construction, Billings directed the re-cataloging of the works from the Lenox, Tilden, and Astor Foundations, which were used to form the Library in 1895. Billings also recruited a young man named Harry Miller Lydenberg to work as his personal assistant and head of reference. Lydenberg expanded upon the collection practices of Billings, and eventually served as Director of NYPL from 1934-1941.[9]

Billings was the senior editor of books reporting the work of the Committee of Fifty to Investigate the Liquor Problem in the early 1900s. The Committee researched the activities and publications of the Department of Scientific Temperance Instruction of the Woman's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU).[10]

Affiliation with Johns Hopkins University

[edit]

Overview

[edit]

Billings' involvement with Johns Hopkins University began in the late 1870s with the initiation of his plans for the hospital and ended in 1889 with his rejection of the position of Hospital superintendent.[9]

Hospital Architecture

[edit]
An exterior view of the Octagon Ward of Johns Hopkins Hospital. This became one Billings' premier designs of the hospital.[11]
John Shaw Billings' architectural plans of Soldier's Home Hospital in Washington D.C. It included a plan that utilized a basement with fresh air ducts and a heating apparatus. This was incorporated into his designs of the Johns Hopkins Hospital.[12]

Billings is renowned for his work of planning the construction of the Johns Hopkins University Hospital. He is credited with designing the original buildings of Johns Hopkins Hospital, which opened in 1889, as well as conducting the national and international search for the initial faculty for Johns Hopkins University. He drafted organization and construction plans for the hospital in 1873 and also recommended the construction pavilion plan, which soon became a plan utilized across the nation. The design of the hospital was inspired by Billings' trips to several hospitals throughout Europe, where he learned the importance of cleanliness. He took European ideas of ventilation and applied them in the context of the hospital's environment, which was a crucial factor to consider in light of Baltimore's varying weather.[13] In addition, Billings' intentionally included electrical wiring in his plans, at a time where electricity wasn't fully accessible by the hospital, highlighting his capacities in design.[9] It is due to his contributions that the building with the hospital's trademark dome was subsequently named for Billings.[5]

Hospital Infrastructure

[edit]

Billings was involved in the hospital's infrastructure, as he wrote numerous reports regarding the training of hospital staff and the organization of the hospital administration.[14] He understood the importance of choosing who works in the hospital. By hiring the right people, Billings believed a lot of medical errors could be avoided, thus improving the efficacy of the hospital.[13] One of such people was William Henry Welch, whom he recommended to President Daniel Coit Gilman for hiring.[9]

Curriculum for Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

[edit]

Billings served as the primary advisor to Gilman, in charge of engineering and implementing the initial educational infrastructure of Johns Hopkins School of Medicine. During a time period where masses of students were trained to become doctors, Billings made decisions to ensure the quality of the students who entered and graduated the School of Medicine.[15] To achieve this, Billings harshened entrance requirements by requiring a bachelor's degree.[6] Furthermore, he proposed that the curriculum be a four-year program consisting of small-sized classes.[15]

Billings' proposed medical curricula and partitioning of faculty into departments based on specialties laid the foundation for the resurgence of modern medical schools in the United States. Department chairs of the medical school were jointly the heads of services at the Hopkins hospital, allowing both organizations to benefit from their expertise. Billings also played a significant role in the determination of the philosophy, structure, organization, and faculty of the Johns Hopkins Medical School.[15]

Billings emphasized Hopkins' Medical School's unique location in Baltimore as something to be taken fully advantage of, knowing its potential for research about illnesses as well as the capacity to treat them effectively.[9] Billings' therefore pressed for clinical laboratories at the School of Medicine, an idea inspired by other prestigious institutions such as Harvard and schools in Michigan and Pennsylvania.[15]

Scientific Contributions

[edit]

Public Health Service

[edit]

Throughout the years of 1869 to 1874, Billings was appointed by the Secretary of the Treasury to inspect and report upon the hygienic conditions of the Marine Hospital Service. With this appointment, Billings was required to travel across the United States in order to inspect and provide recommendations for improving the sanitations policies of the hospitals. In accordance to Billings' recommendations, the Secretary of the Treasury acknowledged Billings' contributions to improving the hospitals by saying, "The condition of the marine hospitals has been improved during the past year. This result is largely due to Dr. J. S. Billings, of the Surgeon-General's Office, who has visited nearly all of them, and through whose advice many important changes have been made." His main contribution to the hospital service was take the organization methods out of political hands and affiliate it with those with military methods of organization. This became known as the Public Health Service, which is the branch of government that works with the medical personnel of the Army and Navy to further preventive medicine.[16]

Yellow Fever

[edit]

In 1879 Billings with Dr. Charles F. Folsom, Colonel George E. Waring, Jr., and other members of the National Board of Health surveyed citizens of Memphis, Tennessee in order to gather data regarding the outbreak of yellow fever in the city. His recommendations to the city board members regarding the sanitation policies were described as a "miracle tonic" by local newspapers as yellow fever cases dropped following his visit. Billings details his findings about the disease in his article found in the International Review in January, 1880. In his article, he outlines the cause of the disease to be "a minute organism somewhat like the yeast plant, or it may be the product of such an organism, like alcohol". In addition to detailing the probable cause of the disease, Billings also wrote about observations he saw regarding the patients. These observations included where they had contracted they illness, physical symptoms, and possible transmission. He elaborates on the transmission process by saying in his article, "yellow fever can't go anywhere unless yer tote it", which served as the early theory for spread of yellow fever by mosquitoes.[17]

Notable achievements

[edit]

Contributions to the National Library of Medicine

[edit]

A senior surgeon in the war, Billings built the Library of the Surgeon General's Office (now the National Library of Medicine), the centerpiece of modern medical information systems.[18] Billings figured out how to analyze medical and demographic data mechanically by turning it into numbers and punching onto cardboard cards as developed by his assistant at the Census Bureau, Herman Hollerith. This was the origin of the computer punch card system that dominated statistical data manipulation until the 1970s. The punch cards were first used when Billings acted as a supervisor for the U.S. Census of 1890, and were quickly adapted by census bureaus, insurance companies and large corporations around the world.[19] He came up with the idea for the library when working on his doctoral thesis when he discovered that there was not one library that had the resources needed for his research. To fix this, John Shaw Billings built a collection and also created Index-catalogues. By the time Billings retired from the army, he had already collected 116,847 books and 191,598 pamphlets.[5] This collection made up the National Library of Medicine and it has grown ever since.

Billings' Building

[edit]

Billings was known for his expertise in hospital construction since the Civil War. He played a significant role in designing the Johns Hopkins Hospital, making the plans and perfecting the layout perfect for teaching. Billings also helped plan the building of six other institutions, including another hospital.[5] He is recognized for the contributions he made to the U.S. Army. His successful organization of army hospitals set him up for a continuing career in hospital planning.[5] Despite many changes since opening in 1889, the main entrance of Johns Hopkins Hospital remains the same and is known as the Billing's Building.

Other Feats

[edit]

Personal life

[edit]

Billings married Kate M. Stevens on September 3, 1862 in St. John's Church, Georgetown (Washington, D.C.). They had five children. His wife died on August 19, 1912, which was a tremendous blow to Billings.[21] During the last several years of his life, he developed a cancer of the lip in 1890 and was diagnosed with bilary calculus, causing him to undergo operation for his cancer and for the removal of his gall bladder. On March 11, 1913, Billings died of pneumonia after an operation for urinary calculus at the age of 74 in New York City.[22] He was buried at Arlington National Cemetery with military honors.[23][24]

His portrait,[25] painted by Cecilia Beaux, hangs in the Main Reading Room of the U.S. National Library of Medicine, where several collections of his papers are located.[26]

Works

[edit]

Among his publications are:[27]

  • "House-Drainage from Various Points of View" . Popular Science Monthly. Vol. 34. January 1889. ISSN 0161-7370 – via Wikisource.
  • Billings, John (1884). The principles of ventilation and heating, and their practical application (PDF). New York: The Sanitary engineer. OL 20621328M. (NLM) 63110980R.
  • Mortality and Vital Statistics of the United States (1885)
  • Medical Museums" (1888) Online at Google Books[28]
  • National Medical Dictionary (Two volumes, 1889)
  • Billings, John (1890). Description of the Johns Hopkins Hospital. Baltimore: [Press of I. Friedenwald]. (NLM) 68110400R.
  • Social Statistics of Cities (Six volumes, for the Eleventh Census)
  • Billings, John (June 17, 1902). Some Library Problems of To-Morrow. American Library Association.
  • Physiological Aspects of the Liquor Problem (1903)

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ Kelly, Howard A.; Burrage, Walter L. (eds.). "Billings, John Shaw" . American Medical Biographies . Baltimore: The Norman, Remington Company.
  2. ^ "Office of Medical History - Colonel John Shaw Billings". history.amedd.army.mil. Retrieved 2017-05-01.
  3. ^ Molnar, Heather. "The Four Founding Physicians". www.hopkinsmedicine.org. Retrieved 2020-04-15.
  4. ^ a b "John Shaw Billings | American surgeon and librarian". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 2020-04-15.
  5. ^ a b c d e "John Shaw Billings Centennial" (PDF). Retrieved 14 April 2017.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g "John Shaw Billings facts, information, pictures | Encyclopedia.com articles about John Shaw Billings". www.encyclopedia.com. Retrieved 2017-05-01.
  7. ^ "Editorial". Military Medicine. 128 (6): 551–552. 1963-06-01. doi:10.1093/milmed/128.6.551. ISSN 0026-4075.
  8. ^ 1967-, Forte, Eric J. (2017-11-21). Fundamentals of government information : mining, finding, evaluating, and using government resources. Hartnett, Cassandra J., 1964-, Sevetson, Andrea (Second ed.). Chicago. ISBN 9780838913956. OCLC 1006879919. {{cite book}}: |last= has numeric name (help)CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  9. ^ a b c d e Molnar, Heather. "But First There Was Billings". www.hopkinsmedicine.org. Retrieved 2020-04-15.
  10. ^ "John Shaw Billings". publicquotes.com. Retrieved 2020-05-05.
  11. ^ Walsh, Kieran (2016-04-27), "Octagon Ward at Johns Hopkins Hospital", Medical Education, CRC Press, pp. 183–184, ISBN 978-0-429-15439-3, retrieved 2020-03-23
  12. ^ Schrier, Robert W. (1993-09-15). "Back to the Old Soldiers' Home?". Hospital Practice. 28 (9): 11–12. doi:10.1080/21548331.1993.11442839. ISSN 2154-8331.
  13. ^ a b Risse, Guenter B., 1932- (2011). Mending bodies, saving souls : a history of hospitals. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-505523-8. OCLC 862148135.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  14. ^ "John Shaw Billings". Association for Information Science and Technology | ASIS&T. Retrieved 2020-04-15.
  15. ^ a b c d Shryock, Richard Harrison (1969). The unique influence of the Johns Hopkins University on American medicine. Amsterdam: Swets & Zeitlinger. OCLC 248325133.
  16. ^ Mitchell, S. W. (1913-12-12). "MEMOIR OF JOHN SHAW BILLINGS". Science. 38 (989): 827–833. doi:10.1126/science.38.989.827. ISSN 0036-8075.
  17. ^ Mitchell, S. W. (1913-12-12). "MEMOIR OF JOHN SHAW BILLINGS". Science. 38 (989): 827–833. doi:10.1126/science.38.989.827. ISSN 0036-8075.
  18. ^ James H. Cassedy, "Numbering the North's Medical Events: Humanitarianism and Science in Civil War Statistics," Bulletin of the History of Medicine, (1992) 66#2 pp 210-233
  19. ^ Allen Kent; et al. (1975). Encyclopedia of Library and Information Science. CRC Press. p. 338. ISBN 9780824720148.
  20. ^ American Antiquarian Society Members Directory
  21. ^ "John Shaw Billings | ASIS&T". www.asist.org. Retrieved 2017-05-03.
  22. ^ Mitchell, S. (August 1917). "Biographical Memoir of John Shaw Billings" (PDF). Retrieved April 20, 2017.
  23. ^ Garrison, F. H., & Hasse, A. R. (1915). John Shaw Billings. (p. 328-329)
  24. ^ Griffith, John (1 March 2001). "Find A Grave". Find A Grave.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  25. ^ "Objects of Art: Colonel John Shaw Billings, M.D." U.S. National Library of Medicine. 2012-02-27. Retrieved 2013-05-30.
  26. ^ "John Shaw Billings Papers 1841-1975". National Library of Medicine.
  27. ^ Lydenberg (1924)
  28. ^ French translation (1888): [John Shaw] Billings. "Les musées médicaux". La Revue scientifique, p. 594, at Google Books. Vol. 42. An editor of the Revue (see footnote) considers that American medical museums have become an example for France.

References

[edit]
[edit]
Non-profit organization positions
Preceded by President of the American Library Association
1901–1902
Succeeded by