
The Boston Medical Library (est. 1875) of
Boston
Boston (), officially the City of Boston, is the capital city, state capital and List of municipalities in Massachusetts, most populous city of the Commonwealth (U.S. state), Commonwealth of Massachusetts, as well as the cultural and financ ...
,
Massachusetts, was originally organized to alleviate the problem that had emerged due to the scattered distribution of medical texts throughout the city. It has evolved into the "largest academic medical library in the world".
Early history
In 1875, the Society for Medical Observation, the
Society for Medical Improvement, the Treadwell Library at the
Massachusetts General Hospital
Massachusetts General Hospital (Mass General or MGH) is the original and largest teaching hospital of Harvard Medical School located in the West End neighborhood of Boston, Massachusetts. It is the third oldest general hospital in the United Stat ...
, and the Public Library all had volumes of information that needed to be more accessible to physicians.
This was the second attempt to create a medical library in the city;
the first attempt was in 1805. This second library was incorporated with the first "as an independent institution under the control of the profession as a whole".
James Read Chadwick, a gynecologist, collected books, pamphlets, and medical periodicals and make this material accessible to the practicing physician. It later became the later the Boston Medical Library (BML).
Oliver Wendell Holmes Sr., Parkman Professor of Anatomy and Physiology at Harvard,
served as the BML's first president and writer
Librarian.
The Francis A. Countway Library of Medicine
In 1960, the BML and the
Harvard Medical Library combined their collections. It was housed in a new building named for
Lever Brothers executive Francis A. Countway, whose sister, after his death, gave $3.5 million of his fortune toward the library.
Current developments
In 1999, the Rare Books and Special Collections Department of the Countway Library assumed custodial responsibility for the
Warren Anatomical Museum. Among its holdings is the skull of
Phineas Gage
Phineas P. Gage (18231860) was an American railroad construction foreman known for his improbable survival of an accident in which a large iron rod was driven completely through his head, destroying much of his brain's left frontal lobe, and ...
, whose life after a traumatic brain injury contributed significantly to medical science.
The department was renamed the Center for the History of Medicine in 2004.
It hosts rotating exhibits about the history of medicine from the library collections. The displays are located in the lobby area and are open to the public. , however, exhibits are closed while the Library undergoes a renovation; the building is slated to reopen in 2021.
According to the History of Medicine Division of the
National Institutes of Health's National Library of Medicine, The Francis A. Countway Library of Medicine is the "largest academic medical library in the world, and its collections, which have been formed over nearly two centuries, sometimes through the medical holdings of other libraries, include rare and historical materials that can be numbered among the largest in the world."
The ''
New England Journal of Medicine'' noted that The Francis A. Countway Library of Medicine loaned out material from the 19th century in order to make the 2010 electronic-conversion possible, as paper copies of some issues of the ''Journal'' were found missing from their own archive.
Collections
Boston Medical Library includes the following collections:
*National Archives of Plastic Surgery, established in 1972 by
Robert Goldwyn
*History of medicine (802
incunabula
In the history of printing, an incunable or incunabulum (plural incunables or incunabula, respectively), is a book, pamphlet, or broadside that was printed in the earliest stages of printing in Europe, up to the year 1500. Incunabula were pro ...
)
*European books printed 16th–20th centuries
*English books published 1475–20th century, American books 18th–20th centuries, Bostoniana
*Medical
Hebraica and
Judaica, 14th–20th centuries
*Manuscripts and archives, especially of New England origin (20 million items)
*Medical library of
Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr. (900 titles)
*Warren Library of early works in surgery (2,000 volumes)
*
Friedrich Tiedemann
Friedrich Tiedemann FRS HFRSE (23 August 178122 January 1861) was a German anatomist and physiologist. He was an expert on the anatomy of the brain.
Tiedemann spent most of his life as professor of anatomy and physiology at Heidelberg, a posit ...
collection of anatomy and physiology (4,000 items)
*Historical collection in
radiology
*Medical prints, photographs and artwork (35,000)
*Storer Collection of medical medals (6,000)
See also
*
Boston Medical Library (1805–1826)
References
Further reading
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External links
Countway Library of Medicine*
*
{{DEFAULTSORT:Boston Medical Library
1875 establishments in Massachusetts
Libraries in Mission Hill, Boston
Medical libraries
University and college academic libraries in the United States
Harvard Library
Harvard Medical School
Libraries established in 1875