Daniel Hale Williams

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Daniel Hale Williams

Daniel Hale Williams, c. 1900
Born January 18, 1856
Hollidaysburg, Pennsylvania
Died August 4, 1931
Idlewild, Michigan
Nationality American
Education Chicago Medical College
Occupation Surgeon
Title Dr
Spouse(s) Alice Johnson
Children 0
Parents Daniel and Sarah Price Williams

Daniel Hale Williams (January 18, 1856 - August 4, 1931) was the first African-American heart surgeon.[1] He was known as one of the most skilled American surgeons of his era.citation needed Williams is known today for performing an early surgery on the pericardium, repairing a knife wound with the use of sutures. He performed this surgery at Provident Hospital,[2] Chicago, on July 10, 1893, a hospital which he founded, and one of the few hospitals that welcomed African Americans. He is sometimes credited as the first surgeon to perform a fully successful open heart surgery. Others had performed similar procedures, after which patients sometimes recovered, but did not survive long-term.citation needed

He was born in Hollidaysburg, Pennsylvania, to Daniel and Sarah Price Williams, a middle-class free black family. In 1883, Williams graduated from the Chicago Medical College, known today as Northwestern University's Feinberg School of Medicine and began his medical career in the office of Surgeon General Henry Palmer in Janesville, Wisconsin.

In 1893 Williams repaired the torn pericardium of James Cornish, who had suffered a knife wound to the heart. This was the second repair of a wound to the pericardium on record, the first having been performed by Dr. Henry Dalton.[3] Even earlier successful pericardial surgeries were performed in the early 19th century by Francisco Romero, a Spanish surgeon, and Napoleon's physician, Baron Dominique-Jean Larrey.[4]

During the administration of President Grover Cleveland, Williams was appointed as Surgeon-in-Chief of Freedman's Hospital in Washington, D.C., another of the few hospitals that would admit African Americans. In addition to organizing the hospital, Williams also established a training school for African-American nurses at the facility.

Williams was a teacher of Clinical Surgery at Meharry Medical College in Nashville, Tennessee and was an attending surgeon at Cook County Hospital in Chicago. He worked hard to create more hospitals for African Americans. In 1895 he co-founded the National Medical Association for black doctors, and in 1913 he became a charter member and the only black in the American College of Surgeons. Williams died of a stroke on August 4, 1931 in Idlewild, Michigan.

In 1898, Williams married Alice Johnson, daughter of the sculptor Moses Jacob Ezekiel and a maid. .[5]

Williams was honoured, amongst others, for his achievements in the Stevie Wonder song Black Man, from the album Songs in the Key of Life.[6]

References

  • Beatty, William K., Williams, Daniel Hale, American National Biography Online Feb. 2000.
  • Yenser, Thomas (editor), Who's Who in Colored America: A Biographical Dictionary of Notable Living Persons of African Descent in America, Who's Who in Colored America, Brooklyn, New York, 1930-1931-1932 (Third Edition)
  • Harlan, et al (editors), Booker T. Washington Papers, Vol. 9, p.396
  • Daniel Hale Williams article from Encyclopedia Britannica
  • Buckler, Helen Daniel Hale Williams 1968. Pitman, New York.

External links

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  • This page was last modified on 22 September 2008, at 00:36.

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