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Medical
Books at Yale from 1701 to 1933
Founding
of the Yale Medical Library, 1934-41
The
Yale Medical Library, 1941-1990
The
Cushing/Whitney Medical Library and the Growth of Electronic Resources,
1990-2001
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THE MEDICAL LIBRARY AT YALE, 1701-2001
Founding of the Yale Medical Library, 1934-41
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PROJECT TO BUILD A NEW MEDICAL LIBRARY, 1934
Harvey Cushing broached to John F. Fulton and Arnold C. Klebs the
plan of joining forces and donating their combined rare book collections
to Yale. Cushing approached Yale officials concerning an appropriate
place to house the collections. Shown here is the text of the first
of the series of letters between Cushing, Fulton, and Klebs which
were published in 1959 as Making of the Library.
The making of a library : extracts from letters, 1934-1941,
of Harvey Cushing, Arnold C. Klebs [and] John F. Fulton; presented
to John Fulton by his friends on his sixtieth birthday, 1 November
1959. New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, c1959.
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| FOUNDERS OF THE YALE MEDICAL LIBRARY,
HARVEY CUSHING, 1869-1939 |
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Cushing, internationally renown for his
preeminence in neurosurgery, returned in 1933 to his beloved alma
mater, Yale (Class of 1891), as Professor of Neurology. Disciple and
biographer of William Osler, Cushing turned to book collecting early
in his career. His collecting was very broad, but among his special
interests were Vesaliana, medieval manuscripts and incunabula. Toward
the end of his life he was working on his Bio-Bibliography of
Andreas Vesalius, published posthumously in 1943. This photograph
dates from 1933. |
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FOUNDERS OF THE YALE MEDICAL LIBRARY: JOHN FARQUHAR FULTON,
1899-1960
John Fulton, the youngest of the three founders of the Historical
Library, trained in medicine at Harvard and Oxford, came to Yale
in 1930 as professor of physiology. He had been a disciple of Harvey
Cushing’s at the Peter Bent Brigham Hospital in Boston. The two
men shared a close friendship based on both scientific and historical
interests. Like Cushing, Fulton was a bibliophile, bibliographer,
and historian. His special collecting interest was physiological
texts from the 16th to 18th century. The Historical Library’s extensive
holdings of the works of William Harvey, Robert Boyle, Luigi Galvani,
Albrecht von Haller, and Joseph Priestley, are among the fruits
of Fulton’s collecting. This photograph was taken in 1932.
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FOUNDERS OF THE YALE MEDICAL LIBRARY: ARNOLD C. KLEBS, 1870-1943
Klebs, born in Switzerland, came to the United States in 1896. In
1903, when he was working with William Osler at Johns Hopkins, he
first met Harvey Cushing. Klebs spent many years as a tuberculosis
specialist in Chicago before settling in his villa in Switzerland.
A historian, wide-ranging book collector, and bibliographer, Klebs
specialized in works on tuberculosis, inoculation and vaccination,
and medical incunabula. Although he had no direct Yale connection,
Cushing convinced him to join the “triumvirate” and donate his collections
to Yale. Because of the war, Klebs was unable to attend the opening
of the Library and his collections did not arrive in New Haven until
1947. This photograph was taken in 1933.
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CUSHING’S BIO-BIBLIOGRAPHY OF ANDREAS VESALIUS, 1943
Each of the founders of the current Medical Library interspersed
historical papers among their substantial scientific output. Each
was especially fond of bibliography. Cushing’s A Bio-Bibliography
of Andreas Vesalius, by Harvey Cushing (New York: Schuman,
1943) provides a biography of Vesalius and a detailed description
of all the editions and translations of Veslius’s writings or of
works incorporating the plates from Vesalius. It is cited whenever
a rare book dealer offers a Vesalius for sale. Similarly, John F.
Fulton’s A Bibliography of the Honourable Robert Boyle
(Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1932) remains the authoritative
bibliography for works of the famous 17th century natural philosopher
and chemist. Arnold Klebs’s best known bibliography is his Incunabula
Scientifica et Medica (Bruges: The Saint Catherine press, 1938),
a listing of all medical and scientific books printed before 1501.
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PLAN OF THE MEDICAL LIBRARY
Dean Milton Winternitz presented a memorandum on the proposed gift
to the Yale Corporation and was authorized to employ an architect
to draw up plans as a prelude to raising funds. Grosvenor Atterbury,
a member of Cushing’s class of 1891 at Yale, designed a grandiose
plan for a separate building costing over two million dollars. After
this proved impractical, Atterbury designed in 1937 a more modest
plan for a Y-shaped building to be attached to the Sterling Hall
of Medicine. The building was to have wings for the Historical Library
and the “General Medical Library.”
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THE UNIVERSITY ACCEPTS THE PLAN, 1939
In June the University agreed to allocate $600,000 to the project
from the Sterling bequest. In October, Cushing died knowing that
the Library would be built. By the end of the year construction
began. Shown here is a letter from Cushing to Klebs, June 3, 1939.
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PHOTOGRAPH OF THE CONSTRUCTION OF THE MEDICAL LIBRARY, 1940.

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DEDICATION OF THE YALE MEDICAL LIBRARY, 1941
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The Yale Medical Library was formally dedicated on June 15, 1941.
Marjorie Wildes became Librarian of the "General Medical Library."
Fulton was Chairman of the Advisory Board of the Historical Library
and Madeline Stanton, former Secretary to Cushing, became "Secretary
in Charge" (later Librarian) of the Historical Library.
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PICTORIAL DESCRIPTION OF THE YALE MEDICAL LIBRARY
The
Yale Medical Library, Dedicated June 15, 1941. Illustrations Reprinted
from Pencil Points, January 1942. (click on image to see
entire brochure)
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| FIREPLACE INSCRIPTION |
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These lines by the Rev. Dr. George Stewart
were carved over the fireplace in the Historical Library. Stewart
was a graduate of Yale (B.A., 1915, Ph.D. 1921, D.D., 1939), a Yale
lecturer, and the son-in-law of Arnold C. Klebs. |
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