Morrison, H. (Hyman), 1881-

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Morrison, H. (Hyman), 1881-

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Morrison, H. (Hyman), 1881-

Morrison, H. (Hyman), b. 1881

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Morrison, H. (Hyman), b. 1881

Morrison, H. b. 1881

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Morrison, H. b. 1881

Morrison, H. b. 1881 (Hyman),

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Morrison, H. b. 1881 (Hyman),

Morrison, Hyman 1881-

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Morrison, Hyman 1881-

Morrison, Hyman, b. 1881

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Morrison, Hyman, b. 1881

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Biographical History

Hyman Morrison (1881-1963), A.B., 1905, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts; M.D., 1908, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, was a visiting physician at Beth Israel Hospital, Boston, a clinical professor of medicine at Tufts College Medical School (now Tufts University School of Medicine) in Medford, Massachusetts, and Chief of Medicine at Boston State Hospital, Massachusetts. Morrison's main areas of research included Jewish nervous disorders, including extensive work contesting the diagnosis of “Hebraic debility,” tuberculosis of the appendix, and the life and work of physicians Reginald Heber Fitz (1843-1913) and Thomas Hodgkin (1798-1866).

Hyman Morrison was born in October 1881 in Vilna, Russia. He emigrated with his family to the United States in 1893. Morrison attended English High School in Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts, and, after graduation, was accepted to Harvard University. He received an A.B. degree with high distinction from Harvard University in 1905; during his time at Harvard, he was elected to the Phi Beta Kappa Society. He moved immediately into the Harvard Medical School and graduated with his M.D. in 1908.

During his time as a student, Morrison worked on research to debate the prevailing diagnosis of “Hebraic debility,” a term often applied to Jewish immigrants suffering from non-specific ailments including fatigue, muscle or joint pain, weakness, or migraine. Morrison’s work, which he continued after graduation, argued that such “debility” was only to be expected in individuals who had undergone such a drastic life-change as whole-sale immigration, often under traumatic circumstances. After graduating from Harvard Medical School, Morrison took advantage of his posts at Beth Israel Hospital and Boston State Hospital to collect data for articles on gastrointestinal disorders, diabetes mellitus, and diseases in the erythema group.

Morrison had a strong interest in medical history, researching and writing a biography of Harvard Medical School professor Reginald Heber Fitz (1843-1913). Fitz was a professor of Morrison’s during his time at Harvard Medical School and was responsible for influential articles on the diagnosis and treatment of appendicitis and other abdominal disorders. Morrison also did work on the life of English doctor Thomas Hodgkin. Hodgkin was responsible for the original diagnosis of the disease now known as Hodgkin’s lymphoma; he was also part of the movement to popularize the use of the stethoscope.

During his life time, Morrison used his research on Hodgkin to publish “Doctors Afield” in 1954 and his research on Fitz for several articles, including “The Chapter on Appendicitis in a Biography of Reginald Heber Fitz” (1946) and “Reginald Heber Fitz” (1941). His other major publications included: “Tuberculosis Located in the Vermiform Appendix” (1952); “A Study of the Incidence of Subacute Bacterial Endocarditis at the Massachusetts General Hospital” (1927); “A Study of the Fatal Cases of Diabetes Mellitus in Boston from 1895 to 1913, with Special Reference to Its Occurrence Among Jews” (1916); and “A Biologic Interpretation of Jewish Survival” (circa 1937). Morrison also published a translation of Paul Langerhans’ work on the survey of the pancreas, “Contribution to the Microscopic Anatomy of the Pancreas” (1937).

Morrison was a member of the Boston Medical History Club and served as Vice-President in 1932; he presented several papers before its membership, including draft versions of what were then revised into published articles. He was also a member of the Greater Boston Medical Society and the Massachusetts Medical Society.

Morrison married Rose Levine (died 1960). They had three daughters: Flora Mildred, Judith, and Miriam. Hyman Morrison died in 1963 in Belmont, Massachusetts, of carcinoma of the stomach.

From the guide to the Hyman Morrison, Papers, 1899-1970 (inclusive), 1920-1963 (bulk)., (Center for the History of Medicine. Francis A. Countway Library of Medicine.)

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External Related CPF

https://viaf.org/viaf/33512894

https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n87149508

https://id.loc.gov/authorities/n87149508

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Appendicitis

Diabetes

Diabetes Mellitus

Endocarditis, Bacterial

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History

Infective endocarditis

Jewish physicians

Jews

Jews

Medical students

Tuberculosis

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Physicians

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Massachusetts--Boston Region

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Germany

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17671464