Wright, Louis T. (Louis Tompkins), 1891-1952
Variant namesBiographical notes:
African American physician, director of surgery at Harlem Hospital, and chairman of the board of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People.
From the description of Papers, 1878-1952. (Moorland-Spingarn Resource Center). WorldCat record id: 70941341
Louis Tompkins Wright, 1891-1952, A.B., 1911, Clark University, Atlanta; M.D., 1915, Harvard; established a general practice in Atlanta in 1916, and after serving in the U.S. Army Medical Corps in France, 1917-1919, had a private surgical practice in New York City from 1919 to 1952. He was the first black appointed to the staff of a New York hospital, the Harlem Hospital in 1919, and later served as surgical director, 1943-1952, and president of the Board of Medical Staff, 1948-1952. Wright was also the first black to hold the position of police surgeon in a major U.S. city (N.Y. City Police Dept., 1929-1952), and among his accomplishments in research, Wright pioneered the use of aureomycin in humans in 1948.
From the description of Papers, 1879, 1898, 1909-1997. (Harvard University). WorldCat record id: 281429962
Louis Tompkins Wright (1891-1952), son and stepson of physicians, and father to two daughter-physicians, graduated from the Harvard Medical School in 1915. He interned at the Freedman's Hospital, affiliated with Howard Medical School, in Washington, D.C., and then went into practice with his stepfather, Dr. William Fletcher Penn, in Atlanta for a year before joining the Army Medical Corps in 1917. During World War I, he saw service in France and sustained permanent damage to his lungs resulting from a gas attack at Mt. Henri. Returning to civilian life in 1919, Dr. Wright began what was to be a lifelong association with the Surgery Department at Harlem Hospital. He was the first Black to be appointed to the medical staff of a New York hospital, the first to be made director of a department in a non-segregated municipal hospital, and the first to serve as president of a medical board of such a hospital.
But Harlem Hospital was far from integrated when Dr. Wright went to work there. His appointment opened the doors to a recognition of the city hospital system and more especially to the advent of Negro professional personnel into Harlem Hospital. He was an active force in the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People's (NAACP) efforts as early as 1920 to undermine the unwritten law that barred Negro doctors and nurses from services in New York municipal hospitals. (He would later serve for twenty years as chairman of the NAACP Board of Directors.) In the 1930s, he successfully opposed a proposal of the Julius Rosenwald Fund to erect a segregated hospital in New York. In all ways he fought to foster full and equal opportunity not only in a hospital environment but in the larger community as well.
Though often a tireless and tempestuous warrior, Dr. Wright did not put all of his time and energy into battling racial discrimination. His 100 or so publications include reports of scientific activities and clinical research on such subjects as traumatic injuries, the use of aureomycin and other antibiotics, and chemotherapy and malignant disease. In his later years, as a hobby he collected the scientific publications of Negro physicians, the number said to exceed 3,000.
In addition to his career at Harlem Hospital, he was appointed police surgeon of the City of New York in 1929--the first of his race to hold that position in any major American city. He was also the first Black admitted to fellowship in the American College of Surgeons (1934) and to honorary fellowship in the International College of Surgeons (1950). He was a leader of the group that formed the Manhattan Central Medical Society in 1930 and a founder of the Harlem Surgical Society in 1937. Life magazine in 1938 saluted him as “the most eminent Negro doctor in the United States.”
At the height of his powers, prolonged illness unfortunately interrupted Dr. Wright's career. Nevertheless, he still had ten good years remaining to him, and he used them well. A number of his investigations on antibiotics were conducted after his return to work. In 1948 he established both the Harlem Hospital Cancer Research Foundation and the Harlem Hospital Bulletin. He lived long enough to enjoy a tribute to his many social and medical contributions in the form of a testimonial dinner given in the spring of 1952, a demonstration of national proportions attended by over 1,000 well-wishers. This occasion celebrated the Louis T. Wright Library of Harlem Hospital, thus affording him the satisfaction of having his name linked permanently to that of the institution with which he was so closely identified.
From the guide to the Papers, 1879, 1898, 1909-1997, (Francis A. Countway Library of Medicine. Center for the History of Medicine.)
Dr. Louis T. Wright (1891-1952), Director of Surgery of Harlem Hospital, Chairman of the Board of the NAACP, and recipient of the 1940 Spingarn Medal, was a prolific writer of medical articles. Dr. Wright's interest in medical research was not limited to his personal inquiries but extended to the research of other Black physicians. He kept detailed records of his research projects and actively collected the published writings of other Black physicians.
From the guide to the Louis T. Wright Papers, 1878-1952, (Moorland-Spingarn Research Center, Howard University)
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Subjects:
- African American newspapers
- African American physicians
- Aureomycin
- Blacks in medicine
- Medicine
Occupations:
- African American physicians
- Afro
- Surgeons
Places:
- New York (State)--New York (as recorded)
- United States (as recorded)
- New York (State)--New York (as recorded)
- GA, US
- NY, US