Jefferson Medical College - Clinic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA)

 - Class of 1970

Page 33 of 296

 

Jefferson Medical College - Clinic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1970 Edition, Page 33 of 296
Page 33 of 296



Jefferson Medical College - Clinic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1970 Edition, Page 32
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Page 33 text:

,n ardent sup- scientiiic anti vic, state and is his priniafl' ine. Est known 35 -osurgeon. He tap the ven- ne of 1116 flISi gnccessfulli- 3 patient Sur' after refnovas 0 pafiiclpafe Operation to wth from the ver Clwland ,as established ecimtrl 1-QCOIU' SSUC SP was ,n tl ' agfeed bu the becaU5e V , .a the 211 H1515 at v5 red that nexus . disttifo IOXC V. inSU'C Secriiiir ahostofo I and th, while I e0Pe' t Was anchored offshore on Long Island Sound. Keen employed a procedure he had devised using a new retractor that made it unnecessary to cut the Presi- dentis cheek open to remove the tumor. The result was so successful that the operation might have remained a secret for many years if the dentist who made the plate to replace the excised tissue were not forced to explain a canceled appointment. 'Keen was not only an outstanding surgeon but an excellent teacher. He began teaching at Iefferson in 1868, barely six years after his graduation, and served in many capacities until 1907, when he became emeritus pro- fessor of surgery. His appointment to the top surgical chair came in 1889 and he remained professor of surgery and clinical surgery until his retirement. He also offered his talents to other institutions, serving as professor of anatomy at both the Womens Medical College of Pennsylvania and the Aca- demy of Fine Arts at various times. Meticulous in his private and profes- sional habits, he was known for the extreme care he took in preparing his lectures-and his students profited from rt. He preceded his lectures with syn- opses so that students, notes were in- variably well organized and complete. He viewed his relationship with his students as mutually beneficial, com- menting once: 1 always feel at the lefferson Hospital as if I were on the run with a pack of lively dogs at my heels. Students are the best whip and spur 1 knowf, Students weren't the only major beneficiaries of his knowledge, for he shared his discoveries and observations with his colleagues through prolific contributions to the medical literature of his time. He published nearly 200 professional papers Clong before the modern 'ipublish or perish mentality forced vast expansion of the medical publishing industryl His textbooks were described by Fielding Carrison, medical historian, as probably the best American Works of their kind. He gained early recognition for a surgical work that laid the groundwork for his later achievements in neuro- surgery. Entitled Cumshot Vlforirtds and Other Injuries of Nerves, it was produced in collaboration with S. VVeir Mitchell, another great name in leffer- son's history, and Ceorge Pr. More- house, also a leff man. While most of Keen's writings concerned medical topics he did not limit himself to that field. Cnc sub- ject that captured his interest was the debate over Darwin's theory of evolu- tion, which was a controversial topic of the 1920's. Keen was a deeply religious man but he failed to sec any conHict between religion and science. He wrote two books on the subject. 1 Relieve in Cod and Evolrrtion and Everlasting life. His philosophy on the issue can be summed up succinctly in this passage from the former pub- lication: Cod deliberately made man out of the smue stuff as the animals and . . . on the same plan as animals. Body- wise, man is an animal, but, thanks be to Cod, his destiny is not the same as that of the beasts that perish. To develop great men, such as Aristotle, Plato, Shakespeare, Milton, VVash- ington, Lincoln and then by death to quench them in utter oblivion, would be unworthy of Cmnipotence. To my mind it is simply an impos- sible conclusion. Man's soul must be immortal. Keen combined his deep religious faith with an intense patriotism. It prompted him to don his countrv's uni- form in two wars and to volunteer for action in a third. His first military serv- ice came during the Civil VVar. He entered combat at Bull Run and served for the duration, being mustered out as a maior. A halffenturv later he felt the need to serve again when the United States entered World War 1. At the age of 80, he was the oldest member of the Medical Reserve Corps. Even at that advanced age his con- tribution to the health of the troops was immeasurable, since he success- fully repulsed the efforts of antivivi- sectionists, who attempted to prevent immunization of soldiers against typh- oid fever. He volunteered for Spanish- American War service, but hostilities concluded before he reported for duty. There have been few American Surgeons so universally respected and honored, a colleague observed follow- ing Keen's death. One outstanding physician who was most vocal in his acclamation of Keen was Chalmers Da Costa, the first Cross professor of surgery at lefferson, who remained ever grateful for his early surgical training under Keen. John H. Gibbon, Sr., who worked intimately with Keen for nearly 40 years mentioned some of the surgeons more notable honors, in- cluding the presidencies of the College of Physicians of Philadelphia, Ameri- can Society of Surgery and American Philosophical Society. His honorary de- grees were many and his invitations to lecture were legion. It all seemed, in effect, a proof of the simple philosophy he once espoused to a group of new lefferson graduates: If in your own life you realize the characteristics of the ideal physician . . . if you attain to old age, when the hairs whiten and the crow's feet begin to show, when your natural forces are abated, you will then not be alone in the world but will have honor, love, obedience, troops of friends. . , . We know this was and is his reward, Martin commented. His monument is built in the hearts of his thousands of friends, and his memory will live on through the ages.

Page 32 text:

n ardent supporter of every moral, scientific and progressive advance in civic, state and national affairs .XR n.!:'I. 1' . :ff-.1 ' E5 , 'ep -- 3,3-. if rf- 1' ' . e 1' -1 'wi' lj ' ' '5 3 'if -'-if . ..1.' F-. ,'. ,V-'. Q'-'14 f 'f . -L.. ,: - . - 352: J ' -vf': . f !' J- ' x . r I .eil ' 1 :Q 1'i',Tr 4 ' i .. .,p M.: 5 u' ' -'37-7.i '19 if GW' illiam Williams Keen witnessed nearly a century of medical progress-and contributed significantly to the advance. When he died in 1932 at the age of 95, antibiotics had yet to revolutionize the treatment of infec- tious disease but medical practice had advanced more in his lifetime, per- haps, than in all of history. Imagine if you canf' Keen observed in l922, the forlorn condition of the doctor 60 years ago-without everything except his eyes, his ears and his fingers, then you can appreciate the triumphal march of medicine during a single life- timeg' Keen's lifetime in medicine lasted 70 years-beginning with his gradua- tion from jefferson in 1862, when he assumed the role of a 'herald of the dawn', according to Franklin H. Mar- tin, Chicago surgeon. The death of this eminent surgeon, Martin com- mented in Surgery, Gynecology and Obstetrics, has brought the whole thinking world to attention in admira- tion of a fine and useful life. Keen eschewed championship of the past, ' Martin wrote, and was an ardent sup- porter of every moral, scientific and progressive advance in civic, state and national affairs, as well as his primary concern, scientific medicine. Keen is probably best known as the first American neurosurgeon. He was the first surgeon to tap the ven- tricles of the brain and one of the first to remove a brain tumor successfully. He gained fame when a patient sur- vived more than 30 years after removal of a meningioma. He also participated in the celebrated secret operation to remove a cancerous growth from the mouth of President Grover Cleveland in I893. The diagnosis was established by examination of a tissue specimen and immediate surgery was recom- mended. The President agreed but in- sisted on absolute secrecy because the nation was in a financial crisis at the time and Cleveland feared that news of his illness would prove disastrous for the stock market. To insure secrecy. the President, Keen and a host of other doctors boarded a yacht and the oper- ation was performed while it WaS anchoi Sound had dc made dent's The r Opefiii. f0l' mg the pl were 1 QPPC Surge began barelv IICSSOI- the If he re Clinic He f iUStit1 Uflato C0lle rlemy, Meiic Slonal



Page 34 text:

.L I ti w would dispute that Chalmers Da Costa was the last Renaissance man to dominate jefferson. A brilliant surgeon and medical educator, he was a man of letters and a powerful orator. He was also a student of history and a true indiyidualist-described by many of his colleagues at the time as un- conventional Da Costa was the first Cross professor of surgery at lefferson, appointed in 1910 when that chair was endowed hy Maria Cross Horowitz, daughter of Samuel D. Cross. Accord- ing to observers at the time, Da Costa was such an outstanding candidate, no one else was considered for the chair. Those who remember him, say Da Costa was the greatest surgical clini- cian of his time. His memory is re- called fondly hy some of the senior physicians still practicing at lefferson and his dictums are still used to coun- sel aspiring young doctors. After Da Costa's death in 1933, Thomas A. Shallow-who ultimately was appointed his successor in the Cross chair-wrote in The Clinic: ln the ordinary sense of the word, he had no children, hut looking at it from another angle he had many sons, as the various classes which he taught at lefferson, next to his im- mediate family, were closest to his great heart. lf Da Costa's labors were any in- dication, that statement was certainly true. I-ie prepared thoroughly for his didactic lectures and surgical clinics, which were described as models of preparation, clearness and emphasis in statement. He drew liberally on his literary and historical knowledge to make his lectures interesting and chal- he various classes which he taught at Jefferson, next to his immediate family, were closest to his great heart lenging to students. While the world- wide fame he gained and the adulation of his students could easily have turned his head, Da Costa maintained a characteristic-if submerged-humility. 1 can't see how a medical man can be vain, he once told his colleagues of the Philadelphia County Medical Society. How can they he vain when they see beauty and anguish walk hand-in-hand and they are forced to stand aside, im- potent and useless. Da Costa remained forever grateful for the surgical train- ing he received from the great W. W. Keen, commenting in later years! Everything that, since that time, 1 may have gained in professional life, 1 owe entirely to his early aid at a critical period, to his enduring friendship and to his constant support. Da Costa felt strongly that all surgeons should con- tinue the tradition and once charged! em st t0daY's hearte 21 11 A H31 agfi ical bo0. Whi als0 ican edltt mart nent time tend Peac wide Speer mant powe his i Paper ers D Da C hy ci lahore dards time. intens clast, i felt W tolerai hestits cially on ma ucatioi lighter there i The inati suhj exan 3SliC1 have Ward is UI Ther. are '. facts Ol

Suggestions in the Jefferson Medical College - Clinic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) collection:

Jefferson Medical College - Clinic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1965 Edition, Page 1

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Jefferson Medical College - Clinic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1966 Edition, Page 1

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Jefferson Medical College - Clinic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1967 Edition, Page 1

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Jefferson Medical College - Clinic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1969 Edition, Page 1

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Jefferson Medical College - Clinic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1977 Edition, Page 1

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Jefferson Medical College - Clinic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1979 Edition, Page 1

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