University of Maryland Baltimore Dental School - Mirror Yearbook (Baltimore, MD)

 - Class of 1903

Page 21 of 180

 

University of Maryland Baltimore Dental School - Mirror Yearbook (Baltimore, MD) online collection, 1903 Edition, Page 21 of 180
Page 21 of 180



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the profession, the outcome of which was the forma- tion of the American Society of Dental Surgeons. This outcome was chiefly due to the labors of Dr. Harden, and he was unanimously chosen President of the society and re-elected each year until his death. Until the illness which terminated his life Dr. Hay- den continued to exercise the duties of his profession and to lecture to his class. He died on the 26th of January. 1844, in the seventy-fifth year of his age. We have already stated that the Baltimore College of Dental Surgery is the oldest institution of its kind in existence, and for this reason we might say that Balti- more is really the cradle of dentistry and of the dental profession. A remarkable feature of dentistry, a feature com- mon to no other profession, is that, although it is one of the most prominent professions to-day, its evolu- tion is embraced within the span of one human life. The practical inauguration of the new college pre- sented a difficulty well known in America, when pro- fessors often outnumbered students. At length five legitimate students of dentistry were found to covet the honor of the new title D.D.S., and the first course of instruction was given in the winter of 1840-41. The didactic lectures were delivered in a small room, pub- licly situated, but the teachings of practical anatomy demanded privacy, and other prudential considera- tions also suggested the use for that purpose of a se- cluded stable loft, the prejudice of the community against dissection having shown itself some years be- fore. Dr. Bond, in his valedictory to the graduates, at its first commencement exercises, March, 1841, says: You have been taught that dental surgery is not a new art separate from, and independent of, general medicine; but that it is an important branch of the science of healing. You have seen and traced out the exquisitely beautiful machiner y by which the human organism is everywhere knit together ; you have care- fully examined the phenomena of health and disease, as they are manifested in the dental arch, its connections and relations, and you have been taught to regard the human body as a whole, united in all its parts, and pervaded everywhere by strong and active sympathies ; and your principles of practice have been carefully formed on a sound knowledge of general medicine and it is therefore that you must be thoroughly educated in the fundamental branches of medicine as the medical man himself. The college was organized with the design of teach-

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Through his labors for the profession and his un- bounded generosity, although his practice was large, he died poor in the city of Baltimore on the 29th of September, i860. HORACE H. HAYDEN was born at Windsor, Conn., October 13, 1768. He was remarkable from his childhood, and it is said that he learned to read almost as soon as he did to talk, and at once contracted that love for books which was so marked all through his life. While a boy he also mani- fested a great fondness for natural history which clung to him in after life. At ten years of age he began the study of classics, but, probably for the want of means, soon abandoned it and at the age of fourteen, in the humble capacity of cabin boy of a fine brig, he made two voyages to the West Indies. At the age of sixteen he became apprenticed to an architect until he became of age. He then pursued his business in the West Indies, Connecticut and New York. While in the latter State he had occasion to call on Dr. John Greenwood (dentist) for his services, when the thought struck him that he would like to fol- low that profession. Obtaining such information as he could from Dr. Greenwood ' s instructions and from his books, he went in 1804 to Baltimore, Md., to practice the profession and labored to elevate the calling. To this end he commenced the study of medicine, and in later life the honorary degree of Doctor of Medicine was conferred upon him both by the Uni- versity of Maryland and the Jefferson Medical Col- lege of Philadelphia. In 1 St 4 he was appo inted acting surgeon in the Thirty-ninth Regiment of Maryland Militia. About the year 1825 he was invited to read a course of lectures on dentistry before the medical class of the University of Maryland. He also contributed several able papers to medical journals on his physiological researches. Having ever in mind the elevation of the dental profession, he. Dr. C. A. Harris and others sent a peti- tion to the Legislature, in December, 1839, to establish a Dental College, the faculty to consist partly of dental and partly of medical practitioners. The Legislature having granted a liberal charter, Dr. Hayden, at the advanced age of seventy, entered upon the duties of the Chair assigned him in that institution, the Balti- more College of Dental Surgery. In 1840, in New York, was held a meeting of the best dentists then in



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ing dentistry as a regular branch of medicine, and in order to denote the phenomenal progress of the old Baltimore College of Dental Surgery, start at the time of its birth; when there were about 1200 practitioners of dentistry in America, more than one-half of whom were ignorant, incapable men, whose knowledge was composed of a few secrets which they had purchased at fabulous prices from other charlatans, and who con- sidered three or four weeks ample time in which to attain all the knowledge necessary to the successful pursuit of the calling, and contrast the requirements of that time with those of the present day. This is the sixty-third year of the career of the Col- lege with its prospects for usefulness brighter than ever. It has added to its Faculty and clinical corps strong and active men, and is better equipped to carry out the purpose of its inception than at any period of its existence. The results of its work in sixty-three years are world-wide in their influence upon dentistry. Over twenty-two hundred graduates have gone from this College into practice, and these are scattered all over the civilized world. They are located in nearly every city of Europe. They lead the profession in all the great centres of civilization and have won emi- nence in England, France, Russia, Switzerland, Spain and Italy. They have carried the honors of the insti- tution into Asia, Australia, and the land of the pyra- mids, while in every State of our Republic, and in all parts of Canada they have demonstrated their own worth and the excellent training afforded them by their Alma Mater. They have met with signal honor abroad, nearly every court dentist in Europe being a graduate of this institution. Such in brief is the history of our dear old College, our beloved Alma Mater, where we are now seeking a training which will not only bring distinction to, and benefit us personally, but which shall instil nobler ideas into our minds, and so broaden our characters, that we may become better citizens, and better able to fill our allotted place in life, whatever it may be. And may we ever prove an honor to the calling in which we are about to engage, and to our best friend, the Balti- more College of Dental Surgery.

Suggestions in the University of Maryland Baltimore Dental School - Mirror Yearbook (Baltimore, MD) collection:

University of Maryland Baltimore Dental School - Mirror Yearbook (Baltimore, MD) online collection, 1901 Edition, Page 1

1901

University of Maryland Baltimore Dental School - Mirror Yearbook (Baltimore, MD) online collection, 1902 Edition, Page 1

1902

University of Maryland Baltimore Dental School - Mirror Yearbook (Baltimore, MD) online collection, 1904 Edition, Page 1

1904

University of Maryland Baltimore Dental School - Mirror Yearbook (Baltimore, MD) online collection, 1905 Edition, Page 1

1905

University of Maryland Baltimore Dental School - Mirror Yearbook (Baltimore, MD) online collection, 1906 Edition, Page 1

1906

University of Maryland Baltimore Dental School - Mirror Yearbook (Baltimore, MD) online collection, 1907 Edition, Page 1

1907


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