We usually think of universities as being the storehouse of eternal wisdom, bastions of understanding with departments like physics, chemistry, philosophy--knowledge for the ages.
But while walking down a corridor lined with old photographs of various university department chairs and important people with a stern visage, I was struck by how many of them were from academic departments I'd never heard of before.
I was staring at the photograph of one such stern-mannered gentleman who was a member of a department that hasn't existed in decades.
He was a physician who served valiantly in a World War, won the Legion of Honor for his noble work in France, and was the first to describe a disease that is now named after him. (He was none -to-happy about that honor...)
What really got to me is that he worked in a university department that no longer exists as an academic discipline.
Today's question:
What is his name and what university department (that no longer exists) did he belong to?
As is often the case, I don't think finding the answer to this challenge is all that difficult, but the back story of this guy is fascinating.
Search on! Be sure to tell us HOW you found out the answer!
But while walking down a corridor lined with old photographs of various university department chairs and important people with a stern visage, I was struck by how many of them were from academic departments I'd never heard of before.
I was staring at the photograph of one such stern-mannered gentleman who was a member of a department that hasn't existed in decades.
He was a physician who served valiantly in a World War, won the Legion of Honor for his noble work in France, and was the first to describe a disease that is now named after him. (He was none -to-happy about that honor...)
What really got to me is that he worked in a university department that no longer exists as an academic discipline.
Today's question:
What is his name and what university department (that no longer exists) did he belong to?
As is often the case, I don't think finding the answer to this challenge is all that difficult, but the back story of this guy is fascinating.
Search on! Be sure to tell us HOW you found out the answer!
Thomas Benton Cooley was the director of the Pasteur Institute at the University of Michigan. 5 minutes, search string = french "legion of honor" doctor disease "world war" university
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
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ReplyDeleteHere is one answer that appears to be right. Alphonse Laveran - Laveran Malaria. Professor of Military Hygiene at École de Val-de-Grâce. He was also Chair of Military Diseases and Epidemics at the same institution.
ReplyDeleteThomas Benton Cooley is also a possiblity. He was Professor of Hygiene and Medicine at the University of Michigan. The disease is Cooley's anemia.
It took me about a half hour. This was my final keyword search:
physician "legion of honor" "world war" university research disease
At first I searched for Legion of Honor ,then I searched for foreign people who won Legion of Honor ,then in Wikipedia page I searched physician and MD ,in USA section i found 2 names.again I searched them separately in Google and found out Dr.Thomas Benton Cooley was professor of hygiene and medicine at the University of Michigan and Wayne State University,
ReplyDeletehe searched about anemia in children and one kind of anemia named after him: Cooley's anemia or erythroblastic anemia
Wow, this one had me searching for a good 15 minutes.
ReplyDeleteI tried many searches along the main themes (Legion of Honor, World War, disease etc.)
I checked quickly the list of foreigners who were awarded the Legion of Honor, because I assumed from your description that this good doctor wasn't french.
Thanks to House MD, I did check where Huntington's disease got its name.
Finally I googled for "legion of honor first describe disease world war work france", and got the first results pointing to this very page, and as 4th result the Wikipaedia page for Thomas Benton Cooley, who was professor of hygiene and medicine at the University of Michigan (and he's definitely stern-looking...)
His name was Thomas Benton Cooley and he was a professor in the department of hygiene at the University of Michigan.
ReplyDeleteSearch took about 2 minutes.
Googled world war legion honor disease professor. (Turns out I didn't really need all those keywords.) That brought me to a list of foreign recipients of the Legion of Honor. Jumped to the United States section and used ctrl-f to find World War participants. The third one was Cooley. His name was hyperlinked to his wikikpedia page, which answered the questions.
Because I live on the other side, people always beat me to it, but what the hell:
ReplyDeleteThomas Benton Cooley
University of Michigan
Professor of Hygiene
Hygiene is important - and there is even a Museum of Hygiene:
http://dhmd.de/index.php?id=204
How? Actually this time no special tricks. Searched for foreign French Legion of Honour medalists, and scanned quickly for physicians, starting with the Americans (this being usually an Americano-centric riddle!)
Assuming the person is Cooley and the department is Hygiene, I would note that the department morphed into the School of Public Health, and is alive and well.
ReplyDeletehttp://umhistory.dc.umich.edu/history/Faculty_History/C/Cooley,_Thomas_Benton.html
http://www.sph.umich.edu/ehs/history.html
Thomas Benton Cooley, Department of Hygiene and Physical Culture
ReplyDeleteGoogled: "Legion of Honor" france disease physician "world war"
He was the 9th entry, the summary of which made it the only one I needed to open: "During World War I, Cooley went to France as the assistant chief of the Children's ... He was decorated in 1924 with the cross of the Legion of Honor for his work in France. ... physician and also undertook further training in contagious diseases."
Googled: "university of michigan" "department of hygiene" defunct
The first hit took me to the full name of the department
Ralph Bourgeois, MD; some kind of department of leprosy?
ReplyDeleteSearch recipients of LOH, wikipedia, looked for physicians, googled name without MD attached, found he was officer in leprosy society.
Jim Mankin
Dr. Alexander Hamilton Rice. Rice founded the Institute of Geographical Exploration (IGE) at Harvard University.
ReplyDeleteFound this info looking at list of Legion of Honor's recipients and searching for "Dr." in the page. From there it led me to his wiki page.
Thomas Benton Cooley, University of Michigan Department of Hygiene. While the Dept. of Hygiene technically still remains, it is no longer called the Dept. of Hygiene so in a sense it no longer exists, no?
ReplyDeleteStart with Wikipedia list of Legion of Honor recipients, look for those who served in either WWI or WWII, narrow down to those of medical professions (physician, pediatrician, etc) and search for those with diseases named after them. Cooley was a pediatrician, received the Legion of Honor for his work during WWI, and did extensive research into Cooley's anemia.
I forgot to mention that here (http://fr.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Catégorie:Officier_de_la_Légion_d%27honneur&pagefrom=Desgraviers-Berthelot%2C+Francois-Ganivet%0AFrançois-Ganivet+Desgraviers-Berthelot#mw-pages
ReplyDeleteCatégorie:Officier de la Légion d'honneur) I have found Gaucher to be awarded Legion of Honour OR Ordre national de la Légion d'honneur.
Alexis Carrel in the Department of Physiology at the University of Chicago
ReplyDeleteSearched [legion of honor physician winners] Found link : http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_foreign_recipients_of_the_L%C3%A9gion_d'Honneur
ReplyDeleteThere I searched with Ctr-F Physician. Found Dr. Carlos Juan Finlay. Carlos Juan Finlay (December 3, 1833 – August 20, 1915) was a Cuban physician and scientist recognized as a pioneer in yellow fever research. Not more data so searched for new thing.
Searched United states medical references in same page found: Thomas Benton Cooley. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Benton_Cooley
Data show he worked in WWI and disease after him but no mention about him not happy for the name.
After searching many pages and in many ways found: http://www.whonamedit.com/doctor.cfm/1931.html
In that page says: His sub-speciality in paediatrics was haematology and he was especially interested in the anaemias of childhood which resulted in the term «Cooley anaemia», an eponym he heartily disliked.
This search was hard for me. Tried to find the three points that thought were important in a single search but found nothing. Also hard because didn´t know about word eponyms.
My answer: Thomas Benton Cooley. Professor of hygiene and medicine at the University of Michigan and Wayne State University.
Alexis Carrel
ReplyDeleteHans Reiter. Professor of
ReplyDeleteHygiene at the Universities of Rostock and
Berlin.
My first search was for 'World War 1 physician disease named after'. I saw an article on Reiter's syndrome. I went to the Hans Reiter wikipedia page which linked to his obituary.
I believe it was Alexander H. Rice, Jr and he was a member of the Institute of Geographical Exploration at Harvard.
ReplyDeleteThe process to find him was pretty simple, I figured that we weren't looking for a French recipient of the Legion of Honor and so went to the list of foreign recipients I found through Google on Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_foreign_recipients_of_the_L%C3%A9gion_d'Honneur
From that list I searched for MD and Dr to see if anyone had it in their title and after going after a few false leads I found Mr Rice. The disease thing was a bit of a red herring as I couldn't find anything on the disease that was named after him but his bio dis say he studied tropical diseases so I figured I was on the right track.
After that I just had to confirm that the department that he started at Harvard had actually shut down. A quick search for the institute brought this up: http://hcl.harvard.edu/libraries/maps/history.cfm confirming that it no longer existed.
Pretty sure I know who it is but all the departments I find he worked for (surgery, medicine, neurology, neurosurgery) still exist... hmm...
ReplyDeleteOk, I think the individual in question was Thomas Benton Cooley who was a professor at the University of Michigan's Pasteur Institute which 'made itself obsolete'in the 1950s according to the Ann Arbor Chronicle.
ReplyDeleteFinding him was easy enough - simple search of American winners of the Legion of Honour, led to a Wikipedia list. Knowing his profession and the time period reduced the possible candidates drastically and then another search eliminated all but Cooley. His own wiki page gave details of his professional appointments and then a process of elimination identified the Pasteur Institute as the most likely candidate.
Well I am working on a Tablet which restricted my image search. I thought turbulent would identify the university. I found a list of California medical schools but none matched the photo. I guessed Californiabecause I think that is your location. So I changed search direction and searched Doctors that were recipients of the Legionary Honor. I found http://www.nndb.com/honors/139/000048992/
ReplyDeleteand looked for doctors and chose to search Emil com Behring because of his identifying diphtheria. That was the most outstanding discovery on the list. Then reviewing Behring's bio I see he was the Head of Hygiene, a distinct field. First search here by the way, hope it's right.
Thomas Benton Cooley, I am certain of that.
ReplyDeleteBut not the department. The only one making sense is Department of Hygiene at the University of Michigan.
I searched [Google] for recipients of the Legion of Honor, then narrowed it down to the American Recipients. I then looked for physicians within the list; then searched the names followed by "professor". Cooley was the only one who had a match. I searched through a couple of his obituaries, and two of them mentioned Cooley's Anemia, a disease in children.
I also saw that he was a professor of Hygiene at University of Michigan and Medicine at Wayne. The University of Michigan didn't turn up many search results.
Hope I am right, finger crossed.
Alexander Hamilton Rice and the Institute for Geographical Exploration at Harvard. Not entirely sure but the way I found it was to do a search for Legion of Honor winners during World War I and World War II.
ReplyDeleteAlexander Hamilton Rice, was head of the Geography dept at harvard, which was disbanded by President Conant, according to Roots Web. I looked in wikipedia for foreign recipients of the Legion of honor and read out that Rice won for his medical work in WWI. Followed the footnote to RootsWeb. I still haven't figured out what disease is named for him though
ReplyDeleteThough I haven't confirmed he disliked the disease being named after him, I suspect no one is particularly proud of that honor.
ReplyDeleteThomas Benton Cooley - Professor of Hygiene, University of Michican and Wayne State University.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Benton_Cooley
Discovered (or first described) the disordered "erythroblastic anemia," subsequently known as "Cooley's anemia."
Legion of Honor in 1924.
Worked with the Red Cross in WWI.
Search methods:
I actually tried searching in French first, expecting it might be someone more likely to be featured on a French wikipedia page. It didn't return anything useful, though. I then tweaked some terms (in English) until I settled on the following single search query on google:
~disease discover 1890..1970 ~professor "Legion of Honor"
The words I felt would most likely be close matches on a page at best I threw the tilda ~ thesaurus function into, hoping it would broaden my results. I isolated key terms I knew had to be included: Legion of Honor. "World War" was probably part of earlier searches, and would have worked here too.
Most important was using google's number range. I wasn't sure what dates might be listed, and considered the range should be fairly broad to allow for early / late discovery of the disease relative to World War I or II's time frame.
Cooley's wikipedia page is the first result I receive after entering that line into Google. Thanks for the challenge! (that is, assuming I'm right. Always possible I'm not!)
-Marsh
I'm not sure it's possible to isolate this doctor from the info given in the challenge. It is easy to find a list of eponymous diseses but there are a large number of members of that class that received the Legion d'Honeur!
ReplyDeleteKarl Landsteiner,Pathology Department of the University of Vienna, i have searched in spanish "descubridor enfermedad trabajo en universidad, then www.historiadelamedicina.org/landsteiner.html.
ReplyDeleteThis one was hard. And I am not sure I am right, but …
ReplyDeleteThis took about an hour, and I did not get to the final answer.
First tried dropping in image into image search, don’t see much.
Now looking for doctors that won the Legion of Honor. First list was incomplete.
Found better list of Legion of Honor winners at
http://www.nndb.com/honors/139/000048992/
Then using I looked through the list and there he was:
Harvey Williams Cushing
And the disease is Cushing’s syndrome. The info page at nndb says he was a:
Professor: Harvard University (1912-32)
Professor: Yale University (1933-39)
Now I look up Harvey Cushing, a wealth of information. Wiki describes him as:
“Harvey Williams Cushing (April 8, 1869 – October 7, 1939), was an American neurosurgeon and a pioneer of brain surgery, and the first to describe Cushing's syndrome.[1] He is often called the "father of modern neurosurgery." “
Looking further into his life I find the Medical Library is named after him and at :
http://www.med.yale.edu/library/historical/cushing/hopkins.html
is much more about his life.
He was influential in many aspects of modern surgery and has numerous awards. See:
http://www.nndb.com/people/641/000127260/
He taught at Harvard where we see that he won the Pulitzer prize
http://www.medschool.lsuhsc.edu/neurosurgery/nervecenter/cushing.html
Following the war, Cushing settled into civilian practice again as chief of surgery at Harvard. Following the death of William Osler, he spent from 1920-1924 writing his biography. The tome was critically acclaimed and won the Pulitzer Prize in literature in 1925.
I am unable to find out the exact name of the Department.
GRayR -- I know about Cushing, but he wasn't a member of a university department that has since disappeared. Surgery is still an active part of the Yale med school! (But otherwise, nice work. Cushing is another very interesting fellow...)
DeleteOddly enough, Thomas Cooley isn't in the NNDB page you cite. I wonder where they got their information?
I also looked at one wiki page that did not have Cooley or Cushing. Gotta be careful of your sources.
ReplyDeleteThere have been thousands of winners of the Legion and I got thrown off by an incomplete list.
Once I found Cushing, I concentrated on the part of the question that said,". . . but the back story of this guy is fascinating". And Cushing is certainly that. I knew something was wrong when I could not get "university department (that no longer exists)". I rationalized that the department had changed its formal name.
So I learned a lot, and spent way too much time (though it was fun), and I'll be back here next week with a long reasoned answer that will probably be wrong, again. This does make the third time I have done that.
wrong-way-Gary
I actually was not able to solve it, although I am happy to see I was on the right track. I was thrown off by Cooley being listed as a pediatrician, and did not have the time to go deeper.
ReplyDeleteMarked "He was a physician who served valiantly in a World War, won the Legion of Honor for his noble work in France, and was the first to describe a disease that is now named after him. (He was none -to-happy about that honor...) " and right clicked, Search on google.
ReplyDeletehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Humphrey_Bogart
Wrong answer but it only took me 3 seconds.
Searcing for about 40 minutes. A Google search bassed on "Doctor World War 1 -II Legion of Honor University Professor" turned up a wikipedia reference to Thomas Benton Cooley, source of "Cooley's anemia" and awarded the French Legion of Honor for his work caring for French children during World War I.
ReplyDeleteA further search for "Thomas B. Cooley" turned up a summary of the "University of Michigan Department of Homeopathic Medicine" . The summary lists a Thomas B. Cooley as a faculty member around 1900. Searching for Homeopathic Medicine at the University of Michigan website turned a note about that defunct department, which existed from 1875 until 1922, when it was phased out in favor of the allopathic School of Medicine.
Ref: http://www.lib.umich.edu/homeopathy-materials-university-michigan-taubman-medical-library
ReplyDeleteDear Mr. Russell,
Boy oh boy, did I miss that one!
My “choice” was:
John Kerner, MD, a World War II veteran from California who participated in the Liberation of France, was awarded France's Légion d'Honneur by President Nicolas Sarkozy during a special ceremony in Washington, DC on Nov. 6.
http://www.ucsf.edu/news/2007/11/7657/kerner-receives-frances-lgion-dhonneur-president-nicolas-sarkozy
1. He is/was a doctor.
2. He received the “Legion O’Honneur” from France.
3. He lived in California.
This last item in the one that “killed” me!
What is in California? Stanford and Mount Zion! Is there a Google Power Search Instruction who lives in California and uses California and Stanford as examples in his classes? (Hint the answer is Mr. Daniel M. Russell)
John Kerner, M.D., former Chief-of-Staff and Director of Obstetrics & Gynecology at Mount Zion
(Confusion Factor: It seems that there is also a John A. (Alen) Kerner at Stanford. Maybe a family member?)
In my minds eye I could see Mr. Russell walking the halls in California (Stanford or Mount Zion) and seeing a plaque about Dr.Kerner.
(Semi-Confusion Factor: Yes, the Internet does show that Dr. Kerner was at Mount Zion. But, there was also a site that shows Dr. Kerner was at USCF. I have no idea of what the relationship of USCF and Stanford is!)
I will keep working on my Google Power Searching skills.
Patrick
pomahony2@gmail.com
good blog :) more info on anemia if required http://www.whatisanemia.info/
ReplyDelete