{"id":12007,"date":"2017-07-18T11:00:52","date_gmt":"2017-07-18T15:00:52","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/circulatingnow.nlm.nih.gov\/?p=12007"},"modified":"2018-09-04T14:40:16","modified_gmt":"2018-09-04T18:40:16","slug":"new-history-of-the-nlm-civil-war-and-the-era-of-john-shaw-billings","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/circulatingnow.nlm.nih.gov\/2017\/07\/18\/new-history-of-the-nlm-civil-war-and-the-era-of-john-shaw-billings\/","title":{"rendered":"A New History of NLM: Civil War and the Era of John Shaw Billings"},"content":{"rendered":"

By James Labosier ~<\/em><\/p>\n

This is the third <\/em>post in a series of nine<\/a> which serializes the new book <\/em>US National Library of Medicine in the popular <\/em>Images of America series of Arcadia Publishing. A hardback version of the book is available from booksellers, and an electronic version of the complete book<\/a> and original versions of\u00a0the 170+ images<\/a>, which appear in it in black and white, are archived and freely available in NLM Digital Collections<\/a>.\u00a0 The Intramural Research Program of the US National Institutes of Health<\/a>, National Library of Medicine, supported the research, writing, and editing of this publication. We hope that you will add it to your summer reading list!<\/em><\/p>\n

Surgeon General Thomas Lawson died on May 15, 1861, barely a month after the Civil War began with the Confederate bombardment of Fort Sumter in South Carolina. Clement A. Finley succeeded Lawson and held the position for less than a year before a young surgeon named William Alexander Hammond formally replaced him in April 1862. Despite his arrogance and abrasive personality\u2014traits that would result in a court-martial and dismissal from the office after just two years\u2014Hammond was an effective and visionary surgeon general, notable for recognizing the potential of the Library and working to ensure its continued growth.<\/p>\n

As medical officers struggled to cope with the devastating injuries they witnessed during the American Civil War, the need for new research dictated accelerated acquisitions by the library. The war presented opportunities for expansion of the Surgeon General\u2019s Office and for a new orientation of the library\u2019s collections. In 1862, the Library moved from rented offices to the Riggs Bank Building in downtown Washington, DC, and Hammond established the Army Medical Museum as a corollary to the Library to collect specimens and data for research in military surgery. Hammond also initiated a plan to create a comprehensive medical and surgical history of the Civil War, a plan that his successor, Joseph K. Barnes, would bring to fruition. The result was the monumental Medical and Surgical History of the War of the Rebellion<\/em>, a multi-volume compilation of medical knowledge and illustrations unlike anything previously produced. Both the museum work and the Medical and Surgical History required varied and specialized medical knowledge heretofore unnecessary in the library. This need for unique medical information would continue after the war as the Library began acquiring studies of yellow fever and cholera, which were regular scourges of Army personnel in scattered outposts.<\/p>\n

The momentum of the war had shifted to favor the Union forces when Barnes succeeded Hammond as surgeon general in August 1864, but months of hard fighting still lay ahead. Barnes assigned Assistant Surgeon John Shaw Billings to the Surgeon General\u2019s Office in January 1865. The Library was not a high priority within the medical department\u2019s operations, and its management was initially an informal addition to Billings\u2019s regular duties. Army surgeons and assistant surgeons routinely filled the administrative positions of the medical department. Like his fellow staff members, Billings was a physician, not a librarian. He did, however, possess a love of books and an appreciation for knowledge, which he avidly applied to the library. In satisfying the library\u2019s growing needs and his own predilection for what should be collected, Billings oversaw expansion of the collection from 602 titles in 1865 to 2,887 titles in 1868. Billings\u2019s devotion to and consummate concern for the library\u2019s development paid off when, around 1870, the Library became his primary responsibility. By the end of 1871, with Surgeon General Barnes\u2019s concurrence, Billings embarked on a mission to transform the surgeon general\u2019s library into a national medical library holding every American medical publication possible. He envisioned it as a medical counterpart to the collection of the Library of Congress. The Library relocated from cramped office shelving in the Riggs Bank Building to the roomier second floor of the remodeled Ford\u2019s Theatre on Tenth Street. After President Lincoln\u2019s assassination there in April 1865, contemporaries believed that the building was no longer appropriate as an entertainment venue, so it was converted to house several military offices. The Office of the Surgeon General eventually occupied the building to accommodate the growing Army Medical Museum and vastly expanded postwar administrative activities. The drive for acquisitions quickly expanded beyond American-produced works and increasingly included medical books and journals produced in all corners of the world. From this point onward, though it remained under the surgeon general of the US Army, the Library publicized the availability of its resources to all medical professionals and researchers. This was the moment in the history of the Library when its trajectory to become the largest repository of medical knowledge in the world began.<\/p>\n