{"id":14799,"date":"2018-07-17T11:00:52","date_gmt":"2018-07-17T15:00:52","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/circulatingnow.nlm.nih.gov\/?p=14799"},"modified":"2024-08-02T15:34:28","modified_gmt":"2024-08-02T19:34:28","slug":"leonidas-h-berry-and-the-fight-to-desegregate-medicine","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/circulatingnow.nlm.nih.gov\/2018\/07\/17\/leonidas-h-berry-and-the-fight-to-desegregate-medicine\/","title":{"rendered":"Leonidas H. Berry and the Fight to Desegregate Medicine"},"content":{"rendered":"
The National Library of Medicine announces new public access to more than 1,600 materials selected and digitized from the Leonidas H. Berry Papers, 1907\u20131982<\/a> manuscript collection including letters, photographs, and ephemera documenting the career and personal life of the trailblazing physician and civil rights advocate. His work is recognized in the NLM traveling banner exhibition <\/em>For All the People: A Century in Citizen Action in Health Care Reform<\/a>; the online adaptation of the exhibition features 1,686 digitized items<\/a> in a digital gallery. Stay tuned this week as <\/em>Circulating Now features materials from the collection in honor of what would be Dr. Berry\u2019s 116th birthday\u2014July 16, 2018. <\/em><\/p>\n By Abigail Porter ~<\/em><\/p>\n When Leonidas H. Berry (1902\u20131995) graduated from Rush Medical College in 1929, racial segregation was a harsh and codified reality in America.\u00a0 Along with racially segregated schools, restaurants, and buses, medicine was subject to an enforced racial order and characterized by a vast inequality. Medical practices and clinics were segregated by race, few medical schools admitted Black students, and many hospitals would not hire Black doctors or admit Black patients.<\/p>\n Many of Dr. Berry\u2019s papers<\/a> housed at the National Library of Medicine (NLM) lay bare the contours of this system of segregated and unequal health care in America in the mid-20th century. This blog showcases four items that highlight Dr. Berry\u2019s multi-pronged, vigorous efforts to fight discrimination in medicine, as well as the impact of racial bias on his career and outlook.<\/p>\n 1958: A Meeting in Segregated New Orleans <\/strong><\/p>\n In 1954, in a landmark ruling, the U.S. Supreme Court unanimously ruled that racial segregation of children in public accommodations was unconstitutional, and that \u201cseparate-but-equal\u201d education and services were not equal at all. The ruling was a key turning point in the Civil Rights Movement.<\/p>\n In many southern states, however, the ruling was met with stiff resistance. When the American College of Gastroenterology scheduled its 1958 annual meeting in New Orleans, Dr. Berry concluded he would not be able to attend due to continued racial discrimination there and \u201clong standing custom.\u201d<\/p>\n In a letter to the society\u2019s chairman, Berry objected to the choice of a meeting location where racial segregation continued to be practiced. He asked that the organization go on record against segregation, pointing out that organizations \u201cmust be willing to stand up and be counted.\u201d Berry\u2019s willingness to speak out against discrimination was a hallmark of his life.<\/p>\n Fighting for a Staff Appointment <\/strong><\/p>\n In 1934, Dr. Berry became a junior attending physician in gastroenterology at Chicago\u2019s Provident Hospital, the first Black-owned and operated hospital in the United States. A year later he became chairman of the Division of Gastroenterology, a position he held for 35 years.<\/p>\n While working at Provident, Berry also joined Chicago\u2019s Michael Reese Hospital in 1946, becoming the first Black physician to do so. For the next 17 years, however, Berry fought to advance from a limited \u201ccourtesy\u201d appointment to the attending staff, being told repeatedly he was not qualified, despite being known world-wide in his field.<\/p>\n In a letter of appeal sent to a Michael Reese official in 1960, Berry detailed his extensive career accomplishments and his concern that he found himself still confined to the \u201cfringes.\u201d Berry\u2019s experience was common at the time. Few Black physicians were named to permanent staff positions at non-Black hospitals well into the 20th century due to racial discrimination.<\/p>\n<\/a>
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