The Priestley Medal was awarded to Roger Adams
In 1946, the Priestley Medal was awarded to Roger Adams by the American Chemical Society “to recognize distinguished…
In 1946, the Priestley Medal was awarded to Roger Adams by the American Chemical Society “to recognize distinguished…
In 1944, the the American Chemical Society awarded the Priestley Medal to James B. Conant “to recognize distinguished…
In 1940, Edwin Cohn, a professor of biological chemistry at Harvard Medical School, developed cold ethanol fractionation, the…
On Aug. 26, 1938, Robert Gross then Chief Resident in Surgery at Children’s Hospital, Harvard Medical School, performed…
On Oct. 12, 1928, the first iron lung was used at Boston Children’s Hospital by Harvard Medical School…
In 1927, the iron lung was developed by Philip Drinker and Louis Agassiz Shaw at Harvard School of…
In 1925, Joseph W. Schereschewsky, head of a PHS Special Cancer Investigations Laboratory established in 1922 in Cambridge,…
In 1922, the Public Health Service opened a Special Cancer Investigations Laboratory at Harvard Medical School.
In 1922, Elliott Joslin, at Harvard Medical Center, introduced insulin to the United States and founded Joslin Diabetes…
On Oct. 21, 1918, Boston schools reopened to students. The District Nursing Association warned Bostonians that, despite the…
On Oct. 19, 1918, it was reported that over 3,500 Bostonians had died from influenza or pneumonia since…
On Oct. 8, 1918, Boston’s health commissioner Dr. William C. Woodward ordered reduced hours for various stores in…
On Oct. 2, 1918, the Massachusetts Department of Health made influenza a reportable disease.
On Sep. 26, 1918, Boston’s health commissioner Dr. William C. Woodward issued a closure order for theaters, movie…
On Sept. 25, 1918, Boston’s health commissioner Dr. William C. Woodward announced that all Boston public schools were…
On Sept. 25, 1918, Boston Mayor Andrew J. Peters appointed an Emergency Committee to advise and empower the…
On Sept. 24, 1918, Massachusetts Governor Samuel W. McCall held a conference call with state health and safety…
By Sept. 23, 1918, the total number of influenza victims jumped to 334. That situation was growing increasingly…
By Sept. 16, 1918, hundreds of influenza cases existed in the city of Boston, overcrowding hospitals.
On Sept. 11, 1918, the first civilian influenza cases were reported in Boston. By September 16, there were…
On Sept. 10, 1918, two hundred sick sailors were admitted to the new emergency hospital. Meanwhile, Chelsea Naval…
On Sept. 9, 1918, the Massachusetts National Guard, under the direction of Colonel William H. Brooks, erected a…
On Sept. 5, 1918, Dr. John S. Hitchcock, the head of the communicable disease section of the Massachusetts…
On Aug. 28, 1918, Influenza had broken out at the Receiving Ship, and within a week there were…
In 1914, at Harvard Medical School, Paul Dudley White introduced the electrocardiograph to the U.S. The original electrocardiograph…
In 1906, the Massachusetts Medical College of Harvard University relocated to its its current location in Boston. Today,…
In 1896 as part of their missionary charter, Methodist deaconesses founded Deaconess Hospital to care for the city’s…
On May 18, 1891, Massachusetts-born businessman William Marsh Rice chartered the William Marsh Rice Institute for the Advancement…
In 1886, Reginald Heber Fitz at Harvard Medical School provided the first clinical description of appendicitis and also…
On Nov. 9, 1872, the Boston Fire began on a Saturday and ended Sunday destroying 776 buildings across…