512:. He advised the Board that English experience showed that free medical care could lead to permanent dependency and the solution was more control of dispensaries. The state legislature passed a law granting the Board of Charities licensing power over dispensaries in 1899, which Smith implemented. He moved cautiously, collecting and supplying data while enforcing the new rules and seeking to avoid embarrassment. Smith was satisfied by 1903 that the licensing law was working because dispensary use was no longer increasing faster than population growth, and he stopped worrying about the issue. Practicing doctors saw it differently and continued complaining that charitable dispensaries were stealing their paying patients for the next two decades.
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hospitals served valuable social and medical purposes, but their quality and viability were threatened because there were too many hospitals for the existing need. Smith wrote: "whenever application is made for its approval of the certificate of incorporation of a new hospital, careful personal inquiry should be made by the
Commissioner to whom the reference is made to determine the need of a hospital in the proposed locality and the qualifications of its projectors to organize and manage it." Smith used the Board’s authority to deny two New York City hospitals in 1899.
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474:) and the State Care Act of 1890, which transferred all publicly-financed mental health care to the state. The State Care Act proved to be a pivotal national event. Johns Hopkins psychiatry professor Henry Hurd wrote in 1916 that New York's actions, "unquestionably gave great impetus to the movement, which has since spread to other states with comparative rapidity."
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recognizing Smith’s public health argument, "An Act to extend the jurisdiction of the park board of the city of New York to the preservation, planting and cultivation of trees and vegetation in the streets thereof for the purpose of improving the public health." However, Smith's 1902 street tree law stayed on the books with no action for twelve years.
202:), in 1861, receiving his first academic appointment as the school's professor of the principles of surgery. He served as the Medical College’s professor of anatomy from 1863 to 1872 and developed a respected teaching approach that discouraged memorization and encouraged students to visualize the body as a machine they should construct from scratch.
195:, where he was appalled by the military’s dismal sanitation and the reckless surgery of many Northern volunteer surgeons. Smith also volunteered at the Union Army's Central Park Hospital, where he developed a lower extremity amputation procedure that became the surgical standard in the United States and England for the next fifty years.
37:(February 19, 1823 – August 26, 1922) was a New York City surgeon and civic leader who made important contributions to medical education, nursing education, public health, housing improvement, mental health reform, charity oversight, and urban environmentalism. Smith maintained an active medical practice, was an attending physician at
569:) to do a brief survey of Manhattan's street trees for the Tree Planting Association, which proved to be the turning point. The City Parks Department commissioned the College of Forestry to prepare a more comprehensive report the following summer, which was Manhattan's first tree census. This report, prepared by a young
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Smith often worked in the background during his younger years, letting his writing speak for him and giving credit to others, which he did in creating the New York State Board of Health in 1879. As he passed into the role of elder statesman, he was more willing to don the visible mantle of public and
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The New York City Board of Health asked
Commissioner Smith to investigate the well-known summer increase in death rates and recommend measures to reduce mortality in 1871. Smith responded with a tightly-written report the following year, the essence of which was that Manhattan was becoming hotter due
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Smith became one of the seminal leaders of nineteenth-century
American public health while still pursuing his medical career. He was a frequent critic of New York City’s corrupt and inefficient sanitation efforts before the Civil War, but reformers brought him into the daily business of public health
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Smith had a more thorough medical education than the typical apprenticeship and (sometimes) two four-month sessions at a medical college. The reason he usually gave for his career choice, as late as age ninety-five, was that he was too sickly as a youth to do the work of a farmer, making medicine the
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Smith argued for street trees as a public health measure to reduce summer heat and save lives in 1872. He pushed this idea as cities cut down trees and paved their way into the twentieth century. He got a law passed in 1902 and fought to get it enforced in 1914 that made New York City’s street trees
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re-appointed Smith to the State Board of
Charities in 1893, which became Smith’s organizational home for the next twenty-five years. Much of Smith’s daily Board of Charities work was personally inspecting or managing inspections of facilities that cared for delinquent, blind, epileptic, consumptive,
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Smith developed a comprehensive plan to re-organize New York City's disjointed public hospital system in 1907. He wanted a single
Department of Public Hospitals and Commissioner of Public Hospitals to replace three overlapping regulatory bodies. He argued that public hospitals should be built where
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Smith pointed to successes in 1888: mechanical restraints had virtually disappeared, mental patients had more liberty, state asylums had schools for patients and training for attendants, there was finally a female physician in the state system, and many patients who were seen early in their disease
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Those who knew him best were most impressed by Smith’s intellect and his even disposition. A contemporary physician described him in 1866: "As an operator, he is confident without being presumptuous, neat without being fastidious, and careful without being timid." New York State Board of
Charities
505:, launched a magazine attack against free hospitals and dispensaries because they deprived hard-working doctors of a fair income. The Board agreed with Shrady that some charitable dispensaries were providing care to persons who could otherwise afford to pay, and asked Smith to investigate in 1896.
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Smith supported
Blackwell's efforts to open a woman's medical college in Manhattan in 1868 by serving as one of its examiners. After Elizabeth left for England in 1869, he continued to serve as an examiner for her sister Emily for almost twenty years. He argued strongly for women physicians in his
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in 1916 as a look back on his time as Lunacy
Commissioner, a reflection of how he felt mental illness should be managed, and a commentary on how things had gone. He maintained that institutional care could return many mentally ill and disabled persons to society, but this had not happened because
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As a health commissioner, Smith sought to convince the City Health
Department to issue tighter building standards and to facilitate the construction of new housing for the poor using public and philanthropic funds. He also encouraged relocation of the poor by providing cheap public transit. These
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for thirty-seven years, and authored three surgical texts, but he was best known for his public service. Three mayors, seven governors, and two U.S. presidents appointed Smith to almost fifty years of public responsibilities. Shortly before Smith’s death in 1922, Columbia
University President and
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Smith and his family lived in Manhattan for most of his life, typically in rented apartments. He sent Lucy and his children to his father-in-law's upstate residence in Greenwich, New York, during the summer and in later years bought a lake house in Skaneateles. He never acquired the wealth of a
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in 1964. The Board had authority to approve and inspect hospitals that treated charity patients, but it had not used this power before Smith's arrival. Smith organized a Board hospital committee in 1895 and began inspecting the state’s hospitals. His major conclusion was that New York’s general
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appointed Smith to Letchworth's State Board of Charities in 1881 (renamed the State Board of Social Welfare in 1929), a semi-official volunteer organization that oversaw all of New York’s publicly-supported institutions except prisons. Cornell named Smith State Commissioner in Lunacy in 1882, a
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Smith made sixty-seven unannounced visits to thirty-nine separate institutions in his first seven months as Lunacy Commissioner. He collected data during his tenure, described what he found, and made recommendations, but he avoided a heavy bureaucratic hand. He wrote in his 1884 annual report:
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in 1806. His son, Lewis, (born in 1786 or 1787) served in the New York militia during the War of 1812. Lewis taught school in Skaneateles, marrying one of his students, Chloe Benson, in 1813. They built a log house next to Job, and Lewis served as a county supervisor, justice of the peace, and
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in 1889, but Smith favored government action, not voluntarism. He prepared a legislative bill giving the City Parks Department control of New York City’s street trees in 1899, which he supported with a publicity campaign based on his 1872 Board of Health work. Albany enacted his bill in 1902,
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salaried position reporting to the Board that was charged with inspecting all facilities incarcerating New York's insane persons and adjudicating inmate complaints. At the time, New York had 10 percent of the country's population but housed 20 percent of the nation's institutionalized insane.
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in 1911 to give a first-hand account of the establishment of the Metropolitan Board of Health in 1866 and show twentieth-century readers how far public health had come. He remained disappointed that the American Public Health Association, despite his multiple urgings, never supported a strong
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Smith was a lifelong advocate for women physicians, often helping behind the scenes. Being raised by a woman may have made him more tolerant than other physicians, but Smith came of age in a time and place that was home to the American Woman's Rights movement, which was closely tied to the
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Smith served as State Commissioner in Lunacy from 1882 to 1888, then addressed New York’s systemic mental health problems in 1889–1890 by helping create its state hospital system. His organizational and data-gathering skills proved to be a good fit for New York's dire mental health needs.
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Newspapers throughout the country cited Smith’s advice on the health benefits of urban trees, but New York City took no action. The city continued removing street trees as it paved roads, built underground lines and vaults, and erected taller buildings during the rest of the century.
406:, “proceeded from those districts of the city notorious for their filthy and unpoliced streets, and wretched and uninhabitable tenement houses,” concluding, “The great and patent prevention for riots like that which we have witnessed is radical reform of the homes of the poor.”
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He took his first steps off the farm in 1845–1846, at age twenty-two, traveling twenty miles south to attend two winter terms at Cortland Academy (later Homer Academy) in Homer, New York. There he met Cortland’s young physician lecturer on anatomy and physiology, Caleb Green.
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Smith wanted to make indigent mentally ill persons wards of the state and, where possible, transfer them to the newer and more professionally-run state asylums. He led a group of reformers that passed laws creating a three-person State Lunacy Commission in 1889 (now the
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At the National Board’s urging, Smith worked to create a New York State Board of Health in 1879. Smith helped draft enabling legislation, encouraged physicians to get behind the law, and lobbied legislators. This led to formation of a state health board in 1880 (now the
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to urbanization, and excessive heat was the primary cause of the rise in summer deaths. The challenges were to curb temperature extremes and improve air quality, and his primary recommendation was more shade trees, managed by the Department of Public Parks (now the
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Blackwell's medical school success settled the question of women in medicine for Smith. He editorialized in February 1861 that, "public opinion, of course, sets strongly in favor of the medical education of females", and that Blackwell's example should force the
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in 1864. Smith managed a landmark block-by-block sanitary survey of Manhattan for the Citizens’ Association, the results of which encouraged the New York legislature to remove health department responsibilities from New York City and create a four-county
95:. Smith later recalled that many of his childhood friends left Spafford to become successful politicians, ministers, and teachers. Smith used the Spafford library to teach himself mathematics, geometry, surveying, some trigonometry, then Latin and Greek.
429:, the State Board of Charities president, toured European asylums in 1880 and concluded, "In this age of high-pressure living, there is perhaps no subject of more general or more urgent interest than that of insanity and its relations to the State."
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wrote about Smith’s first three Lunacy Commissioner reports that, "They now furnish by far the most reliable data as to the actual condition of the insane in public and private institutions that we can have access to in the State of New York." The
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in 1844, running for the office of Inspector of Elections. He received two votes, which settled him on politics and rural life: "I left the farm and town soon after and the popular cry, 'Back to the farm,' finds no favorable response on my part."
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mental health cheerleader, writing books and granting newspaper interviews. He died of general debility at his daughter Florence’s home in Montour Falls, New York, on August 26, 1922, six months short of his one-hundredth birthday.
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named Smith the “Nestor of American Surgeons” in 1917. Smith said in 1918, reflecting on his many other achievements, "My steadfast aim and purpose has been to succeed as a practiser and teacher of the science and art of surgery."
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at Bellevue Hospital in 1872 and was an examiner for the Bellevue School of Nursing. Smith assured Bellevue's nursing graduates in 1903 that the introduction of trained nurses was the greatest advance he had witnessed in medicine.
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Smith was president of the city Tree Planting Association in 1914 and launched a publicity campaign to shame the Parks Department into enforcing his 1902 law. He arranged for the new State College of Forestry at Syracuse (now the
566:
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Smith left the city health department and his American Public Health Association presidential post in 1875, but re-engaged with public health in 1878 by drafting a bill to create a national board of health. Congress approved a
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Smith became a successful New York City surgeon and medical educator. He finished his Bellevue house officer duties in 1852 and was appointed attending surgeon at Bellevue Hospital in 1854, a position he held until 1891. The
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managers had abandoned inexpensive individualized dwellings for ever-larger centralized facilities, "thus reducing the entire population to the common level of a custodial institution." Smith rejected the rising tide of
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reviewed the final reports and found that Smith brought, "a ripeness of experience and a breadth of research which make his paper exceedingly instructive to the sanitary student." The Hopkins trustees ultimately chose
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president William Rhinelander Stewart spent thousands of miles in Smith's company and commented that Smith took the tedious work seriously and calmly, "Never too late, never too early, and always even tempered."
233:) from 1874 to 1882 and clinical professor of surgery there from 1874 to 1894. He was a consulting surgeon to St. Vincent’s, Bellevue, and Columbus Hospitals until 1911. Medical historian and U.S. Army physician
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Smith was also a supporter of women nurses, who, like women physicians, were often opposed by male doctors. He editorialized several times on behalf of women nurses during the Civil War, citing the women-led
191:, which became the Union Army's surgical field manual and likely contributed to the now recognized improvements in Civil War medical outcomes. That same year, he traveled to the Virginia swamps during the
63:. His paternal grandfather, Job, was a Continental Army officer during the Revolutionary War. Job moved from Connecticut to New York after the war and settled on lot 74 of central New York’s newly created
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awarded him the school’s highest honor and pronounced Smith, “the most interesting figure in American medicine and in American public service today.” The New York Academy of Medicine initiated the annual
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Smith maintained a busy medical life into his eighties despite his civic obligations. He was professor of orthopedic surgery at the Medical Department of the University of the City of New York (also now
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649:, on June 1, 1858. They had nine children, three of whom died in infancy. Stephen and Lucy named their first child Florence Nightingale Smith (1861) and their other children after family members.
438:"Reforms affected by persuasion and appeals to the humanity, and especially the good sense of keepers, more effective and more lasting than when enforced by the arbitrary power of law." The country's
466:) grounds with Smith as a young alienist, acknowledged in 1922 that the internal changes Smith put in place between 1882 and 1888 were the administrative backbone of New York’s state hospital system.
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486:. He stated that forced sterilization for preventing mental illness and disability was a procedure that, "is naturally shocking to the moral sense and must be attended with serious difficulties."
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appointed Smith a member. However, the National Board was weaker than Smith had wanted, and its leaders were prone to battling with other government entities. Congress ceased funding it in 1883.
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Smith called a small meeting of sanitarians in his office in 1872 to discuss a national organization that could support his and others’ public health efforts. This led to the formation of the
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they were needed and managed by local districts. The mayor's Commission on Hospitals adopted Smith's recommendations in 1909, but New York City did not implement them until 1929, when mayor
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abolitionist movement he favored. When Elizabeth Blackwell arrived at his medical college in 1847, he quickly accepted her, and Blackwell added his reminiscences to her 1895 autobiography.
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Between 1851 and 1922, Smith published two medical journals, six books and hundreds of articles, speeches, and official reports. Smith became the editor and proprietor of the bimonthly
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and his numerical method. Smith followed their examples in his surgical and civic work. During the summer cholera epidemic of 1849, Smith and Hamilton cared for patients at Buffalo’s
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appointed Smith to the Metropolitan Board of Health in 1868, Smith’s first public appointment. The legislature returned local health department control to New York City in 1870, and
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later that year, which named Smith its first president. Smith and Association secretary, Elisha Harris, launched the organization’s journal in 1875 with $ 1,000 of their own money.
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Lewis Smith died in 1829 when Stephen was six years old, most likely from typhoid fever and Chloe raised the family with the help of the Thorn Hill Baptist Church and the local
131:, the first woman admitted to a regular (allopathic) medical college. Smith did not return to Geneva the following fall. He followed Geneva’s charismatic surgery professor,
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Smith was a respected voice in mid-century hospital design. He encouraged sanitary principles and plain buildings based on the pavilion system during the Civil War, citing
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305:) sought his counsel on their hospital’s construction in 1865. The Roosevelt trustees placed a copy of his recommendations in the new hospital’s cornerstone in 1869.
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Smith worked to make housing reform a part of public health’s mandate, providing momentum for changes that occurred later in the century. He editorialized in
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in May 1862, which went through five printings and became the Union Army’s surgical handbook during the Civil War. He wrote a general surgical text in 1879,
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Stephen Smith was raised in Spafford, New York, a central New York State farming village, but he was influenced by the social dynamism of the surrounding
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165:. During his time at Bellevue, Smith began his seventy-year literary career by publishing a review of seventy-eight cases of urinary bladder rupture.
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or mentally defective state inmates; however, his more lasting contribution was in helping organize New York’s public medical care delivery system.
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existence and he typically wrote at least one editorial for each issue. He collected fifty-eight of his articles and editorials for his 1872 book,
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Smith spoke and consulted on public health for the next fifteen years, although he was busy with other civic work during much of this time.
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to advise them, but Billings was not satisfied with his own work and incorporated ideas from Smith and the others in his final design.
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83:. These conservative institutions reflected their New England roots; however, Smith was surrounded by the religious upheaval of the
161:), listing Hamilton as his preceptor and receiving his diploma in 1850. Shortly afterward, he obtained a house officer position at
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Smith went to Manhattan in the fall of 1849 for a third four-month academic session at The College of Physicians and Surgeons (now
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only option. An alternative explanation from a contemporary was that his elder brother Sidney encouraged him to pursue medicine.
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64:
3237:
The College of Physicians and Surgeons - New York - and Its Founders, Officers, Instructors, Benefactors and Alumni: A History
3012:
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The College of Physicians and Surgeons - New York - and Its Founders, Officers, Instructors, Benefactors and Alumni: A History
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The College of Physicians and Surgeons - New York - and Its Founders, Officers, Instructors, Benefactors and Alumni: A History
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The College of Physicians and Surgeons - New York - and Its Founders, Officers, Instructors, Benefactors and Alumni: A History
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The College of Physicians and Surgeons – New York – and Its Founders, Officers, Instructors, Benefactors and Alumni: A History
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to amend its code of ethics to, "recognize properly educated female physicians as practitioners in good and lawful standing."
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Smith directed the Board’s work on medical charities and hospitals. The medical charity issue hit the headlines in 1894 when
442:(psychiatrists), who supervised its asylums, made him an honorary member of their national association in 1885.The editor of
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Smith spent the four-month winter term at Buffalo Medical College in 1848–1849, where Hamilton was Professor of Surgery and
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Smith was less concerned with physician income than social science arguments that poorly-designed charities could lead to
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appointed Smith a City Health Board sanitary commissioner. Smith remained a New York City health commissioner until 1875.
20:
1781:
Brieger, G.H. (1966). "Sanitary Reform in New York City: Stephen Smith and the Passage of the Metropolitan Health Bill".
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asked Smith to inspect Union Army hospitals in the District of Columbia in 1862. The trustees of Roosevelt Hospital (now
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was Dean and Professor of Medicine. Both men were data-collectors and well-acquainted with the work of French physician
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637:, and a second edition of this work in 1887. See below for a list of Smith's published books and book chapters.
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Smith brought hospitals under the Board’s purview, establishing a precedent for New York’s first in the country
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234:
1822:
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Pioneer Work in Opening the Medical Profession to Women: Autobiographical Sketches by Dr. Elizabeth Blackwell
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s biggest concern, after the poor state of insanity care, was that Smith's job was too much for one person.
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132:
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Smith, S, (1911) "The Law in Its Relations to the Practice of Surgery". In: Bryant J. D., Buck A. H., eds.
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2014:
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3033:
Laws of the State of New York Passed at the One Hundred Twenty-fifth Session of the Legislature, Vol. 2
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1917:
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1048:"A Contribution to the Statistical Rupture of the Urinary Bladder: With a Table of Seventy-Eight Cases"
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Smith married Lucy (Lucie) Culver (1835–1905), daughter of Brooklyn judge and well-known abolitionist
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60:
1071:
An Account of Bellevue Hospital with a Catalogue of the Medical and Surgical Staff from 1736 to 1894
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2364:"Proceedings of the Association of Medical Superintendents of American Institutions for the Insane"
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Manhattan carriage-trade physician. When he died in 1922, his estate was worth less than $ 30,000.
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by documenting the state of the city's street trees and recommending a comprehensive approach to
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Hurd, H. M.; Drewry, W. F.; Dewey, R.; Pilgrim, C. W.; Blumer, G. A.; Burgess, T. J. W. (1916).
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in Paris, which Smith considered, “the final act of my service in the field of public health.”
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Smith did not enlist during the Civil War, but in 1862 he published his 279-page, pocket-sized
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Sanitary Commission #56: Department of Special Inspection or The General Hospitals of the Army
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2189:
Second Annual Report of the Board of Health of the Health Department of the City of New York
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1977:
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Mortuary Records with Genealogical Notes of the Town of Spafford, Onandaga County, New York
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Smith asked Caleb Green to tutor him in medicine in December, 1846, and he enrolled in the
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asked Smith and four others to offer suggestions for their proposed hospital in 1875. The
2791:
1023:
Against the Spirit of System – The French Impulse in Nineteenth-Century American Medicine
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Smith, S. (1906) "The Evolution of American Surgery". In: Bryant J. D., Buck A. H., eds.
76:: Sidney in 1815, Mary in 1816, William in 1819, Stephen in 1823, and Job Lewis in 1827.
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1419:
The Road to Seneca Falls: Elizabeth Cady Stanton and the First Woman's Rights Convention
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editorials, he was the anonymous New York correspondent for the English medical journal
2204:"Methods of Improving the Homes of the Laboring and Tenement House Classes of New York"
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1965:
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Second Annual Report of the Board of Health of the Health Department, City of New York
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for three terms. He and Chloe had five children who were born on the family farm near
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1726:"The Original Plans for the Johns Hopkins Hospital and Their Historical Significance"
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218:
80:
30:
Stephen Smith as first president of the American Public Health Association, 1872-1875
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Bellevue: Three Centuries of Medicine and Mayhem in America's Most Storied Hospital
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at Bellevue Hospital in 1875–1876. Harris argues that Smith was the one who taught
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1134:
2745:"Suggestions of a Plan of Organizing a Hospital System for the City of New York"
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1119:"The Union Army's Surgical Handbook and the Positive Story of Civil War Surgery"
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1981:
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first Lunacy Commissioner report in 1882 and proudly announced that New York’s
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Smith, S. (1889) "Surgical Diseases of Early Childhood". In: Hirst B. C., ed.
621:
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According to Smith, but also Walsh, Smith was the first to use antisepsis and
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2063:"Insanity and Quarantine - Topics Discussed by the State Medical Association"
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The Institutional Care of the Insane in the United States and Canada. Vol. 1
1073:. New York, NY: The Society of the Alumni of Bellevue Hospital. p. 130.
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Student Records, 1816-1934 of College of Physicians and Surgeons of New York
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3308:. Albany, NY: J. B. Lyon Company, State Printers. 1911. pp. 1506–1507.
3075:"City Street Trees: If Official Neglect Continues They Will Soon Disappear"
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2134:
1999:
1331:
History of Medicine in New York - Three Centuries of Medical Progress Vol 5
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in 1860, which lasted until 1864. Smith was the sole editor during most of
184:) pronounced him one of New York’s up and coming young physicians in 1858.
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567:
State University of New York College of Environmental Science and Forestry
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2089:
Annual Report of the State Board of Charities for the Year 1910, Volume 1
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A Candle in Her Hand: A Story of the Nursing Schools of Bellevue Hospital
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73:
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3199:"In Memoriam - Stephen Smith, M.D., LL.D. Health News. 1922;17(10):239"
2191:. New York, NY: David H. Gildersleeve, Printer. 1872. pp. 333–347.
964:"Doctor Stephen Smith's Ninety-fifth Anniversary - Dr. Smith's Address"
880:"Doctor Stephen Smith's Ninety-fifth Anniversary – Dr. Smith's Address"
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1510:. Albany, NY: Assembly of the State of New York. 1886. pp. 20–21.
1359:
Annual Report of the State Board of Charities for the Year 1910 Vol. 1
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Annual Report of the State Board of Charities for the Year 1910 Vol 1
3254:. New York, NY: Frank Allaben Genealogical Company. pp. 197–199.
1918:"On the Progress of Public Health Organizations in the United States"
1361:. Albany, NY: J. B. Lyon Company, State Printers. 1911. p. 1543.
820:. Syracuse, NY: Onandaga County Historical Society. pp. 240–242.
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2091:. Albany, NY: J.B. Lyon Company, State Printers. 1911. p. 1535.
87:, the economic and transportation revolutions spawned by the nearby
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Pestilence, Insanity, and Trees: How Stephen Smith Changed New York
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Seeing Trees: A History of Street Trees In New York City and Berlin
3267:
Pestilence, Insanity, and Trees: How Stephen Smith Changed New York
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Seeing Trees: A History of Street Trees In New York City and Berlin
2574:. Albany, NY: The State Board of Charities. 1900. pp. 405–418.
2560:. Albany, NY: The State Board of Charities. 1898. pp. 637–644.
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Pestilence, Insanity, and Trees: How Stephen Smith Changed New York
1902:. Concord, NH: Republican Press Association. 1897. pp. 20–24.
25:
3020:. The City of New York Department of Parks. 1903. pp. 53–56.
2588:. Albany, NY: The State Board of Charities. 1901. pp. 46–47.
1811:. Albany, NY: The Metropolitan Board of Health. 1868. p. 15.
1240:
Surgery: A Practical Treatise with Special Reference to Treatment
3104:. The New York State College of Forestry at Syracuse University.
2352:. Albany, NY: Senate of the State of New York. 1885. p. 40.
3292:
Biographical Sketches of Distinguished Living New York Surgeons
3239:. New York, NY: The Lewis Publishing Company. pp. 496–513.
3222:
Biographical Sketches of Distinguished Living New York Surgeons
2666:. Albany, NY: The State Board of Charities. 1896. pp. LIV.
1770:. New York, NY: The Lewis Publishing Company. pp. 496–513.
1482:. New York, NY: New York Academy of Medicine. 1911. p. 15.
1272:. New York, NY: The Lewis Publishing Company. pp. 496–513.
1255:
Biographical Sketches of Distinguished Living New York Surgeons
994:
Biographical Sketches of Distinguished Living New York Surgeons
952:. New York, NY: The Lewis Publishing Company. pp. 496–513.
868:. New York, NY: The Lewis Publishing Company. pp. 496–513.
848:
Biographical Sketches of Distinguished Living New York Surgeons
2680:. Albany, NY: The State Board of Charities. 1896. p. 288.
2509:. Albany, NY: J.B. Lyon Company, Printers. 1918. pp. 3–8.
1496:. Albany, NY: New York State Assembly. 1883. pp. 172–174.
209:
Stephen Smith (center) age 72 at patient's bedside in Bellevue
159:
Columbia University Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons
3184:
Doctor in Medicine: And Other Papers on Professional Subjects
2546:. Albany, NY: The State Board of Charities. 1897. p. 82.
1333:. New York, NY: National Americana Society. pp. 329–335.
1242:. Philadelphia, PA: P. Blakiston, Son & Co. p. 1147.
679:
Doctor in Medicine: And Other Papers on Professional Subjects
412:
Tenement House Act of 1867 and the Tenement House Act of 1879
1508:
Thirteenth Annual Report of the State Commissioner in Lunacy
1480:
In Memory of Dr. Elizabeth Blackwell and Dr. Emily Blackwell
1052:
The New York Journal of Medicine and the Collateral Sciences
835:. New York, NY: The S. J. Clarke Publishing Co. p. 736.
2408:
Fifteenth Annual Report of the State Commissioner in Lunacy
1345:
Catalogue of New York University: 1833–1907, Medical Alumni
926:"Reminiscences of the 'Old Home' of Suburban Skaneateles".
903:
Medical Education in the United States before the Civil War
786:"Reminiscences of the 'Old Home' of Suburban Skaneateles".
3511:
The History of Public Welfare in New York State, 1867–1940
3036:. Albany, NY: State of New York. 1902. pp. 1096–1098.
2507:
Fifty-Second Annual Report of the State Board of Charities
2386:"State Commissioner in Lunacy – Reports for 1883 and 1884"
2268:
The History of Public Welfare in New York State, 1867-1940
1347:. New York, NY: General Alumni Society. 1908. p. 595.
686:
Manual of the Principles and Practice of Operative Surgery
635:
Manual of the Principles and Practice of Operative Surgery
127:
in the fall of 1847, where one of his fellow students was
2818:. David H. Gildersleeve, Printer. 1872. pp. 374–403.
2495:. New York, NY: The Macmillan Company. pp. 226, 284.
2350:
Twelfth Annual Report of the State Commissioner in Lunacy
833:
Past and Present of Syracuse and Onondaga County New York
462:
president Edward Brush, who walked the Utica Asylum (now
1446:. London, UK: Longmans, Green, and Co. pp. 255–259.
1209:"Amputation at the Knee-Joint by Modified Lateral Flaps"
410:
steps, which were later enacted, were far more than the
225:, later one of the pioneers of modern American surgery.
2336:
Tenth Annual Report of the State Commissioner in Lunacy
2282:
Tenth Annual Report of the State Commissioner in Lunacy
1494:
Tenth Annual Report of the State Commissioner in Lunacy
1085:"The Profession in New York - Impressions of a Visitor"
597:
in 1857. He closed this journal and started the weekly
276:
as one that, "has no equal in this country." He helped
3581:
New York University Grossman School of Medicine alumni
3427:
A History of Public Health in New York City: 1866–1966
3413:
A History of Public Health in New York City, 1625–1866
2480:. Baltimore, MD: The Johns Hopkins Press. p. 167.
2410:. Albany, NY: Assembly of the State of New York. 1888.
1632:. New York, NY: Wm C Bryant & Co. pp. 11, 15.
1308:"Reminiscences of Two Epochs - Anesthesia and Asepsis"
805:. Boston, MA: The Boston History Company. p. 911.
3591:
New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene
3441:
The Sanitarians – A History of American Public Health
102:
on a visit to Thorn Hill and joined the anti-slavery
1941:
The Sanitarians: A History of American Public Health
1876:
The Sanitarians: A History of American Public Health
1468:(February 23): 130–131. 1861 – via HathiTrust.
803:
Onondaga's Centennial: Gleanings of a Century. Vol 1
2964:"Vegetation a Remedy for the Summer Heat of Cities"
1617:(October 26): 279–281. 1861 – via HathiTrust.
1374:"Dr. Stephen Smith, the Nestor of American Surgery"
263:had added a female physician to its staff in 1885.
51:for lifetime achievement in public health in 2005.
3102:Report on the Street Trees of the City of New York
1943:. University of Illinois Press. pp. 162–172.
1878:. University of Illinois Press. pp. 130–131.
707:A Practical Treatise on Fractures and Dislocations
3531:History of the American Public Health Association
1010:. College of Physicians and Surgeons of New York.
716:. Vol. 1. New York, NY: William Wood and Company.
702:. Vol 2. Philadelphia, PA: Lea Brothers & Co.
198:Smith helped start Bellevue Medical College (now
3513:. Chicago, IL: The University of Chicago Press.
3294:. New York, NY: John Bradburn. pp. 187–201.
3224:. New York, NY: John Bradburn. pp. 187–201.
3171:(September 3): 125. 1864 – via HathiTrust.
2119:"Development of American Public Health Endeavor"
1554:(June 15): 388–389. 1861 – via HathiTrust.
1257:. New York, NY: John Bradburn. pp. 187–201.
996:. New York, NY: John Bradburn. pp. 187–201.
850:. New York, NY: John Bradburn. pp. 187–201.
756:"Dr. Smith at 100 Receives Degree from Columbia"
693:The Principles and Practice of Operative Surgery
547:New York City Department of Parks and Recreation
3121:The New York Journal of Medicine. 1857;2(3):411
2769:. City of New York Martin B. Brown Press. 1909.
2650:Dispensaries - Their Management and Development
3469:Mental Illness and American Society, 1875–1940
3369:The New York Times Magazine Section – Part Six
2455:. Princeton University Press. pp. 87–91.
2453:Mental Illness and American Society, 1875–1940
2177:(July 25): 41–42. 1863 – via HathiTrust.
1532:(July 13): 25–26. 1861 – via HathiTrust.
1396:"Dr. Stephen Smith's Ninety-fifth Anniversary"
3471:. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
3149:(July 7): 13–15. 1860 – via HathiTrust.
2423:"Obituary: Stephen Smith, M.D., LL.D., Sc.D."
905:. New York, NY: Arno Press and the NY Times.
8:
3365:"How First Fight Against Disease Waged Here"
2338:. Albany, NY: New York State Assembly. 1883.
2284:. Albany, NY: New York State Assembly. 1883.
1213:The American Journal of the Medical Sciences
135:to his office in Buffalo and the new (1846)
3353:(28): 152–153. 1895 – via HathiTrust.
3321:"Passage of the State Board of Health Bill"
2374:(July): 46–97. 1885 – via HathiTrust.
2015:"Passage of the State Board of Health Bill"
674:. 1st ed. New York, NY: Baillière Brothers.
611:which allows some cross-reference with his
16:American surgeon and public health advocate
3331:(June 19): 708–709 – via HathiTrust.
2532:(September): 68–79 – via HathiTrust.
2025:(June 19): 708–709 – via HathiTrust.
737:New York, NY: The Macmillan Company; 1916.
709:. Philadelphia, PA: Lea Brothers & Co.
700:A System of Obstetrics by American Authors
688:. Boston, MA: Houghton, Osgood and Company
3429:. New York, NY: Russell Sage Foundation.
3415:. New York, NY: Russell Sage Foundation.
2786:. New York, NY: Oxford University Press.
2142:
1989:
1966:"The National Board of Health: 1879-1883"
1142:
730:. New York, NY: William Wood and Company.
378:named Smith a delegate to the 1894 Ninth
55:Family history, early life, and education
3457:. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.
3347:The Century Illustrated Monthly Magazine
2888:. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.
1900:Public Health Papers and Reports, Vol 22
1695:"Hospital Construction and Organization"
615:editorials. In addition to his unsigned
556:Tree advocates got New York to enact an
204:
2396:: 352–356. 1885 – via HathiTrust.
1384:(Fall): 318–322 – via HathiTrust.
747:
458:were being returned to society. Former
91:(1825), and the social energies of the
3186:. New York, NY: William Wood & Co.
2879:
2877:
2652:. New York, NY: The MacMillan Company.
2648:Davis Jr., M.M.; Warner, A.R. (1918).
2586:Annual Report for the Year 1900, Vol 1
2572:Annual Report for the Year 1899, Vol 1
2266:Schneider, D. M.; Deutsch, A. (1941).
1761:
1759:
1318:(343): 273–278 – via HathiTrust.
1312:Bulletin of the Johns Hopkins Hospital
1058:(May): 336–375 – via HathiTrust.
987:
985:
983:
981:
943:
941:
939:
937:
695:. Philadelphia: Lea Brothers & Co.
681:. New York, NY: William Wood & Co.
274:Sisters of Charity Hospital in Buffalo
3391:"Dr Stephen Smith Dies in 100th Year"
2767:Report of the Commission on Hospitals
2214:(28): 145–162 – via HathiTrust.
2123:The American Journal of Public Health
1911:
1909:
1522:"Female Nurses in Military Hospitals"
1163:
1161:
1112:
1110:
781:
779:
777:
536:Urban environmentalism – street trees
219:Joseph Lister’s antiseptic techniques
7:
2522:"The Pay of Physicians and Surgeons"
1196:. Washington, DC: National Archives.
859:
857:
68:sheriff. He was also elected to the
3048:"Want City Bureau for Tree Culture"
2322:"Tenth Census of the United States"
1783:Bulletin of the History of Medicine
1730:Bulletin of the History of Medicine
1699:Boston Medical and Surgical Journal
1646:Principles of Hospital Construction
1569:. New York, NY: G.P. Putnam's Sons.
1089:Boston Medical and Surgical Journal
369:New York State Department of Health
314:Boston Medical and Surgical Journal
297:hospital experience in Crimea. The
181:The New England Journal of Medicine
176:Boston Medical and Surgical Journal
125:Medical Institute of Geneva College
3509:Schneider D. M, Deutsch A. (1941)
3117:"Resignation of the Senior Editor"
2968:Appletons' Popular Science Monthly
2792:10.1093/oso/9780195119503.001.0001
2426:The American Journal of Psychiatry
2270:. The University of Chicago Press.
1928:(2): 41–43 – via HathiTrust.
705:Hamilton, F. H., Smith, S. (1891)
577:, set the Parks Department on its
472:New York State Hospital Commission
349:American Public Health Association
14:
3586:People from Skaneateles, New York
3209:(10): 239 – via HathiTrust.
2974:: 433–450 – via HathiTrust.
2935:Culyer, J. Y. (October 7, 1900).
2611:: 180–184 – via HathiTrust.
2229:. G. P. Putnam's Sons. p. 1.
380:International Sanitary Conference
299:United States Sanitary Commission
3543:
3443:. University of Illinois Press.
3127:(3): 411 – via HathiTrust.
2985:Culyer, J. Y. (April 28, 1902).
2755:(1): 1–5 – via HathiTrust.
2368:The American Journal of Insanity
1421:. University of Illinois Press.
1295:(1): 1–6 – via HathiTrust.
1225:10.1097/00000441-187001000-00002
930:. August 24, 1915. pp. 3–4.
790:. August 24, 1915. pp. 3–4.
672:Hand-Book of Surgical Operations
631:Hand-Book of Surgical Operations
460:American Psychiatric Association
189:Hand-book of Surgical Operations
42:future Nobel Peace Prize winner
2678:Annual Report for the Year 1895
2664:Annual Report for the Year 1895
2558:Annual Report for the Year 1897
2544:Annual Report for the Year 1896
2227:The Insane in Foreign Countries
231:NYU Grossman School of Medicine
200:NYU Grossman School of Medicine
3576:American public health doctors
3397:. August 27, 1922. p. 28.
2830:"Shade-Trees as Disinfectants"
2724:. December 16, 1899. p. 5
2106:. New York, NY: Frank Allaben.
2069:. November 18, 1892. p. 9
1025:. Princeton University Press.
723:. New York, NY: Frank Allaben.
115:Medical education and training
1:
3161:"Announcement to Subscribers"
2692:"Deny Mrs. Lathrop's Request"
2623:"Dispensaries and Physicians"
1705:(December 2): 651–654. 1875.
1675:. October 30, 1869. p. 5
1587:. January 14, 1903. p. 7
1194:Stephen Smith Service Records
1095:(15): 299–305. May 13, 1858.
3054:. March 15, 1914. p. 19
2167:"Riots and Their Prevention"
2043:. January 3, 1888. p. 3
1829:. April 11, 1870. p. 10
1135:10.1097/AS9.0000000000000419
1117:Harris Jr., John M. (2024).
728:American Practice of Surgery
714:American Practice of Surgery
595:New York Journal of Medicine
390:national health department.
332:Metropolitan Board of Health
253:American Medical Association
242:Support for women physicians
169:Surgical and academic career
3542:(public domain audiobooks)
3499:. New York, NY: Doubleday.
3485:. New York, NY: Routledge.
3269:. New York, NY: Routledge.
2718:"Object to Jewish Hospital"
2629:. April 4, 1909. p. 74
1711:10.1056/NEJM187512020932309
1172:. New York, NY: Routledge.
1101:10.1056/NEJM185805130581504
152:Sisters of Charity Hospital
3607:
3265:Harris Jr., J. M. (2024).
3165:The American Medical Times
3143:The American Medical Times
3073:Smith, S. (May 26, 1914).
2862:. April 3, 1874. p. 2
2860:The San Francisco Examiner
2836:. April 7, 1873. p. 4
2698:. May 25, 1899. p. 14
2601:"Dispensary Law Effective"
2247:. June 18, 1881. p. 4
2225:Letchworth, W. P. (1889).
2171:The American Medical Times
1982:10.1177/003335491112600117
1611:The American Medical Times
1548:The American Medical Times
1462:The American Medical Times
1458:"A New Question in Ethics"
1238:Moullin, C. W. M. (1891).
629:Smith authored a 279-page
376:President Grover Cleveland
193:Peninsula Campaign of 1862
18:
3371:. May 19, 1912. p. 4
2302:. May 26, 1882. p. 2
1378:Annals of Medical History
1168:Harris Jr., J.M. (2024).
831:Beauchamp, W. M. (1908).
762:. June 7, 1922. p. 1
541:a public responsibility.
361:President Rutheford Hayes
3481:Harris Jr. J. M. (2024)
3197:Rickards, B. R. (1922).
3139:"American Medical Times"
3014:Report for the Year 1902
2916:. May 1, 1890. p. 2
2856:"Trees as Disinfectants"
2390:The Medico-Legal Journal
2296:"Legislators in a Hurry"
1855:. May 5, 1875. p. 2
1669:"The Roosevelt Hospital"
1372:Garrison, F. H. (1917).
464:Utica Psychiatric Center
444:The Medico-Legal Journal
427:William Pryor Letchworth
357:National Board of Health
267:Support for women nurses
3290:Francis, S. W. (1866).
3252:Colver-Culver Genealogy
3220:Francis, S. W. (1866).
3100:Francis, H. R. (1914).
2884:DĂĽmpelmann, S. (2019).
2440:– via HathiTrust.
2241:"The News This Morning"
2037:"A Disgrace and Danger"
1849:"The Health Department"
1823:"The Health Department"
1724:Brieger, G. H. (1965).
1607:"Hospital Construction"
1227:– via HathiTrust.
1069:Carlisle, R.J. (1893).
1046:Smith, Stephen (1851).
846:Francis, S. W. (1866).
665:Books and book chapters
530:Department of Hospitals
517:certificate of need law
495:Governor Roswell Flower
431:Governor Alonzo Cornell
137:Buffalo Medical College
133:Frank Hastings Hamilton
3536:Works by Stephen Smith
3250:Colver, F. L. (1910).
2783:No One Was Turned Away
2245:New-York Daily Tribune
2135:10.2105/ajph.5.11.1115
1964:Michael, J.M. (2011).
1526:American Medical Times
1442:Blackwell, E. (1895).
1285:"How to Study Anatomy"
1253:Francis, S.W. (1866).
1123:Annals of Surgery Open
1021:Warner, J. H. (1998).
992:Francis, S.W. (1866).
928:Skaneateles Free Press
901:Norwood, W.F. (1971).
816:Collins, G.K. (1917).
788:Skaneateles Free Press
599:American Medical Times
400:American Medical Times
338:Governor Reuben Fenton
310:Johns Hopkins Hospital
295:Florence Nightingale's
210:
85:Second Great Awakening
44:Nicholas Murray Butler
31:
19:For other people, see
3453:DĂĽmpelmann S. (2019)
3115:Purple, S.S. (1857).
2937:"The Boulevard Trees"
2520:Shrady, G.F. (1894).
1970:Public Health Reports
1329:Walsh, J. J. (1919).
208:
93:abolitionist movement
29:
3343:"Topics of the Time"
2987:"City Care of Trees"
2780:Opdycke, S. (1999).
2451:Grob, G. N. (1983).
2438:10.1176/ajp.79.2.358
1649:. Roosevelt Hospital
1628:Clark, H.G. (1862).
1417:Wellman, J. (2004).
801:Bruce, D.H. (1896).
308:The trustees of the
282:first nursing school
280:start the country’s
70:New York legislature
61:Burned-over District
3495:Oshinsky D. (2016)
3235:Shrady, J. (1903).
1809:Third Annual Report
1766:Shrady, J. (1903).
1268:Shrady, J. (1903).
948:Shrady, J. (1903).
864:Shrady, J. (1903).
609:Doctor in Medicine,
583:urban reforestation
575:John D. Rockefeller
571:Laurie Davidson Cox
528:created a citywide
278:Louisa Lee Schuyler
129:Elizabeth Blackwell
49:Stephen Smith Medal
3467:Grob G. N. (1983)
3395:The New York Times
3325:The Medical Record
3319:Smith, S. (1880).
3182:Smith, S. (1872).
3079:The New York Times
3052:The New York Times
2962:Smith, S. (1899).
2941:The New York Times
2834:The New York Times
2743:Smith, S. (1907).
2722:The New York Times
2696:The New York Times
2627:The New York Times
2599:Smith, S. (1903).
2491:Smith, S. (1916).
2300:The New York Times
2202:Smith, S. (1875).
2117:Smith, S. (1915).
2102:Smith, S. (1911).
2067:The New York Times
2019:The Medical Record
2013:Smith, S. (1880).
1939:Duffy, J. (1992).
1916:Smith, S. (1902).
1874:Duffy, J. (1992).
1853:The New York Times
1797:– via JSTOR.
1752:– via JSTOR.
1643:Smith, S. (1866).
1581:"Nurses Graduated"
1565:Giles, D. (1949).
1306:Smith, S. (1919).
1283:Smith, S. (1903).
1219:(January): 33–36.
1207:Smith, S. (1870).
625:from 1878 to 1906.
319:John Shaw Billings
211:
100:Frederick Douglass
32:
3571:American surgeons
3519:978-0-87585-045-0
3505:978-0-385-52336-3
3491:978-1-032-60394-0
3477:978-0-691-65680-9
3463:978-0-300-22578-5
3449:978-0-252-06276-6
3435:978-0-87154-213-7
3421:978-0-87154-212-0
2914:The Evening World
2910:"Arbor Day Comes"
2801:978-0-19-511950-3
2129:(11): 1115–1119.
2104:The City That Was
1950:978-0-252-06276-6
1885:978-0-252-06276-6
760:The Evening World
733:Smith, S. (1911)
721:The City That Was
719:Smith, S. (1911)
691:Smith, S. (1887)
684:Smith, S. (1880)
677:Smith, S. (1872)
670:Smith, S. (1862)
647:Erastus D. Culver
510:chronic pauperism
490:Charity oversight
387:The City That Was
235:Fielding Garrison
163:Bellevue Hospital
39:Bellevue Hospital
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3439:Duffy J. (1992)
3425:Duffy J. (1974)
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1555:
1540:
1534:
1533:
1518:
1512:
1511:
1504:
1498:
1497:
1490:
1484:
1483:
1476:
1470:
1469:
1454:
1448:
1447:
1439:
1433:
1432:
1414:
1408:
1407:
1406:: 510–515. 1918.
1392:
1386:
1385:
1369:
1363:
1362:
1355:
1349:
1348:
1341:
1335:
1334:
1326:
1320:
1319:
1303:
1297:
1296:
1280:
1274:
1273:
1265:
1259:
1258:
1250:
1244:
1243:
1235:
1229:
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1198:
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1190:
1184:
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1165:
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1114:
1105:
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1081:
1075:
1074:
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1060:
1059:
1043:
1037:
1036:
1018:
1012:
1011:
1004:
998:
997:
989:
976:
975:
974:: 378–386. 1918.
960:
954:
953:
945:
932:
931:
923:
917:
916:
898:
892:
891:
890:: 378–386. 1918.
876:
870:
869:
861:
852:
851:
843:
837:
836:
828:
822:
821:
813:
807:
806:
798:
792:
791:
783:
772:
771:
769:
767:
752:
606:
573:and financed by
453:
404:1863 draft riots
342:Mayor Oakey Hall
303:Mount Sinai West
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3601:
3600:
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3406:Further reading
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603:Medical Times’'
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289:Hospital design
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223:William Halsted
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