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Louis T. Wright

Louis Tompkins Wright, MD, FACS[1] (July 23, 1891 – October 8, 1952)[2] was an American surgeon and civil rights activist. In his position at Harlem Hospital he was the first African-American on the surgical staff of a non-segregated hospital in New York City. He was influential for his medical research as well as his efforts pushing for racial equality in medicine and involvement with the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), which he served as chairman for nearly two decades.[3][4]

Louis Wright
Sculpture of Wright by William E. Artis
Chair of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People
In office
1934–1952
Preceded byMary White Ovington
Succeeded byChanning Heggie Tobias
Personal details
Born
Oswald Garrison Villard

(1891-07-23)July 23, 1891
LaGrange, Georgia, U.S.
DiedOctober 8, 1952(1952-10-08) (aged 61)
New York City, New York, U.S.
EducationAtlanta University (BS)
Harvard University (MD)
Civilian awardsSpingarn Medal
Military awardsPurple Heart

Early life and family edit

Wright was born in LaGrange, Georgia. His father, Ceah Ketchan Wright, was born enslaved but obtained formal education, finishing medical school as valedictorian but later giving up his medical practice to be a Methodist minister.[5] Ceah died shortly after Louis's birth and his mother, a sewing teacher named Lula Tompkins, remarried in 1899. Also a physician, Louis's step-father, William Fletcher Penn, was the first African-American to graduate from Yale School of Medicine.[6] Penn, who became a prominent doctor in Atlanta and was the first African-American to own an automobile in the city, had a strong influence on Louis both as a physician and through the racism Louis watched him endure.[5]

Wright graduated from Clark Atlanta University in 1911 and received his medical degree from Harvard Medical School in 1915, finishing fourth in his class.[2] Wright's admission to Harvard Medical School must be recognized as no easy feat. Despite being a very educated individual, Wright was deemed unfit by Channing Frothingham, MD––one of the medical school's interviewers––due to his attendance of an undergraduate institution that permitted blacks. However, after subjecting Wright to numerous tests, Frothingham ultimately ruled that he had "adequate chemistry for admission to this school."[7] He completed his postgraduate work at Howard University-affiliated Freedmen's Hospital in Washington, DC before returning to Georgia.[4]

He married public school teacher Corinne Cooke, and the couple had two daughters, Jane Cooke Wright and Barbara Wright Pierce, both of whom also became physicians and researchers.[6]

Medical career edit

Shortly after completing medical school and moving back to Georgia, Wright joined the Army Medical Corps, serving as a lieutenant during World War I, stationed in France. While there he introduced intradermal vaccination for smallpox and was awarded the Purple Heart after a gas attack.[2][4]

 
Louis T. Wright and colleagues at patient bedside, Harlem Hospital, New York, N.Y. From left to right: Dr. Lyndon M. Hill, Dr. Louis T. Wright, Dr. Myra Logan, Dr. Aaron Prigot, unidentified African American woman patient, and unidentified hospital employee.

Upon returning to the United States in 1919, he moved to New York amid racial tensions in Georgia to set up a private practice in Harlem and established ties to the Harlem Hospital, where he was the first African-American on the surgical staff.[2] Dr. Wright's implementations at Harlem Hospital were incredibly significant. He addressed the institution's issues of professionalism and quality of standards, and made the appropriate changes. Wright's additions gained the attention of the nation, and his revisions were eventually implemented into many hospitals nationwide.[8] In 1929 he was also appointed to serve as the first African-American police surgeon with the New York Police Department.[2][9] In his thirty years at the hospital he started the Harlem Hospital Bulletin, headed the team that first used chlortetracycline on humans, founded the hospital's cancer research center, and earned a reputation as an expert on head injuries.[10] He was a Fellow of the American College of Surgeons[11] and the American Medical Association.[9]

Civil rights activism and leadership edit

Throughout his life Wright involved himself in civil rights efforts, beginning in college when he missed three weeks of school to join picket lines protesting D. W. Griffith's The Birth of a Nation, a film controversial for its sympathetic portrayal of the Ku Klux Klan.[9] At Harvard he insisted on equal treatment when a professor prevented him from delivering white patients' babies.[2] He joined the NAACP after medical school and remained involved with the organization for the rest of his life, eventually serving as chairman of its national board of directors from 1933 until his death in 1952.[12]

Wright's work at the NAACP did not go unnoticed. For the better part of a decade, he wrote multiple columns in The Crisis, the NAACP's magazine publication.[8] The majority of Wright's work dealt with issues that are still brought up by modern black authors, such as Harriet A. Washington. Wright challenged the false beliefs that because of their biology, black people are more susceptible to infectious diseases—such as syphilis—than other races.[8]

He was a frequent leader in the struggle for integration, especially in medicine. In 1920, early in his tenure at Harlem Hospital, he played a key role in fighting the precedent in New York whereby African-American doctors and nurses were barred from serving in municipal hospitals. He actively opposed segregated hospitals, including a successful effort in 1930 to stop the construction of a new such facility proposed by the Rosenwald Fund.[4][5] In working towards equality in medicine and medical education, he advocated for raising standards for black medical students, leading to some pushback from peers who had become used to having a different set of requirements.[13]

In 1940 he was the recipient of the Spingarn Medal for "his contribution to the healing of mankind and for his courageous position in the face of bitter attack."[14]

There is no such thing as Negro health ... the health of the American Negro is not a separate racial problem to be met by special segregated setups or dealt with on a dual standard basis, but is an American problem which should be adequately and equitably handled by the identical agencies and met with the identical methods that deal with the health of the remainder of the population.

— Louis T. Wright, Address at the 1938 National Health Conference[9]

Death and legacy edit

Wright had chronic health problems following his war service and was hospitalized for tuberculosis from 1939 to 1942. Though he returned to medicine thereafter and was appointed chief of surgery in 1943, he never fully recovered and died in 1952 at the age of 61.[2]

Throughout his career Wright published research extensively and his research proved influential in a number of areas including antibiotic treatment, cancer research, chemotherapy, treating head injuries, and treating bone fractures.[2]

The Harlem Hospital library was renamed in his honor just before he died.[2]

"What the Negro physician needs is equal opportunity for training and practice—no more, nor less."[12]

— Louis T. Wright

Fictional portrayals edit

Wright is the inspiration for the character Algernon Edwards, played by actor Andre Holland, in the Cinemax television drama series The Knick. Edwards, like Wright, graduated at the top of his class at Harvard Medical School and serves as the first African-American surgeon at the fictionalized Knickerbocker Hospital in Manhattan. Whereas the Harlem Hospital consisted a previously all-white surgical staff serving primarily African-American patients, the hospital in The Knick is an all-white surgical staff serving primarily white patients. While Edwards, active two decades prior to Wright, was not involved in broad-scale civil rights activism, the racial injustice he and others contended with is a major theme of the show.[9][15][16]

References edit

  1. ^ "Louis Tompkins Wright, MD, FACS, 1891–1952". American College of Surgeons. from the original on August 3, 2020. Retrieved December 12, 2018.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i Appiah, Kwame Anthony; Gates Jr., Henry Louis, eds. (2004). "Wright, Louis Tompkins". Civil Rights: An A-to-Z Reference of the Movement That Changed America. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: Running Press. p. 464.
  3. ^ "Kenyon College". Northbysouth.kenyon.edu. from the original on October 20, 2017. Retrieved February 1, 2012.
  4. ^ a b c d . Harvard Medical Library, Francis A. Countway Library of Medicine. June 13, 2007. Archived from the original on October 11, 2016. Retrieved November 9, 2014.
  5. ^ a b c Reynolds, P. Preston (June 2000). "Dr. Louis T. Wright and the NAACP: Pioneers in Hospital Racial Integration". American Journal of Public Health. 90 (6): 883–892. doi:10.2105/AJPH.90.6.883. PMC 1446256. PMID 10846505.
  6. ^ a b "Jane Cooke Wright" June 21, 2016, at the Wayback Machine, Encyclopedia of World Biography (2008)
  7. ^ "Louis Tompkins Wright, MD, FACS, 1891–1952". American College of Surgeons. from the original on August 3, 2020. Retrieved December 12, 2018.
  8. ^ a b c "Wright, Louis T. (1891–1952) | The Black Past: Remembered and Reclaimed". blackpast.org. January 19, 2007. from the original on September 8, 2018. Retrieved December 12, 2018.
  9. ^ a b c d e Thomas, Karen Kruse (August 11, 2014). "The Politics of Early Surgery: Review of 'The Knick'". Medpage Today. from the original on September 9, 2018. Retrieved November 8, 2014.
  10. ^ "University of Washington". Faculty.washington.edu. from the original on September 17, 2020. Retrieved February 1, 2012.
  11. ^ . Time. October 29, 1934. Archived from the original on November 25, 2010. Retrieved February 1, 2012.
  12. ^ a b "Topic | Dr. Louis T. Wright | The History of African Americans in the Medical Professions". chaamp.virginia.edu. from the original on August 17, 2019. Retrieved December 12, 2018.
  13. ^ "Louis T. Wright, surgeon and NAACP Chairman – African American Registry". African American Registry. from the original on October 17, 2018. Retrieved October 17, 2018.
  14. ^ NAACP Spingarn Medal July 7, 2010, at the Wayback Machine
  15. ^ Hay, Mark (September 3, 2014). . Good Magazine. Archived from the original on November 8, 2014. Retrieved November 8, 2014.
  16. ^ Gipson, Grace (September 4, 2014). . The Berkeley Graduate. Archived from the original on November 24, 2014.

Further reading edit

  • Buckely, Joann H.; Fisher, W. Douglas (2016). African American Doctors of World War I: The Lives of 104 Volunteers. McFarland & Company, Inc. ISBN 9781476663159.
  • Gates Jr. Henry Louis; Higginbotham, Evelyn Brooks, eds. (2009). Harlem Renaissance Lives. From the African American National Biography. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780195387957.
  • Thomas, Karen Kruse (2011). Deluxe Jim Crow: Civil Rights and American Health Policy, 1935-1954. University of Georgia Press. ISBN 9780820330167.

External links edit

  • Louis Tompkins Wright papers, 1879, 1898, 1909-1997. H MS c56. Harvard Medical Library, Francis A. Countway Library of Medicine, Boston, Mass.

louis, wright, louis, tompkins, wright, facs, july, 1891, october, 1952, american, surgeon, civil, rights, activist, position, harlem, hospital, first, african, american, surgical, staff, segregated, hospital, york, city, influential, medical, research, well, . Louis Tompkins Wright MD FACS 1 July 23 1891 October 8 1952 2 was an American surgeon and civil rights activist In his position at Harlem Hospital he was the first African American on the surgical staff of a non segregated hospital in New York City He was influential for his medical research as well as his efforts pushing for racial equality in medicine and involvement with the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People NAACP which he served as chairman for nearly two decades 3 4 Louis WrightSculpture of Wright by William E ArtisChair of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored PeopleIn office 1934 1952Preceded byMary White OvingtonSucceeded byChanning Heggie TobiasPersonal detailsBornOswald Garrison Villard 1891 07 23 July 23 1891LaGrange Georgia U S DiedOctober 8 1952 1952 10 08 aged 61 New York City New York U S EducationAtlanta University BS Harvard University MD Civilian awardsSpingarn MedalMilitary awardsPurple Heart Contents 1 Early life and family 2 Medical career 3 Civil rights activism and leadership 4 Death and legacy 5 Fictional portrayals 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksEarly life and family editWright was born in LaGrange Georgia His father Ceah Ketchan Wright was born enslaved but obtained formal education finishing medical school as valedictorian but later giving up his medical practice to be a Methodist minister 5 Ceah died shortly after Louis s birth and his mother a sewing teacher named Lula Tompkins remarried in 1899 Also a physician Louis s step father William Fletcher Penn was the first African American to graduate from Yale School of Medicine 6 Penn who became a prominent doctor in Atlanta and was the first African American to own an automobile in the city had a strong influence on Louis both as a physician and through the racism Louis watched him endure 5 Wright graduated from Clark Atlanta University in 1911 and received his medical degree from Harvard Medical School in 1915 finishing fourth in his class 2 Wright s admission to Harvard Medical School must be recognized as no easy feat Despite being a very educated individual Wright was deemed unfit by Channing Frothingham MD one of the medical school s interviewers due to his attendance of an undergraduate institution that permitted blacks However after subjecting Wright to numerous tests Frothingham ultimately ruled that he had adequate chemistry for admission to this school 7 He completed his postgraduate work at Howard University affiliated Freedmen s Hospital in Washington DC before returning to Georgia 4 He married public school teacher Corinne Cooke and the couple had two daughters Jane Cooke Wright and Barbara Wright Pierce both of whom also became physicians and researchers 6 Medical career editShortly after completing medical school and moving back to Georgia Wright joined the Army Medical Corps serving as a lieutenant during World War I stationed in France While there he introduced intradermal vaccination for smallpox and was awarded the Purple Heart after a gas attack 2 4 nbsp Louis T Wright and colleagues at patient bedside Harlem Hospital New York N Y From left to right Dr Lyndon M Hill Dr Louis T Wright Dr Myra Logan Dr Aaron Prigot unidentified African American woman patient and unidentified hospital employee Upon returning to the United States in 1919 he moved to New York amid racial tensions in Georgia to set up a private practice in Harlem and established ties to the Harlem Hospital where he was the first African American on the surgical staff 2 Dr Wright s implementations at Harlem Hospital were incredibly significant He addressed the institution s issues of professionalism and quality of standards and made the appropriate changes Wright s additions gained the attention of the nation and his revisions were eventually implemented into many hospitals nationwide 8 In 1929 he was also appointed to serve as the first African American police surgeon with the New York Police Department 2 9 In his thirty years at the hospital he started the Harlem Hospital Bulletin headed the team that first used chlortetracycline on humans founded the hospital s cancer research center and earned a reputation as an expert on head injuries 10 He was a Fellow of the American College of Surgeons 11 and the American Medical Association 9 Civil rights activism and leadership editThroughout his life Wright involved himself in civil rights efforts beginning in college when he missed three weeks of school to join picket lines protesting D W Griffith s The Birth of a Nation a film controversial for its sympathetic portrayal of the Ku Klux Klan 9 At Harvard he insisted on equal treatment when a professor prevented him from delivering white patients babies 2 He joined the NAACP after medical school and remained involved with the organization for the rest of his life eventually serving as chairman of its national board of directors from 1933 until his death in 1952 12 Wright s work at the NAACP did not go unnoticed For the better part of a decade he wrote multiple columns in The Crisis the NAACP s magazine publication 8 The majority of Wright s work dealt with issues that are still brought up by modern black authors such as Harriet A Washington Wright challenged the false beliefs that because of their biology black people are more susceptible to infectious diseases such as syphilis than other races 8 He was a frequent leader in the struggle for integration especially in medicine In 1920 early in his tenure at Harlem Hospital he played a key role in fighting the precedent in New York whereby African American doctors and nurses were barred from serving in municipal hospitals He actively opposed segregated hospitals including a successful effort in 1930 to stop the construction of a new such facility proposed by the Rosenwald Fund 4 5 In working towards equality in medicine and medical education he advocated for raising standards for black medical students leading to some pushback from peers who had become used to having a different set of requirements 13 In 1940 he was the recipient of the Spingarn Medal for his contribution to the healing of mankind and for his courageous position in the face of bitter attack 14 There is no such thing as Negro health the health of the American Negro is not a separate racial problem to be met by special segregated setups or dealt with on a dual standard basis but is an American problem which should be adequately and equitably handled by the identical agencies and met with the identical methods that deal with the health of the remainder of the population Louis T Wright Address at the 1938 National Health Conference 9 Death and legacy editWright had chronic health problems following his war service and was hospitalized for tuberculosis from 1939 to 1942 Though he returned to medicine thereafter and was appointed chief of surgery in 1943 he never fully recovered and died in 1952 at the age of 61 2 Throughout his career Wright published research extensively and his research proved influential in a number of areas including antibiotic treatment cancer research chemotherapy treating head injuries and treating bone fractures 2 The Harlem Hospital library was renamed in his honor just before he died 2 What the Negro physician needs is equal opportunity for training and practice no more nor less 12 Louis T WrightFictional portrayals editWright is the inspiration for the character Algernon Edwards played by actor Andre Holland in the Cinemax television drama series The Knick Edwards like Wright graduated at the top of his class at Harvard Medical School and serves as the first African American surgeon at the fictionalized Knickerbocker Hospital in Manhattan Whereas the Harlem Hospital consisted a previously all white surgical staff serving primarily African American patients the hospital in The Knick is an all white surgical staff serving primarily white patients While Edwards active two decades prior to Wright was not involved in broad scale civil rights activism the racial injustice he and others contended with is a major theme of the show 9 15 16 References edit Louis Tompkins Wright MD FACS 1891 1952 American College of Surgeons Archived from the original on August 3 2020 Retrieved December 12 2018 a b c d e f g h i Appiah Kwame Anthony Gates Jr Henry Louis eds 2004 Wright Louis Tompkins Civil Rights An A to Z Reference of the Movement That Changed America Philadelphia Pennsylvania Running Press p 464 Kenyon College Northbysouth kenyon edu Archived from the original on October 20 2017 Retrieved February 1 2012 a b c d Wright Louis T Louis Tompkins 1891 1952 Papers 1879 1898 1909 1997 Finding Aid Harvard Medical Library Francis A Countway Library of Medicine June 13 2007 Archived from the original on October 11 2016 Retrieved November 9 2014 a b c Reynolds P Preston June 2000 Dr Louis T Wright and the NAACP Pioneers in Hospital Racial Integration American Journal of Public Health 90 6 883 892 doi 10 2105 AJPH 90 6 883 PMC 1446256 PMID 10846505 a b Jane Cooke Wright Archived June 21 2016 at the Wayback Machine Encyclopedia of World Biography 2008 Louis Tompkins Wright MD FACS 1891 1952 American College of Surgeons Archived from the original on August 3 2020 Retrieved December 12 2018 a b c Wright Louis T 1891 1952 The Black Past Remembered and Reclaimed blackpast org January 19 2007 Archived from the original on September 8 2018 Retrieved December 12 2018 a b c d e Thomas Karen Kruse August 11 2014 The Politics of Early Surgery Review of The Knick Medpage Today Archived from the original on September 9 2018 Retrieved November 8 2014 University of Washington Faculty washington edu Archived from the original on September 17 2020 Retrieved February 1 2012 Medicine Negro Fellow Time Magazine 29th October 1934 Time October 29 1934 Archived from the original on November 25 2010 Retrieved February 1 2012 a b Topic Dr Louis T Wright The History of African Americans in the Medical Professions chaamp virginia edu Archived from the original on August 17 2019 Retrieved December 12 2018 Louis T Wright surgeon and NAACP Chairman African American Registry African American Registry Archived from the original on October 17 2018 Retrieved October 17 2018 NAACP Spingarn Medal Archived July 7 2010 at the Wayback Machine Hay Mark September 3 2014 The Hygiene Fiend Who Inspired Gory New Drama The Knick Good Magazine Archived from the original on November 8 2014 Retrieved November 8 2014 Gipson Grace September 4 2014 Before modern medicine there was the New York Knickerbocker Hospital Cinemax s New Late Summer Series The Knick The Berkeley Graduate Archived from the original on November 24 2014 Further reading editBuckely Joann H Fisher W Douglas 2016 African American Doctors of World War I The Lives of 104 Volunteers McFarland amp Company Inc ISBN 9781476663159 Gates Jr Henry Louis Higginbotham Evelyn Brooks eds 2009 Harlem Renaissance Lives From the African American National Biography Oxford University Press ISBN 9780195387957 Thomas Karen Kruse 2011 Deluxe Jim Crow Civil Rights and American Health Policy 1935 1954 University of Georgia Press ISBN 9780820330167 External links editLouis Tompkins Wright papers 1879 1898 1909 1997 H MS c56 Harvard Medical Library Francis A Countway Library of Medicine Boston Mass Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Louis T Wright amp oldid 1208828957, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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