American Decades
Reed, Walter 1851-1902
ARMY SURGEON AND PATHOLOGIST
Early Career.
Born in Belroi, Virginia, on 13 September 1851, Walter Reed was the son of Methodist minister Lemuel S. Reed and his wife, Pharaba. Reed received his first medical degree from the University of Virginia in 1869 and a second degree from Bellevue Hospital Medical College in New York City the following year. After a two-year internship in Brooklyn, he served in two public health posts in New York City until 1875. In that year he joined the U.S. Army Medical Corps and rotated through various U.S. posts—including Fort Apache, Arizona—until being named to the just-opened Army Medical School's faculty in 1893. Prior to this assignment, Reed spent two years studying pathology under the famed Dr. William Welch at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore. Much of this work involved laboratory research on hog cholera and typhoid fever. His studies of microscopic bacteriology under Welch...
[The entire page is 520 words long]
1900's Medicine and Health
- Overview
-
Topics in the News
- The American Medical Association Reorganizes
- Diversity in the Medical Profession: African American Physicians
- Diversity in the Medical Profession: Women Physicians
- Hookworm in the South
- Human Subjects in Medical Research
- Medical Education Reform
- Pellagra in the South
- Plague in San Francisco
- The Tuberculosis Movement
- Yellow Fever
- Headline Makers
- People in the News
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in Medicine and Health, 1900–1909
