American Decades
Drew, Dr. Charles R. 1904-1950
BLOOD RESEARCHER WHOSE WORK SAVED LIVES
IN WORLD WAR II
Blood-Transfusion Specialist.
The story of the career of the African American surgeon Charles R. Drew illustrates the tragic loss of human potential in a society afflicted with racism. While his pioneering work in blood research was responsible for saving countless lives during World War II, he was unheralded in his day and died unnoticed.
A Medical Pioneer.
Charles Drew was born 3 June 1904 in his grandmother's house in Washington, D.C. His father was a carpet layer, the only African American in the Carpet and Tile Layers Union. His mother, a graduate of Howard University's Miner Normal School in Washington, was a homemaker. His parents encouraged their five children to aim high and to take their studies seriously. Drew grew up in a comfortable home filled with books and classical music in the ethnically mixed neighborhood known as Foggy Bottom....
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1940's Medicine and Health
- Overview
-
Topics in the News
- Allergy Relief: The Antihistamines
- Atomic Medicine
- The Center for Disease Control
- DDT—Before Silent Spring
- Discrimination in Medical Colleges
- Electroconvulsive Therapy
- Harry S Truman and the AMA
- Hospitals and the Hill-Burton Act
- It's Patriotic to Stay Healthy!
- Medicine and World War II
- Polio
- Psychiatry after World War II
- Psychosurgery
- Venereal Disease
- The Wonder Drugs: "Magic Bullets" Against Disease
- Headline Makers
- People in the News
- Awards
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in Medicine and Health, 1940–1949
