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  1. Organization Type: Library
    Address: 601 W. Lombard Street
    City: Baltimore
    State Or Province: Maryland
    Zip / Postal Code: 21201-1512
    Country: United States
    Telephone Number: 410-706-5048
    Abstract: The collections at the University of Maryland, Baltimore’s Health Sciences and Human Services Library are strong in the history of medicine and dentistry but also include collections on Social Work, Nursing, Physical Therapy, and Pharmacy. Archival materials and special collections relating to the University of Maryland Baltimore and the Maryland State system are also held in the historical collections. Materials are available for public use but are library use only. It is best to make an appointment to use the collections; however, the space is usually open from 8:30AM to 4:30PM Monday through Friday.
    Holdings: The Historical Collections of the Health Sciences and Human Services Library are comprised of eight separate book collections, and include significant materials in medicine, dentistry, pharmacy, nursing, and social work. The Crawford Collection, which includes early works on medicine and related fields, was originally the private collection of Dr. John Crawford, an early 19th century Baltimore physician. Following his death in 1813, the University of Maryland School of Medicine purchased the collection from his estate. This purchase represents the founding of the Health Sciences Library and by extension the entire University of Maryland Library System. The Cordell Collection, named for Dr. Eugene Cordell, an early historian of the University and first librarian of the institution, includes imprints in the field of medicine. The collection features works by such notables as John Hunter, Benjamin Rush, Hermann Boerhaave, and others. It also includes a substantial number of writings by early faculty members. The Grieves Collection contains significant works in the history of dentistry. Outstanding examples are complete sets of the oldest American dental journals, the first dentistry book published in the United States, as well as the volume Practica Medicine by Arnoldus de Villa Nova, published in Venice in 1497. Of particular note is the extensive collection of dental history prints representing the work of numerous renowned artists dating from the 17th to the 19th centuries. The Pharmacy Collection is rich in herbals, pharmacopoeias, materials on the history of pharmacy, and early pharmaceutical imprints. Notable authors represented include Armand Trousseau, George Urdang, Jacob Bigelow, and Jonathan Pereira. The Nursing Collection is the smallest, but contains first editions of Florence Nightingale's works, and also includes some of her original handwritten notes. The Social Work Collection began with the purchase of the Marie Stopes birth control collection. It includes significant works by such prominent social workers as Jane Addams, Dorothea Dix, Mary Ellen Richmond, Margaret Sanger, and Marie Stopes herself. Its scope ranges from topics such as birth control and world fertility studies, to child welfare, social settlements and the history of social work. The Kendall Historical Collection in physical therapy was donated to us by Dr. Florence P. Kendall, noted lecturer and author of works that have become core materials in the discipline of physical therapy. The collection includes significant twentieth century texts devoted to the study of anatomical structures, movement, and rehabilitative exercise. Other works offer a variety of studies devoted to orthopedic surgery, muscle function, and sports medicine. Of special interest is Dr. Kendall's own work, Muscles, Testing and Function, published in English and eight foreign language editions. The Ferencz Historical Collection is our most recent addition. Donated by Dr. Charlotte Ferencz, the collection includes chiefly twentieth century works in the field of heart disease. The collection informed and inspired Dr. Ferencz's own career in pediatrics and epidemiology, particularly in terms of her work in the area of congenital heart disease and her coordination of the Baltimore-Washington Infant Study. In addition to these book collections, there are archival materials relating to the history of the University of Maryland Baltimore and the history of medicine in Baltimore generally. Records include yearbooks and annual catalogs from the professional schools in the University of Maryland Baltimore. Collections also include papers from influential school founders, professors, and administrators.
    Contact Name, Title: Tara Wink, Historical Librarian And Archivist
    Contact Telephone Number: (410) 706-5048
    Contact Email Address: twink@hshsl.umaryland.edu
    Web Site: http://www.hshsl.umaryland.edu/resources/historical/index.cfm
    Collection Subject Strengths: History of Dentistry, History of Medicine, History of Nursing [show all 6]
  2. Organization Type: Library
    Address: 4720 Montgomery Lane P.O. Box 31220
    City: Bethesda
    State Or Province: Maryland
    Zip / Postal Code: 20824-1220
    Country: United States
    Telephone Number: 301-652-6611
    Fax Number: 301-656-3620
    Abstract: The Wilma L. West Library (WLW) acquires, organizes and retains literature and other media specific to occupational therapy and occupational science. Patrons may find material from related or supporting disciplines, such as rehabilitation, education, psychiatry or psychology, and health care delivery or administration as it relates to occupational therapy. The library's catalog is titled OT SEARCH and is available on-line by subscription. However, researchers can access it free of charge in the library. The full text of the indexed resources is not in this database; just the bibliographic information to identify the material and an author's abstract, when one exists. As available, OT SEARCH is adding links to sources for full-text copies. Currently OT SEARCH contains over 37,200 records of materials dating from 1910 to the present. The WLW Library is open from 11:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. Monday through Thursday, by appointment only. Appointments should be made at least twenty-four hours before the planned visit. Materials published since 1940 are available for interlibrary loan and the library is a member of DOCLINE. The "Guide to the Archives of the American Occupational Therapy Association" is available on the AOTF website, on www.archive.org and directly upon request form the Wilma L. West Library of the AOTF Institute for the Study of Occupation and Health. The Archive of the American Occupational Therapy Association The Archive of the American Occupational Therapy Association (AOTA) is housed in a separate room adjacent to the library and is maintained by the library’s staff. This special collection includes: correspondence and early reprints of the founders of the National Society for the Promotion of Occupational Therapy; minutes and reports from the Association's governing boards, the Delegate/Representative Assembly, councils, and committees; records generated by AOTA's national office staff; minutes and/or proceedings from annual and midyear meetings; early legislation and grants important to occupational therapy's development; reports and publications from early occupational therapy schools and programs; records and correspondence concerning AOTA's interaction with other organizations or agencies; photographs of the Association's leaders, of significant events in its history, and of occupational therapists working with patients in various settings.
    Holdings: The collection of the Wilma L. West Library and Archives includes: Over 4300 monographs, dissertations and theses; over 2200 photographic images; Archives: 168 linear feet. Journals: a few of our historical journals include: The American Journal of Occupational Therapy, 1947-present; Archives of Occupational Therapy, 1922-1924; Maryland Psychiatric Quarterly, 1911-1922; Occupational Therapy and Rehabilitation, 1922-1952; and WFOT Bulletin, 1978-present. For a complete list of the journals that are held in the library and are indexed in OT SEARCH, please visit the library's website: <a href="http://www1.aota.org/otsearch/index.asp" >http://www1.aota.org/otsearch/index.asp</a>. Please note: only selected articles from these titles are indexed. For a Guide to the Archives of the AOTA, please go to: <a href="http://www1.aota.org/otsearch/docs/otslit.pdf" >http://www1.aota.org/otsearch/docs/otslit.pdf</a>.
    Contact Name, Title: Mindy A. Hecker, Director of Information Resources and the Wilma L. West Library
    Contact Telephone Number: 301-652-6611 ext 2558
    Contact Email Address: mhecker@aotf.org
    Web Site: http://www.aotf.org
    Collection Subject Strengths: History of Hospitals, History of Medicine, History of Preventive or Occupational Medicine [show all 7]
  3. Organization Type: Library, Museum
    Address: 2500 Linden Lane
    City: Silver Spring
    State Or Province: Maryland
    Zip / Postal Code: 20910
    Country: United States
    Telephone Number: 301-319-3300
    Abstract: The National Museum of Health and Medicine of the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology (NMHM), established in 1862, inspires interest in and promotes the understanding of medicine—past, present, and future—with a special emphasis on tri-service American military medicine. As a National Historic Landmark recognized for its ongoing value to the health of the military and to the nation, the Museum identifies, collects, and preserves important and unique resources to support a broad agenda of innovative exhibits, educational programs, and scientific, historical and medical research. Formerly the Armed Forces Medical Museum, NMHM holds history of medicine material including the records of the Army Medical Museum and the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology. The Otis Historical Archives holds manuscripts, archives, films, prints and photographs, and institutional records. Historical collections hold medical instrumentation and equipment. The Anatomical collections consist of human and veterinary specimens of historical and pathological interest. The neuroanatomical collections focus on the study of the brain and comparative neuroanatomy. The Human Developmental Anatomy Center contains a large embryology collection. SERVICES: The museum is open to the public every day (except Dec. 25) from 10:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Admission is free. Group tours can be arranged with advance notice. The museum is open for research to qualified researchers. Reference services are available by telephone, mail and electronic mail. The museum's web site can be used as a beginning point to search the collections.
    Holdings: The museum has a small reference library with journals and monographs. The archival collections consist of about 1,700 linear feet. Of this, there are about 1,000 films and about 300,000 photographs in all media dating from the 1850's. Holdings also include the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology (AFIP) Oral History Collection. Anatomical collections hold 5,000 pathological skeletal specimens and 8,000 fluid-preserved pathological specimens. Historical collections contain approximately 13,000 medical equipment and instruments, including the Billings microscope collection of microscopes, accessories, microtomes and microscopic slides. The staff is compiling a multitude of databases, printouts of which are available on request. The collections are strongest in the late 19th and early 20th century periods. Our Guide to the Collections is available online at our website.
    Contact Name, Title: Timothy Clarke Jr., Deputy Director (Communications)
    Contact Telephone Number: (301) 319-3349
    Contact Email Address: timothy.clarkejr@us.army.mil
    Web Site: http://www.medicalmuseum.mil/index.cfm
    Collection Subject Strengths: History of Anatomy, History of Military/Naval Medicine, History of Neurology [show all 7]
  4. Organization Type: Library
    Address: 1900 East Monument Street
    City: Baltimore
    State Or Province: Maryland
    Zip / Postal Code: 21205
    Country: United States
    Telephone Number: 410-955-3159
    Abstract: The Historical Collection was established in 1929 in association with the Institute of the History of Medicine, which occupies the top floor of the William H. Welch Medical Library. The rare book collection consists largely of gifts received by the Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions. The largest single donor was Howard O. Kelly, Hopkins's first professor of gynecology. A small, but important collection of books by and about Michael Servetus was the gift of Leonard Mackall, a noted Baltimore bibliophile. The Jacobs Collection is strong in 19th century French clinical medicine and pathology; smallpox vaccination and inoculation; tuberculosis in the 18th and 19th centuries; Louis Pasteur; and Rabelais. The Historical Collection has extensive collections of secondary works. We attempt to collect all current scholarship in the history of medicine published in Roman alphabet European languages, and to selectively acquire materials in related fields, such as history of science and technology; sociology and anthropology of medicine; literature and medicine; women in medicine; and history of the occult. SERVICES: Reference service provided in person, by telephone, and by mail. Interlibrary loans are handled by the Welch Medical Library.
    Holdings: Incunabula: 11 volumes; 16th and 17th century: about 2,000 volumes; 18th century: about 4,000 volumes; 19th and 20th century rare medical books are in both the Historical Collection and the general collection of the Welch Library. Secondary works on history of medicine and related fields: about 30,000 volumes. Our holdings are in OCLC and the Welch Library's online catalog. Scholars interested in the history of Johns Hopkins medicine should be aware of the Alan Mason Chesney Archives, which is a separate unit
    Contact Name, Title: Christine Ruggere, Curator
    Contact Telephone Number: (410) 955-3159
    Contact Email Address: ruggere@jhmi.edu
    Web Site: http://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/about/welch_library.html
    Collection Subject Strengths: History of Epidemiology and Infectious Diseases, History of Inoculation Vaccination and Immunization, History of Medicine [show all 4]
  5. Organization Type: Library, Archive
    Address: 8600 Rockville Pike Building 28, Rm. 1E21
    City: Bethesda
    State Or Province: Maryland
    Zip / Postal Code: 20894
    Country: United States
    Telephone Number: 301-402-8878
    Fax Number: (301) 402-0872
    Abstract: The History of Medicine Division maintains one of the world's finest collections of medical history, including the history of the biological sciences, public health, and other health-related disciplines. Holdings consist of monographs and serials; modern manuscripts - <a href="https://www.nlm.nih.gov/hmd/manuscripts/msc.html" >https://www.nlm.nih.gov/hmd/manuscripts/msc.html</a>; medical archives; pamphlets; theses; prints and photographs, including a collection of medical bookplates; historical audiovisuals, including scripts, production and use files, and published reviews; East Asian collection of printed books, manuscripts, and visual material in Japanese, Chinese, and Korean; incunabula; Arabic, Persian, and early Western manuscripts; college catalogs; government documents. SERVICES: interlibrary loan; reference questions dealing with the Division's holdings; microfilming; photocopying; reproduction of prints, photographs, and audio-visuals; indexing of secondary literature in the history of medicine (included in PubMed); seminars and special lectures; exhibitions program. All reproductions subject to copyright and other restrictions. Publications: Bibliography of the History of Medicine (published 1964-1993); Directory of History of Medicine Collections. See fact sheets at <a href="https://www.nlm.nih.gov/pubs/factsheets/factsheets.html" >https://www.nlm.nih.gov/pubs/factsheets/factsheets.html</a>. For Online Reference Support please go to: <a href="https://support.nlm.nih.gov">NLM Customer Support</a>
    Holdings: Incunabula: 568 titles; early Western manuscripts: 90; Arabic and Persian manuscripts: 139; 16th century: 5,697 titles; 17th century: 13,450 titles; 18th century: 38,500 titles; 19th century: 66,000 titles. Pamphlets: 76,940; theses: 281,784; bound serials: 26,750; East Asian collection. Over 9,100 linear feet of modern manuscript materials, 1600 to the present; more than 250 oral histories, over 69,000 prints and photographs (Images from the History of Medicine); 5,300 titles of historic films and videotapes, and a digital collection of over 16,000 items of papers of prominent scientists in biomedicine, including some who have received the Nobel prize. ONLINE CATALOGS: Search LocatorPlus (see address above) for monographs, manuscripts, serials, and audiovisuals. Theses, some pamphlets, East Asian collection, and early Western manuscripts not yet in LocatorPlus. Index Cat,<a href="https://indexcat.nlm.nih.gov/" >https://indexcat.nlm.nih.gov</a>, the online version of the Library of the Surgeon-General’s Office, U. S. Army (61 volumes in 5 series, 1880-1961), Images from the History of Medicine (IHM) available in HMD Reading Room and online - <a href="https://www.nlm.nih.gov/hmd/ihm/index.html" >https://www.nlm.nih.gov/hmd/ihm/index.html</a>. See HMD home page for links to Islamic Medical Manuscripts at the National Library of Medicine, Profiles in Science, Finding Aids for Selected Modern Manuscript Collections, Directory of History of Medicine Collections, Early Western Manuscripts in the National Library of Medicine: A Short Title List. Consult Fact Sheets (via NLM Home Page) for further information. PRINTED CATALOGS: For searching many HMD materials, especially pamphlets, dissertations, and journal articles from the 19th and early 20th centuries, this title is invaluable: Index Catalogue of the Library of the Surgeon-General's Office, U.S. Army (61 volumes in 5 series, 1880-1961). (NLM was formerly the Library of the Surgeon-General's Office.) Although not as current as online catalogs, the following are useful: Richard J. Durling, A Catalogue of Sixteenth Century Printed Books in the National Library of Medicine (1967); Peter A. Krivatsy, A Catalogue of Sixteenth Century Printed Books in the National Library of Medicine First Supplement (1971) and A Catalogue of Seventeenth Century Printed Books in the National Library of Medicine (1989); John B. Blake, A Short Title Catalogue of Eighteenth Century Printed Books in the National Library of Medicine (1979); Dorothy M. Schullian, A Catalogue of Incunabula and Manuscripts in the Army Medical Library (1950); Early Western Manuscripts in The National Library of Medicine, A Short-Title List (1989).
    Contact Name, Title: Crystal Smith, Reference Librarian
    Contact Telephone Number: 301 827 4568
    Contact Email Address: crystals@mail.nih.gov
    Web Site: http://www.nlm.nih.gov/hmd/
    Collection Subject Strengths: History of Medicine
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