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Alice Hamilton History

 

ALICE HAMILTON, M.D.

 young A. Hamilton A. Hamilton USP stamp

(February 27, 1869 - September 22, 1970)

FOR HER OUTSTANDING CONTRIBUTIONS TO
OCCUPATIONAL SAFETY AND HEALTH IN THE UNITED STATES

| The Person | The Facility |

 

THE PERSON

Many of the first laws and regulations passed to improve the health of workers were the direct result of the work of one dedicated and talented woman, Alice Hamilton, M.D. Born into a prominent family in Indiana (her sister is the well-known classicist, Edith Hamilton), Dr. Hamilton graduated from medical school at the University of Michigan in 1893 and she moved into Jane Addams' Hull House in Chicago. There she opened a well-baby clinic for poor families in the local settlement house neighborhood. As she acquainted herself with the families in the neighborhood, she learned of their pains, strange deaths, lead palsy, "wrist drop," and of the high numbers of widowed women. Encouraged by the reformers of Hull House, she began to apply her medical knowledge to these social problems and thus began her scientific inquiry into occupational health for which she became known.

Dr. Hamilton quickly realized that while some progress in understanding occupational illness and disease was being made in Europe, little was written or understood about occupational disease conditions in the U.S. In 1908 she published one of the first articles on occupational diseases in this country and was soon a recognized expert on the topic. Starting in 1910, under the sponsorship initially of a commission of the State of Illinois, and later the Federal Bureau of Labor Statistics, she conducted a series of brilliant explorations of occupational toxic disorders. Relying primarily on "shoe leather epidemiology," and the emerging laboratory science of toxicology, she pioneered occupational epidemiology and industrial hygiene in the U.S. Her findings were so scientifically persuasive that they caused sweeping reforms, both voluntary and regulatory, to improve the health of workers.

In 1919, Dr. Hamilton was appointed Assistant Professor of Industrial Medicine at Harvard Medical School and became the first female faculty member at Harvard University. While there, she served two terms on the Health Committee of the League of Nations. When she retired from Harvard at age sixty-six, she became a consultant to the U.S. Division of Labor Standards and served as the president of the National Consumers League.

ALICE HAMILTON LABORATORY

On Friday, February 27, 1987, the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health dedicated its facility located at 5555 Ridge Avenue in Cincinnati, Ohio, to the memory of Alice Hamilton, M.D. The facility will be known as the "Alice Hamilton Laboratory for Occupational Safety and Health" in honor of the first American physician to devote her professional life to the practice of occupational health.

Construction of this facility began in the Fall of 1952 and was completed in November 1954. For several years it was used as the world headquarters and manufacturing plant of the Disabled American Veterans (DAV). In this facility, "Ident-o-Tags," miniature license plates for key chains, were manufactured by disabled veterans for distribution throughout the United States.

In the early 1960's, a portion of the facility was leased to the Federal Government to provide space for a small number of Federal employees. From the early 1960's to the early 1970's more and more of the facility was used by the Federal Government, until by 1973, the entire building was leased for Federal offices and laboratories. In September of 1974, the first employees of NIOSH were assigned to space in the facility. In December 1982, the U.S. Public Health Service purchased the facility for three and one-half million dollars. It now houses the Division of Physical Science and Engineering and the Division of Surveillance, Hazard Evaluations and Field Studies. Over 200 people are at work here in engineering, epidemiology, general administration, industrial hygiene, and laboratory research. The facility contains some of the most advanced laboratories and sophisticated scientific equipment in the Institute.

 

Alice Hamilton Awards

Alice Hamilton image

Alice Hamilton Related Links:

Alice Hamilton Home

 
>Alice Hamilton History
 
NIOSH Bibliography 2007
 
NIOSH Bibliography 2006
 
NIOSH Bibliography 2005
 
NIOSH Bibliography 2004
 
NIOSH Bibliography 2003
 
NIOSH Bibliography 2002
 
NIOSH Bibliography 2001
 
NIOSH Bibliography 1999
 
Federal Buildings in the United States Named for
Outstanding Women

 

Related Awards
 
Alice Hamilton Awards
 
Bullard-Sherwood Awards
 
Charles C. Shepard Awards
 
James P.Keogh Award

 
Page last updated: May 1, 2008
Page last reviewed: January 4, 2008
Content Source: National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)