Creator
Dates
- 1905-1954.
Scope and content
The Harrison Stanford Martland, MD, Papers span the years 1905-1954. They document Dr. Martland's investigations of occupational health hazards in New Jersey. This collection contains four series including Scrapbooks, Publications, Photographs, and Miscellaneous Papers. Publications are the strongest series in this collection, followed by Scrapbooks.
For further biographical information see:
Berg, Samuel. Harrison Stanford Martland, MD: the story of a physician, a hospital, an era. NY: Vantage, 1978.
Extent
3 Linear Feet (3 linear ft)
Restrictions on Access
No restrictions on access, under the conditions of the Archives access policy.
Language of Materials
English
Introduction
The papers of Harrison Stanford Martland, MD date from 1905 to 1954, with bulk dates from the 1920s to the late 1940s. The records total approximately 3 linear feet. They form Personal Collection PC/1 in the Special Collections' Bergen University Archives. The records are open for research without restriction under the conditions of the Archives' access policy.
Biographical Sketch
Harrison Stanford Martland, the son of Dr. William Henry and Ida (Carlyle) Martland, was born in Newark on September 10, 1883. Harrison Martland received a BS degree from Western Maryland College in 1901. After receiving his MD degree from the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Columbia University in 1905, he served an 18-month internship at the municipal New York City Hospital on Welfare Island. He then spent a period of two years in Pathology and Bacteriology at the Russell Sage Laboratory.
Dr. Martland accepted the appointment of the first full-time paid pathologist at the Newark City Hospital in January 1909. On November 16, 1910 he married Myra C. Ferdon and they purchased a house at 180 Clinton Avenue, Newark, which was to be their home until his death in 1954. When World War I broke out, Dr. Martland joined the Bellevue Hospital Unit and as a lieutenant colonel he took charge of a hospital in Vichy, France. He later was awarded a Citation for Exceptionally Meritorious and Conspicuous Service by General John Pershing.
In June 1925 Dr. Martland was chosen to fill the post of Essex County Physician. Immediately, he saw the danger of divided authority in the system that allowed a coroner's jury of laymen to decide causes of sudden death therefore, he set out to establish the medical examiner system in Essex County. He won his fight in the State Legislature and the county government in March 1927, and was appointed Chief Medical Examiner by the Essex County Board of Freeholders. In April 1933, Dr. Martland was named Professor of Forensic Medicine at New York University, a post he held for fifteen years.
Dr. Martland made important contributions in the fields of pathology and forensic medicine. The work that attracted the most attention was his research begun in 1924, on the effects of radioactive material on the human body. Dr. Martland determined that minute traces of radioactivity contained in luminous paint had caused the deaths of watch dial painters employed at the US Radium Corporation in Orange, NJ. The Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) credits Dr. Martland's work with having made it possible for atomic development to proceed with comparative safety. At the request of the AEC, Dr. Martland prepared a permanent exhibit on radioactive dangers and precautions which is on display in Oak Ridge, Tennessee. In 1916, Dr. Martland alerted dynamite manufacturers to the dangers of occupational poisoning in TNT.
It was Dr. Martland who proved, back in 1928, that "punch drunk" prize fighters were suffering from a brain injury caused by the rupture of blood vessels. He did notable work in phases of cardiac syphilis and in the effects of bullet wounds on the body. Dr. Martland's accomplishments also included the first paper establishing the lethal effects of beryllium poisoning, which led to implementation of regulatory reforms governing the use of beryllium in industrial plants.
Dr. Martland received numerous honors and awards. Nobel Prize winners came to Newark three times to salute him at annual Harrison S. Martland Lectures sponsored by the Essex County Anatomical and Pathological Society. The New York Pathological Association named him its first out-of-state president in 1928. He was President of the Essex County Medical Society in 1920 and of the Academy of Medicine of Northern New Jersey in 1922. In 1943, the Academy of Medicine gave Dr. Martland the Edward J. Ill Award as the outstanding physician and citizen of the county. The Newark City Commission paid tribute to the eminent pathologist when the new city hospital was dedicated the Harrison S. Martland Medical Center on January 24, 1954.
After forty-five years as Newark City Hospital Pathologist and twenty-five years as Essex County Medical Examiner, Dr. Martland retired in November 1953. He died on May 1, 1954 at the age of 71.
Arrangement
This collection has been organized into four series. They are:
Series I: Scrapbooks
Series II: Publications
Series III: Photographs
Series IV: Miscellaneous Papers
Custodial History
Dr. Martland's papers were given to the Bergen University Archives on October 3, 1979 by Samuel Berg, MD. Dr. Berg rescued the papers from permanent destruction by removing them from the trash at the old Newark City Hospital. A later addendum (90-30) of seven scrapbooks was donated by Frank J.Tomaino (Forensic Administrator, Office of the State Medical Examiner, Newark) in April 1990. In 1994,Dr. Robert Goode, New Jersey State Medical Examiner, donated another addenda (94-22), which included a collection of reprints and a letter.
- Author
- Sarah A Hull
- Date
- April 1999
- Edition statement
- Finding Aid was written in April 1999 and revised March 2, 2001
Part of the RBHS Special Collections in the History of Medicine Repository