The Genealogy Of Mass General (October/November 1984 | Volume: 35, Issue: 6)

The Genealogy Of Mass General

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Authors: William Bennett

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October/November 1984 | Volume 35, Issue 6

 

HE WAS A sixth-generation American, white and Protestant, educated at Princeton and the University of Pennsylvania Medical School, which, at the time, was the best in the country. Even in 1912, hiring David Linn Edsall would hardly seem to be a blow for equal-opportunity employment. But the place was Boston, the job was to lead the medical staff of the Massachusetts General Hospital. In the decades since 1821, when the hospital first opened its doors to patients, only Bostonians had been invited to practice at Mass General. Edsall was from Hamburg, New Jersey, of all places. Moreover, his main rival for the position was an ideal candidate—Richard Clarke Cabot, an extraordinary man, a gifted physician, a cousin by marriage of the retiring chief, and a member of Boston’s aristocracy.

That the city’s most thoroughly Brahmin institution (after Harvard) would pass over someone with Cabot’s name and qualifications to bring in a complete outsider—this was a remarkable, even a radical, turn of events. It was not quite as revolutionary, though, as rumor had it. Some of Boston society’s more parochial members thought Edsall was Jewish. What else could he be? His first name was David; he had supported Louis D. Brandeis’s appointment to the Supreme Court; and he was known to be a staunch Democrat.

Why had the hospital taken such a drastic step? The reason was, quite simply, that the people who supported and staffed it had always conceived of Mass General as an elite institution. But they feared the rest of the world would soon come to see their hospital as second-rate—a Brahmin backwater with some amusing traditions, but one that was making little contribution to the progress of modern medicine. It was not that the hospital had changed. What had changed was medicine itself.

 
 
 

Although Cabot had expected throughout most of his career that he would succeed to the top position in medicine, by 1912 even he declared himself eager to persuade the New Jersey doctor to come to Boston. His admiration for Edsall was based on that physician’s identification with the new style of medicine, one that fused modern laboratory investigation with an older tradition of pains-taking bedside diagnosis. Cabot had become so impressed with Edsall’s reputation over the years that he had declared himself “only too happy to serve under him.” And the move that originally had seemed so alarming to some turn-of-the-century Bostonians proved in the end to accomplish exactly what was intended. Under Edsall’s leadership, and with Cabot’s unstinting support, the Mass General staff succeeded in reshaping the hospital to meet new and changing standards. Today it is one of the world’s most famous medical institutions.

ALTHOUGH THE HOSPITAL’S original stone building remains in use, it is now barely visible to passersby. The large, and largely ugly, structures surrounding it provide for the care of some 31,000 inpatients and 144,000