Wyman/Clifford/Saxton

Walter WymanAge: 6318481911

Name
Walter Wyman
Birth August 17, 1848 33 28
Birth of a brotherFrank Wyman
July 25, 1850 (Age 23 months)
Birth of a brotherHerbert Wyman
September 17, 1853 (Age 5)
Death of a brotherHerbert Wyman
October 18, 1853 (Age 5)
Cause: membranous Croup
Birth of a sisterFlorence Wyman
March 24, 1855 (Age 6)
Birth of a brotherHadley Wyman
November 18, 1858 (Age 10)
Death of a brotherHadley Wyman
November 18, 1858 (Age 10)
Death of a motherElizabeth Frances Hadley
November 18, 1858 (Age 10)
Cause: Placenta Previa
Marriage of a parentEdward WymanMartha LeighView this family
December 25, 1859 (Age 11)
Birth of a half-brotherArthur Wyman
December 5, 1860 (Age 12)
Death of a sisterElla Wyman
March 4, 1863 (Age 14)
Death of a paternal grandmotherSusan Frances Cutter
November 14, 1864 (Age 16)
Death of a paternal grandfatherNehemiah Wyman
June 25, 1869 (Age 20)
Education
Amherst College, Amherst, Hampshire, Massachusetts, USA
1870 (Age 21)

Education
St. Louis Medical College, St. Louis, St. Louis, Missouri, USA
1873 (Age 24)

Death of a fatherEdward Wyman
April 30, 1885 (Age 36)
Death of a brotherCharles H. Wyman
1908 (Age 59)

Death November 21, 1911 (Age 63)
Family with parents - View this family
father
mother
Marriage: April 16, 1839Boston, Suffolk, Massachusetts, USA
1 year
elder brother
Edward Francis Wyman
Birth: April 21, 1840 24 20Hillsboro, Montgomery, Illinois, USA
Death: December 22, 1844Boston, Suffolk, Massachusetts, USA
18 months
elder brother
2 years
elder sister
Ella Wyman
Birth: January 25, 1844 28 24Boston, Suffolk, Massachusetts, USA
Death: March 4, 1863St. Louis, St. Louis, Missouri, USA
23 months
elder brother
3 years
himself
Walter Wyman
Birth: August 17, 1848 33 28St. Louis, St. Louis, Missouri, USA
Death: November 21, 1911Washington, Washington, District of Columbia, USA
23 months
younger brother
3 years
younger brother
Herbert Wyman
Birth: September 17, 1853 38 33St. Louis, St. Louis, Missouri, USA
Death: October 18, 1853St. Louis, St. Louis, Missouri, USA
18 months
younger sister
4 years
younger brother
Hadley Wyman
Birth: November 18, 1858 43 38St. Louis, St. Louis, Missouri, USA
Death: November 18, 1858St. Louis, St. Louis, Missouri, USA
Father’s family with Martha Leigh - View this family
father
step-mother
Marriage: December 25, 1859St. Louis, St. Louis, Missouri, USA
11 months
half-brother

Note

Wyman served as a physician at the city hospital in St. Louis for 2 years and then engaged in private practice for another year before joining the Marine Hospital Service in 1876 as an Assistant Surgeon. He was promoted to Surgeon the following year, and served successively in the marine hospitals at St. Louis, Cincinnati, Baltimore, and New York. While he was in charge of the marine hospital in Staten Island, New York, the Hygienic Laboratory (forerunner of the National Institutes of Health) was established there in 1887 by Supervising Surgeon General John B. Hamilton. Wyman had studied in Europe in 1885, and was well acquainted with the bacteriological investigations of Robert Koch and others. He fully supported the creation of the Hygienic Laboratory.

In December, 1888, Wyman moved to Washington, D.C. as Chief of the Quarantine Division. When Hamilton resigned as Supervising Surgeon General, Wyman was appointed to the position as of June 1, 1891. He was to remain at the helm of the Marine Hospital Service for 20 years.

During Wyman's tenure, the Marine Hospital Service significantly expanded its responsibilities, and in 1902 was renamed the Public Health and Marine Hospital Service. At that time, Wyman's title was also changed from Supervising Surgeon General to just Surgeon General. As a result of immigration legislation passed on March 3, 1891, shortly before Wyman took office, the Marine Hospital Service was assigned responsibility for the medical inspection of arriving immigrations. The largest immigration depot was Ellis Island in New York, opened in 1892, where Service physicians would inspect thousands of arriving immigrants on busy days. The quarantine activities of the Service were expanded by legislative acts of 1893 and 1906, and maritime quarantine functions were extended to Hawaii, Cuba, Puerto Rico, the Panama Canal, and the Philippine Islands.

The 1902 act, which changed the name of the Service, also charged the Surgeon General with convening a conference of state health authorities at least on an annual basis, and directed him to prepare and distribute to state health officers forms for the uniform compilation of vital statistics. This statistical information was published in the Service's journal, Public Health Reports. The 1902 law also expanded the Hygienic Laboratory, which Wyman had moved to Washington, D.C. in 1891. Under Wyman's administration, the Laboratory significantly increased its research activities, including studies on diseases such as hookworm and Rocky Mountain spotted fever, and was provided with a new building in 1901. The 1902 Biologics Control Act gave the Laboratory responsibility for the regulation of biological products such as vaccines and antitoxins.

In the early years of the twentieth century, Surgeon General Wyman found himself in the midst of a controversy over plague in the city of San Francisco. The Service first became involved in the situation in 1900 when PHS physician Joseph Kinyoun, stationed in San Francisco, confirmed by bacteriological analysis that the death of a laborer in the city's Chinatown section was due to bubonic plague. Many local officials and business leaders, as well as Chinatown residents, concerned about how fears of plague would effect their lives and businesses, denied the existence of the disease and/or resisted quarantine and immunization efforts. When Wyman attempted to enforce an embargo on interstate travel for Californians without proper health certificates, the Governor of the state persuaded President McKinley to lift the travel ban. By 1903, however, the situation had become serious enough that an emergency conference was held in Washington, D.C., and a recommendation was made that all traffic between California and the rest of the country be halted unless Federal authorities were permitted to carry out their eradication campaign. Faced with the threat of a national boycott, San Francisco officials cooperated with Wyman and the Service, and a successful campaign to eliminate the disease was led by PHS physician Rupert Blue (who would later serve himself as PHS Surgeon General). The Service under Wyman also cooperated with state and local health authorities in the control of other infectious diseases such as yellow fever.

Wyman was involved in the creation of the Pan American Sanitary Bureau in 1902. From the time of its organization until 1936, the Surgeons General of the Public Health Service served as the Directors of the Bureau, with Wyman as Director until his death in 1911. Many of Wyman's health policies and principles were adopted by the Bureau. He also played a leading role in the first four Inter-American Sanitary Conferences, acting as President of the first two and attending the next two as the United States Delegate.

Wyman authorized a nationwide study of the prevalence of leprosy in 1901, and worked to establish a leprosy hospital and laboratory in Hawaii. In 1905, Wyman personally went to Hawaii to select the site of the new facility.

During his tenure as Surgeon General, Wyman was active in professional service in a number of organizations. For example, he served as President of the American Public Health Association in 1902 and as President of the Association of Military Surgeons in 1904.

Wyman continued to serve as Surgeon General until his death in Washington, D.C. on November 21, 1911.

http://www.surgeongeneral.gov/library/history/sglist.htm

US Surgeon General