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The gift to the Medical Historical Library of neuroscience texts that
belonged to John Flynn recalled a Cold War tale involving Flynn and his
wife, Hulda Rees McGarvey Flynn.
Flynn found a three-volume set written by a Spanish physician in a used
bookstore in New York City. A lengthy inscription by the author, Santiago
Ramón y Cajal, added to its value.

Textura del Sistema Nervioso del Hombre y de los Vertebrados is
considered one of the two greatest books on neuroscience of the 20th century.
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Rare volumes and a refuge from
the blacklist
Deemed a security risk and unable to find work, a psychologist in the
McCarthy era found a home at Yale.
By Jill Max

John P. Flynn, Ph.D., a professor emeritus of psychology (psychiatry)
who died in 1980 after 26 years on the Yale faculty, liked to tell the
story of how he acquired some neurology books at a used bookstore in New
York in the early 1940s. The owner, unaware of their value, sold the rare
volumes to Flynn for just $10.

The three-volume set, Textura del Sistema Nervioso del Hombre
y de los Vertebrados, was written between 1897 and 1899 by the Spanish
histologist Santiago Ramón y Cajal, M.D., considered the founder
of modern neuroscience (this year is the centennial of the Nobel Prize
in physiology or medicine to Cajal and Camillo Golgi, M.D.). John Gach,
president of John Gach Books and an appraiser specializing in the neurosciences,
described the set as “one of the two greatest neuroscience books
of the 20th century,” along with The Integrative Action of the
Nervous System, by another Nobel laureate, Sir Charles Scott Sherrington,
M.D., published in 1906. (Sherrington’s book is a compilation of
the Silliman Lectures he gave at Yale in 1904, which were originally published
by Yale University Press in 1906.) Cajal was the first to describe the
main types of neurons as separate cells, which became the basis of the
neuron theory. He also hypothesized about how neurons interact through
junctions to form the circuits for brain functions. The books, purchased
by Flynn in the original Spanish edition, are especially prized because
Cajal himself inscribed them, with a lengthy handwritten note explaining
his reasons for writing them, in 1910. “They were my father’s
most prized material possession,” said Flynn’s daughter, Sarah
Flynn.

Flynn came to Yale during the McCarthy era, when he was
deemed a risk to national security. During the 1930s and early 1940s,
his wife, Hulda Rees McGarvey Flynn, Ph.D., had been involved in an early
teachers’ union and had supported the anti-fascist cause in the
Spanish Civil War. After being called before the House Un-American Activities
Committee in 1953, Flynn was told he could keep his job as head of the
Psychology and Statistics Division at the Naval Medical Research Institute
(NMRI) in Bethesda, Md., only if he divorced his wife. He chose to stay
with her.

Thirteen offers of employment came from universities in
the ensuing months; in all but one case the university backed out. The
exception was Yale, where Flynn was hired in 1954 and worked with Paul
D. MacLean, M.D. ’40, a professor of physiology and psychiatry who
was studying the limbic system, and where he remained for the rest of
his career. Yale’s president at the time, A. Whitney Griswold, believed
strongly in academic freedom and was known for standing up to Sen. Joseph
McCarthy. In a recent letter to Yale President Richard C. Levin, Sarah
Flynn wrote: “My father was always very proud of being a Yale faculty
member, and many are proud of Yale for taking the stand it did during
this black period in our nation’s history.”

The beginning of Flynn’s interest in psychology is
almost as serendipitous a tale as that of his acquisition of the Cajal
volumes. In the early 1940s, while a priest in Chicago, Flynn volunteered
to study psychology in order to be able to teach it. He earned a Ph.D.
in experimental psychology at Columbia in 1943. A year later he left the
priesthood. In 1945, while working at the PsychoAcoustics Lab at Harvard,
he married McGarvey, whom he had met at Columbia and who later became
an assistant professor of psychology at Yale. One year later, he went
to NMRI, where he began his work in physiological psychology.

While at Yale, Flynn established the psychiatry basic science
section at the Connecticut Mental Health Center and became internationally
renowned for his studies on aggressive behavior and neural function. Each
year the university holds a lecture in his honor.

Flynn’s legacy at Yale now also includes the Cajal
volumes, which his daughter donated to the Medical Historical Library
last year. In remarks read at the presentation of the set in April 2005,
Gordon M. Shepherd, M.D., Ph.D., professor of neuroscience and neurobiology,
said: “It will not only be an ornament in the library’s collection,
but also a reminder of John Flynn’s own distinguished contribution
to neuroscience at Yale, and of the generosity and thoughtfulness of Sarah
Flynn in giving it a home in his memory.”

Jill Max is a writer in Connecticut.
The neuroscience texts, a gift to the Medical Historical Library, were
John Flynn’s most prized possession.
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