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Medical
Books at Yale from 1701 to 1933
Founding
of the Yale Medical Library, 1934-1941
The
Yale Medical Library, 1941-1990
The
Cushing/Whitney Medical Library and the Growth of Electronic Resources,
1990-2001
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THE MEDICAL LIBRARY AT YALE, 1701-2001
The Yale Medical Library, 1941-1990
| YALE MEDICAL LIBRARY ROTUNDA |
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Rotunda of the Medical Library, 1945, showing
an exhibit of the works of medical illustrators. The interior of the
Rotunda was a 50th reunion gift of Cushing's classmates from the Class
of 1891. It looks the same now as it did in 1945. |
| FREDERICK KILGOUR, DIRECTOR OF THE YALE
MEDICAL LIBRARY, 1948-1966 |
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In 1948 Frederick G. Kilgour,
later the founder of OCLC, became Librarian of the Yale Medical Library.
Kilgour was not only at the forefront of library technology, he was
also a devoted historian of medicine. The Historical Library and General
Medical Library were from then on administered as a single unit. Administrative
responsibility for the Yale Medical Library was transferred from the
Medical School to the University Library. At this point, the Medical
Library became an integral part of the Yale University Library. The
medical journals from Sterling Memorial Library were transferred in
1942 and 130,000 volumes of monographs and pamphlets in 1949. |
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MADELINE EARLE STANTON (1898-1980), LBRARIAN OF THE HISTORICAL LIBRARY, 1941-1968
Madeline Stanton, a graduate of Smith College, was hired by Harvey Cushing, then at the Peter Bent Brigham Hospital in Boston, to be his secretary. She moved with Cushing to New Haven
in 1933. After Cushing's death in 1939, she served for a decade as Secretary of the Historical Library under John F. Fulton, and from 1949 to 1968 as Librarian of the Historical Collections. She authored or co-authored several bibliographies including a bibliography of early publications on anesthesia with John Fulton that is still a standard work.
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| REPORT OF THE HISTORICAL LIBRARY, 1947-48 |
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Report of the Historical
Library, 1947-48, announcing the appointment of Frederick Kilgour,
who was to serve as Librarian until 1966, and the integration of the
Medical Library into the University Library. |
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FOUNDING OF THE ASSOCIATES OF THE YALE MEDICAL LIBRARY, 1948
  
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This brochure announces the founding of the Library Associates, a friends
group that has continued to provide support to the Library. The Associates sponsor an annual meeting
and distinguished lecturer each Spring.
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| LIBRARY BROCHURE, 1956 |
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This brochure of 1956 shows the plan of
the Library as it was then. The long corridor featured in the cover
design originally had medical school offices. The library began at
the rotunda and the circulation desk was located where the Information
Desk currently is. There was no Information Room and there were no
computers in the Library. |
| STANLEY TRUELSON, JR., DIRECTOR
OF THE MEDICAL LIBRARY, 1966-1976 |
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With Stanley Truelson in this
photograph is Lucia Fulton, widow of John F. Fulton. |
| FIRST PUBLIC HEALTH LIBRARY |
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The Department of Public Health
(later part of Epidemiology and Public Health) established its own
library, initially located at 310 Cedar Street. Ruth Herrington, librarian,
is seen in this picture taken in 1945. |
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PERIODICAL ROOM, 1960s

The periodical room was the main reading room of the Medical Library before the renovation and the creation of the current Information Room.
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| YALE MEDICAL LIBRARY USER'S GUIDE, 1972 |
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A major task of medical reference
librarians at this time was to perform bibliographical searches on
MEDLINE (the index to medical literature) for faculty and students. |
| IRA VAUGHAN HISCOCK LIBRARY |
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The Hiscock Library, as shown in these two photographs,
was located in the Epidemiology and Public Health building at 60 College
Street, designed by architect Phillip Johnson in the 1960s. Hiscock
was chairman of the department or school of public health from 1945
to 1960. After 1960, the department was renamed Epidemiology and Public
Health (EPH). |
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NEED FOR EXPANSION AND RENOVATION, 1981
 The
photographs in this 1981 Yale Medicine article on the Library explain
why an expansion and renovation of the Medical Library was desperately
needed. By 1981, the Library had run out of space for books and
journals. Some had to be stored offsite in a medical school basement.
There was too little space for patrons to work. In addition, two
major technological innovations since the founding of the Library had
changed the way patrons used the Library: photocopying and electronic
bibliographic searching. The configuration of space meant that patrons
had to go a long distance from the journal stacks to the photocopy
machines and staff had to haul journals a long distance for reshelving.
Since the databases were not user friendly and charging was by time,
databases had to be searched for patrons by librarians who had memorized
the codes of the interface. Additional librarians and space for
them to work were needed to cope with the electronic resources and
the ever-expanding flood of medical information.
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| REDEDICATION OF THE HARVEY CUSHING/JOHN
HAY WHITNEY MEDICAL LIBRARY, JUNE 7, 1990 |
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In the late 1980s, Betsy Cushing
Whitney, daughter of Harvey Cushing (Yale 1891) and widow of John
Hay Whitney (Yale 1926) donated 8 million dollars to enlarge and refurbish
the Medical Library. Space for the collections was approximately doubled
and the beautiful sky-lit Information Room was added to main floor. |
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| REDEDICATION INVITATION, 1990 |
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