About Baltimore County Medical Association
Mission
Preamble from the Bylaws of the Baltimore County Medical Association
The Baltimore County Medical Association is a non-profit organization. The purpose of this Association shall be to federate and bring into one society the medical profession of Baltimore County; to extend medical knowledge and advance medical sciences; to elevate the standard of medicine and secure the enactment of just laws relating to the practice of medicine and the public health; to foster friendly relations among the physicians; and to enlighten and inform the public, so that the profession shall become more useful in the prevention of disease, and in prolonging and adding comfort to life.
A Brief History
Excerpts from an article written by Joseph M. Miller, M.D., marking the centennial of the Baltimore County Medical Association in 1997
Five
doctors from Baltimore County were in the founders’ group of the Medical and
Chirurgical Faculty of the State of Maryland in 1799, well before the birth of
the county society. Dr. Charles M. Ellis, in his presidential address at MedChi
in 1898, noted the disparity between a city and a country practice.
The city physicians had hospitals and dispensaries and could take
advantage of post-graduate courses, consultations, and libraries.
The
practice of medicine must have been difficult in Baltimore County early in the
1890s. Specialists did not exist, there were no hospitals, and transportation
was most limited. Most doctors had
little formal learning experience after medical school although a few had
internships. Thus, many of these men felt the need of further medical education
for the treatment of diseases for which they, as individuals, had little to
offer.
To
change their particular medical environment, a small group of Baltimore County
medical practitioners, persuaded of the advantages of the diffusion of knowledge
and the cultivation of friendly relations, constituted themselves an association
for the above purposes. They agreed to be governed by an adopted Constitution
and Bylaws, in addition to the Code of Ethics of the American Medical
Association.[i]
The
start of this century-old group was far from auspicious. Upon the invitation [ii]of
five of their colleagues, 18 men assembled on April 15, 1897 in the Grange Hall
at Towson. Subsequently, 41 members agreed to abide by the adopted rules by
affixing their signatures to the agreement. The Association decided to meet in
Towson or some other town in the county, which was accessible by steam or
electric cars, on the third Thursday in each month at two o’clock pm from
October to May. The dues were two dollars a year.
One
of the prime objectives of the new society was the promotion of public health.
Dr. Jackson Piper, who became its first president at 69 years of age,
tremendously aided this endeavor. At the July, 1897 meeting of the society, a
resolution was passed calling attention to the fact that the health of Baltimore
County residents was jeopardized by the presence of leaking cess-pits. The
society requested county legislation to forbid the construction of cesspools
that were not watertight.
Towson
(Towsontown until 1880) was the county seat of Baltimore County. This area was
the richest and most populace site in the county during the last part of the 19th
century.[iii],[iv].
The York Turnpike ran through its center, the Northern Central Railroad extended
along its western side, and a narrow gauge railroad connected the town to
Baltimore. The ride to Baltimore could also be made on a horse-car railroad.
This era was well before the appearance of the automobile.
The
area did not have a hospital so those patients needing such care had to be taken
to Baltimore. Two institutions for mental care were, however, in the area. The
Sheppard and Enoch Pratt Hospital was built on a 340 acre farm known as Mt.
Airy, six miles from Baltimore on the York Road.
To connect with the recently extended Charles Street, an additional 35
acres were acquired. The first patient was received in 1891, and at the present
time, this hospital is one of the finest psychiatric institutions in the United
States.[v]
House
calls in 1900 were made on horseback or by horse and buggy. James F.H. Gorsuch
(Figure 4), born in Harford County, was a pupil of Dr. John J. Chilsolm.
Gorsuch graduated from the University of Maryland Medical School in 1876.
He practiced in Fork, and at one time was president of the Harford County
Medical Society. Later, he became one of the founders and then president of the
Baltimore County Medical Association. At
first, Dr. Gorsuch made house calls on horseback but later used a one-horse
buggy and then a team to travel about Fork and its environs. In 1910, he
acquired one of the early automobiles. He
was a gifted orator and a political power in the county.[vi],[vii]
The
Baltimore County Medical Association’s monthly meetings were held at various
locations- local hotels and halls, one of the small asylums or retreats, or in
one of the homes of the physicians. Subjects of discussion included diseases of
the day: typhoid fever, diphtheria, vaccination, thyroid lesions, rabies, and
injuries from the explosion of firecrackers.
The
size of the society has paralleled the increase in population of the county. The
number of inhabitants rose to almost 700,000 in 1990.
In 1961, the Association had 219 members and now, in 1997, the society
numbers 1,173. Hospital growth has
also been comparable. In an area that once did not have a hospital bed, four
large hospitals now offer 1,477 beds.
The
period following World War II was turbulent in many aspects.
African American physicians had repeatedly been refused admittance to
MedChi, and it was not until April 1949 that the House of Delegates voted to
admit them as full members. A letter to MedChi from the Baltimore County Medical
Association states that as of March, 1953, Joseph H. Nichols, Joseph A. Thomas,
and William C. Wade, all African American, were members.[viii]
In 1969, African American physician, Theodore C. Patterson, a general
practitioner in the Turner Station area of Dundalk, was elected president of the
BCMA. In its first century, four women had been elected president: Margaret
Sherrard (1960), Elizabeth Sherrill (1977), Esther Edery (1990), and Marianne
Benkert (1993).
The
badge of authority of the Baltimore County Medical Association is an ebony cane
with a golden head that is inscribed with the names of the presidents of the
society.[ix]
The cane, first presented to Dr. John S. Green, Jr. by Dr. George H. Hocking in
1946, was to be passed to
The
seal of the society is a unique logo designed by Lee Einwaechter, a student in
Catonsville High School.[x]
The seal features the arch geographical outline of the county, a caduceus, and
the year of the founding of the society.
The
Baltimore County Medical Association has witnessed innumerable improved methods
of diagnosis and treatment.[xi]
Born just two years after Roentgen discovered the X-Ray, the group has seen
major advances in roentgenography, computerized axial tomography, and magnetic
resonant imaging. The county
physician was liberated from his individual pharmacy by amazing developments in
the pharmaceutical world. Vaccines prevented previously lethal diseases.
Public
service continued to be a hallmark of the society at mid-century.
The Family Life Program was introduced into the public schools as a pilot
program in 1969 for the purpose of acquainting pre-adolescent children with the
normal biological changes of puberty. Immunization
against Rubella was given to 6,500 school children in 1970.
The Family Life Program was later instituted in the 11th and
12th grades.
Now,
at 100, the Baltimore County Medical Association continues to exhibit the
strength and integrity of its founders.
[i] Reports of the Secretaries, Baltimore County Medical Association
[ii] History of Baltimore City and Baltimore County, Scharff, J.T., Philadelphia, Louis H. Everts, 1881.
[iii]Atlas of Baltimore County, Maryland, Hopkins, C. M., Philadelphia, F. Borquin’s Steam Lithographic Press, 1877.
[iv] A History of Baltimore County, Brooks, N. A., and Rockel, E. G. with a Final Chapter by Hughes, W. C., Towson, Maryland, Friends of the Towson Library, 1979.
[v] Baltimore County Panorama, Brooks, N. A. and Parsons, R., Towson, Maryland, Baltimore County Public Library, 1988.
[vi] “Country doctor at Fork quits after 54 years,” The Evening Sun, October 24, 1930.
[vii] “Gorsuch rounding out half century of service.” The Jeffersonian, April 25, 1931.
[viii] Letter to the Medical and Chirurgical Faculty of the State of Maryland from the Baltimore County Medical Association, dated March 20, 1953. From the transactions of the Medical and Chirurgical Faculty of the State of Maryland.
[ix] “The golden headed cane of the Baltimore County Medical Association,” Stroebel, M. E., Maryland State Medical Journal, 1954: 3, 188-189.
[x] “History of the seal of the Baltimore County Medical Association,” Pillsbury, W. A., Maryland State Medical Journal, 1954: 3, 388.
[xi]“The origin of the Baltimore County Medical Association,” Maryland State Medical Journal, 1954: 3, 587.