summary: This article details the history of Slossfield Hospital, an African American hospital and community center founded in Birmingham, Alabama, in 1937. During its New Deal--era existence it provided African American physicians institutional support for their medical practices. Additionally, as a community center, it addressed the socioeconomics of good health. This paper uses Slossfield as a case study to explore how some African Americans included the socioeconomic in their definition of public health during the New Deal, as well as to understand how these ideas were subsumed by more mainstream ideas about public health promulgated by black and white physicians and the local and federal governments.
...MoreDescription On the New Deal history of Slossfield Hospital in Birmingham, Alabama.
Book
Mary Kaplan;
(2016)
The Tuskegee Veterans Hospital and Its Black Physicians: The Early Years
(/isis/citation/CBB160176192/)
Article
Pohl, Lynn Marie;
(2012)
African American Southerners and White Physicians: Medical Care at the Turn of the Twentieth Century
(/isis/citation/CBB001251109/)
Book
Nelson, Alondra;
(2011)
Body and Soul: The Black Panther Party and the Fight against Medical Discrimination
(/isis/citation/CBB001251125/)
Thesis
Pearson, Reggie L.;
(2004)
Crucible of Change: Black Health Care in the Urban South, 1910--1954
(/isis/citation/CBB001562065/)
Book
Gray, Fred D.;
Tuskegee Institute, ;
(2002)
The Tuskegee Syphilis Study: The Real Story and Beyond
(/isis/citation/CBB000201837/)
Article
Farland, Maria;
(2006)
W. E. B. DuBois, Anthropometric Science, and the Limits of Racial Uplift
(/isis/citation/CBB001030907/)
Article
Savitt, T. L.;
(2000)
Four African-American proprietary medical colleges: 1888-1923
(/isis/citation/CBB000111187/)
Book
Long, Margaret Geneva;
(2012)
Doctoring Freedom: The Politics of African American Medical Care in Slavery and Emancipation
(/isis/citation/CBB001252883/)
Article
Patterson, Andrea;
(2009)
Germs and Jim Crow: The Impact of Microbiology on Public Health Policies in Progressive Era American South
(/isis/citation/CBB000932225/)
Book
Dana R. Chandler;
Edith Powell;
(2018)
To Raise Up the Man Farthest Down: Tuskegee University’s Advancements in Human Health, 1881–1987
(/isis/citation/CBB807329182/)
Article
Dorr, Gregory Michael;
(2006)
Defective or Disabled? Race, Medicine, and Eugenics in Progressive Era Virginia and Alabama
(/isis/citation/CBB000742077/)
Book
Susan M. Reverby;
(2000)
Tuskegee's Truths: Rethinking the Tuskegee Syphilis Study
(/isis/citation/CBB442304232/)
Article
Crenner, Christopher;
(2012)
The Tuskegee Syphilis Study and the Scientific Concept of Racial Nervous Resistance
(/isis/citation/CBB001250116/)
Book
Lerone A. Martin;
(2014)
Preaching on Wax: The Phonograph and the Shaping of Modern African American Religion
(/isis/citation/CBB497586158/)
Book
Kornweibel, Theodore;
(2010)
Railroads in the African American Experience: A Photographic Journey
(/isis/citation/CBB001230717/)
Article
Collins, Sibrina N.;
(2011)
Celebrating Our Diversity: The Education of Some Pioneering African American Chemists in Ohio
(/isis/citation/CBB001232504/)
Thesis
Claudia Jeanne Ford;
(2015)
Weed Women, All Night Vigils, and the Secret Life of Plants: Negotiated Epistemologies of Ethnogynecological Plant Knowledge in American History
(/isis/citation/CBB407270471/)
Thesis
Christopher D. Willoughby;
(2016)
Pedagogies of the Black Body: Race and Medical Education in the Antebellum United States
(/isis/citation/CBB728296810/)
Article
Patterson, Andrea;
(2012)
Black Nurses in the Great War: Fighting for and with the American Military in the Struggle for Civil Rights
(/isis/citation/CBB001212413/)
Article
Savitt, Todd Lee;
(2001)
Money versus Mission at an African-American Medical School: Knoxville College Medical Department, 1895-1900
(/isis/citation/CBB000100883/)
Be the first to comment!