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Calvin Walter Schwabe Papers

 Collection
Identifier: MS C 490

Abstract

Dr. Calvin Schwabe, veterinarian and public health scientist, has been throughout his career a leading worker at the interface of human and veterinary medicine. Dr. Schwabe was a member of the medical and public health faculties of the American University of Beirut, where he developed a significant research program on hydatid disease and other parasitic zoonoses, founded a joint Department of Tropical Health within those two faculties in l957, and a Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics within the School of Public Health in l962. He also established the first department and graduate program in epidemiology within a school of veterinary medicine at the University of California, Davis.

Dates

  • 1944-1992

Extent

43 Linear Feet (34 boxes, 27 volumes)

Creator

Physical Location

Materials stored onsite. History of Medicine Division. National Library of Medicine

Language of Materials

Collection materials primarily in English

Restrictions

Collection is not restricted. Contact the Reference Staff for information regarding access.

Copyright and Re-use Information

Donor's copyrights were transferred to the public domain. Archival collections often contain mixed copyrights; while NLM is the owner of the physical items, permission to examine collection materials is not an authorization to publish. These materials are made available for use in research, teaching, and private study. It is the user's responsibility to research and understand any applicable copyright and re-publication rights not allowed by fair use. NLM does not grant permissions to publish.

Privacy Information

Archives and manuscript collections may contain materials with sensitive or confidential information that is protected under federal or state right to privacy laws and regulations. Researchers are advised that the disclosure of certain information pertaining to identifiable living individuals represented in any collection without the consent of those individuals may have legal ramifications for which the National Library of Medicine assumes no responsibility.

Biographical Note

Calvin W. Schwabe was born on March 15, 1927, in Newark, New Jersey to Calvin W. Schwabe Sr. and Marie (Hassfeld) Schwabe. He graduated in l948 with a B.S. in biology (honors), from Virginia Polytechnic Institute. While attending graduate school at the University of Hawaii, from which he received a M.S. in zoology in 1950, he met and subsequently married the former Gwendolyn Joyce Thompson. In 1954 Dr. Schwabe was awarded the D.V.M. degree (highest honors) from Auburn University and, in 1955, an M.P.H. degree in tropical pubic health from Harvard University. His terminal Sc.D. degree in parasitology-tropical public health was awarded by Harvard in 1956.

From l956 until l966 Dr. Schwabe was a member of the medical and public health faculties of the American University of Beirut, where he developed a significant research program on hydatid disease and other parasitic zoonoses, founded a joint Department of Tropical Health within those two faculties in l957, and a Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics within the School of Public Health in l962. Beginning in l960 he served as a consultant to the World Health Organization, developing its collaborative global program on hydatid disease research and control. From l964-l966, on leave of absence from Beirut, he directed that and several other parasitic diseases programs at the WHO Secretariat in Geneva, and has remained an active consultant and expert committee member to WHO since then in the areas of zoonoses and veterinary public health.

In l966, Dr. Schwabe established the first department and graduate program in epidemiology within a school of veterinary medicine at the University of California, Davis, activities with significant international dimensions, and served as Professor of Epidemiology within that campus' veterinary and medical schools (as well as within the medical school and Hooper Foundation for Medical Research of the University of California, San Francisco) until his retirement in l99l.

In addition to his research and control efforts against parasitic zoonoses, Dr. Schwabe has been throughout his career a leading worker more generally at the interface of human and veterinary medicine. The three editions of his Veterinary Medicine and Human Health remain the only comprehensive treatment of that overall subject and his Spink Lectures on Comparative Medicine (Cattle, Priests and Progress in Medicine) were the first attempt to document historically the research dimension specifically of veterinary medicine's contributions to human medicine and to suggest how that interaction might develop in the future. In a further series of papers undertaken through his association with the Agricultural History Center at UC Davis, Dr. Schwabe has examined in greater detail the beginning emergence, in association with other man-animal relationships, of that comparative analogical approach to biomedical unknowns within ancient Egypt, especially in connection with the Egyptian religious rites of bull sacrifice.

Dr. Schwabe's Epidemiology in Veterinary Practice (with Riemann and Franti) was the first extensive treatment of that field within veterinary medicine, as well as the first epidemiology textbook to draw upon all three of epidemiology's developmental avenues: disease intelligence, medical ecology and quantitative analyses. Through a combination of those and related interests, a further focus of Professor Schwabe's activities has concerned health, food and other aspects of development with the Third World, especially among its largely neglected nomadic and other pastoral peoples. His other books include What Should a Veterinarian Do? and Unmentionable Cuisine, a popular examination of the contributions made by food prejudices and ignorance to world food-population imbalance.

Collection Summary

Contains correspondence, subject files and printed matter.

Abstract

Dr. Calvin Schwabe, veterinarian and public health scientist, has been throughout his career a leading worker at the interface of human and veterinary medicine. Dr. Schwabe was a member of the medical and public health faculties of the American University of Beirut, where he developed a significant research program on hydatid disease and other parasitic zoonoses, founded a joint Department of Tropical Health within those two faculties in l957, and a Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics within the School of Public Health in l962. He also established the first department and graduate program in epidemiology within a school of veterinary medicine at the University of California, Davis.

Physical Location

Materials stored onsite. History of Medicine Division. National Library of Medicine

Provenance

Gift - 1989. Acc. #541, #560, #583, #720.

General

Processed by
Peter B. Hirtle
Processing completed
22 June 1993
Encoded by
Dan Jenkins
Title
Finding Aid to the Calvin Walter Schwabe Papers, 1944-1992
Status
Unverified Partial Draft
Author
Peter B. Hirtle
Date
22 June 1993
Language of description
English
Script of description
Latn
Language of description note
Finding aid is written in English
Edition statement
Version 1.0

Revision Statements

  • July 2004: PUBLIC "-//National Library of Medicine::History of Medicine Division//TEXT (US::DNLM::MS C 490::Calvin Walter Schwabe Papers)//EN" "schwabe" converted from EAD 1.0 to 2002 by v1to02.xsl (sy2003-10-15).

Collecting Area Details

Part of the Archives and Modern Manuscripts Collection Collecting Area

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