Safety and Health Hall of Fame International est. 1986

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Dr. Alice Hamilton
Class of 1992

Background:
Alice Hamilton was born in New York City in 1869, but was raised in Fort Wayne, Indiana, USA. During her youth, she expressed a determination to become a medical missionary. Upon graduation from medical school at the University of Michigan in 1893, she worked at hospitals in Minneapolis and Boston before returning to Michigan for graduate work. She then went to Europe for a year of study at the University of Leipzig, Germany (1895-96), followed by a year at The Johns Hopkins University.

Professional Experience:
In 1897, Dr. Hamilton was appointed professor of Pathology at Northwestern University Women's Medical School. She became a resident of Jane Addams' Hull House in Chicago, a famous settlement house that became a powerful vehicle for social change in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Hull House served as a forum where judges, authors, political and social activists, religious leaders, and other men and women of leadership and prominence gathered to plan social change. In 1919, the dean of the Harvard Medical School, who had initiated the first degree program in the United States in industrial hygiene, offered Dr. Hamilton an appointment to teach that subject. She accepted, thus becoming the first woman member of the Harvard faculty. Upon retirement from Harvard in 1935, Dr. Hamilton returned to the United States Department of Labor, where the late Frances Perkins was Secretary of Labor and a fellow member of the social reform network. In accepting the part-time job as medical consultant to the Division of Labor Standards, Dr. Hamilton rejected a full-time position with the United States Public Health Service, feeling that she could better serve the working men and women of this nation with the Department of Labor.

Career Highlights:
Dr. Hamilton established the field of industrial medicine in the United States at a time when society in general, and the profession in particular, was highly restrictive toward women. When, in 1910, the governor of Illinois established the first Occupational Disease Commission in the United States, which was to lead to a workman's compensation law for his state, he appointed Dr. Hamilton its managing director. At the 1910 International Congress on Occupational Accidents and Diseases in Brussels, the United States Commissioner of Labor in the Department of Commerce (the Labor Department was not created until 1913) was so impressed by Dr. Hamilton's report on her Illinois investigations that he asked her to make a similar survey for the federal government. She praised the "informal and extra-legal method" of investigation, conference, and agreement between manufacturers and state and federal health officials as "the only way a quick and effective reform can be brought about in several states simultaneously." As a consultant to the Department of Labor, Dr. Hamilton conducted surveys, offered advice, attended conferences, testified at hearings, and brought neglected problems to the department's attention. As the only woman member of the League of Nations Health Committee, Dr. Hamilton was invited to the Soviet Union in 1924 to observe the progress being made in the field of industrial hygiene since the revolution in 1919. The Alice Hamilton Occupational Safety and Health Science Award was established to recognize outstanding contributions to the field. On February 27, 1987, the Alice Hamilton Laboratory for Occupational Safety and Health was dedicated in Cincinnati, Ohio. She is credited with saving literally thousands of workers' lives as a result of her research with industrial poisons alone. Dr. Hamilton died at her home in Hadlyme, Connecticut, September 22, 1970, a few months before the Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970 was signed into law.



 
 

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