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THE HISTORY OF MEDICINE is as old as civilization
itself. Its roots date back to early Egyptian times
with the practices of embalming and mummifying to
the time of Hippocrates, the Greek physician now
revered as the “Father of Medicine.” That history is
coming alive at the Louis Calder Memorial Library in
an extraordinary collection of medical textbooks
donated by Martin B. Raskin, M.D., a retired New
York obstetrician and gynecologist now living in
Lake Worth, Florida. Raskin’s collection totals
more than 5,000 books and, at 81 years old, he’s
still adding to it every chance he gets. More than
half of the publications are on the shelves in the
Emanuel M. Papper, M.D., History of Medicine Reading
Room and in the Rare Book Room at Calder; they
started arriving back in 1996.
For perspective on the historical significance of
the collection, consider that almost half of the
books reside in the Rare Book Room. For a book to be
called rare at the Calder Library, it had to be
published before 1864, the year the Civil War ended.
Five of those rare books were published before the
1600s. Not only that, but close to 400 of the titles
are listed in the bibliography commonly known as
“Garrison & Morton.” Now in its 5th edition, the
bibliography lists all major significant authors in
the development of medicine from ancient times to
the 20th century.
Currently the oldest book in the collection,
published in 1549, describes medicine and the
importance of hygiene in good health. It is an
Italian translation of Galen, who is considered one
of the most influential ancient medical writers. A
physician and philosopher, Galen was born at
Pergamum in A.D. 129, but spent most of his career
in Rome. The fact that his textbooks were still
being translated in the 1500s is a testament to the
significance of his medical and philosophical
writings.
“This gift is extraordinary in its size, scope,
and quality,” says Henry L. Lemkau, Jr., J.D.,
director and chairman of the Department of the
Library and Biomedical Communications. “If you’re
interested in the history of your profession or just
have a great love of history, this collection is
unrivaled anywhere in the state of Florida and is
among the top collections in the United States. For
a medical school as young as the University of Miami
at 50 years old, to have something like this in our
library brings depth and prestige to the
institution.”
It can make your institution known around the
world as well. Since the Raskin collection is
catalogued and processed on OCLC, an international
database, medical scholars and historians are
attracted to Calder, where they may find titles not
available anywhere else.
Thumbing through the pages of Dr. Raskin’s
textbooks, you will see many languages represented.
In Western medicine’s earliest days, Latin and Greek
were the principal languages. It was years later
that some of the books were translated and written
in French, Italian, German, and eventually English.
You also will find almost every medical discipline
represented, making the collection a comprehensive
history of medicine and the allied health fields.
Though he collects books on many areas of
medicine, Raskin says the textbooks in his
specialty, obstetrics and gynecology, are among his
favorites. He started collec-ting as a young medical
student at the Philadelphia College of Osteopathic
Medicine back in the mid-1940s. “I was interested in
the history of medicine, and I was interested in the
various doctors who wrote about certain things that
they discovered, so I got their books. Then I got
another and another, and it just grew and grew, but
I never thought it would grow this large,” says
Raskin. He describes himself as a “real good book
hunter,” and says he would go to bookstores wherever
he traveled, attend auctions, advertise for books,
and he would even get letters from people who found
books for him.
“The pristine condition of these books shows this
is truly a man’s passion,” remarks Lemkau on the
quality of the collection. Raskin was equally
passionate about medicine. He practiced in Queens,
New York, for almost 50 years, delivering close to
5,000 babies. He also was medical director at
Baptist Hospital in New York and a professor of
obstetrics and gynecology at New York College of
Osteopathic Medicine, before eventually retiring to
Florida.
Raskin decided to house his collection at Calder
after his wife, a retired family medicine physician,
underwent successful spinal surgery at the School of
Medicine. “It’s very easy for us to get to, we like
the people at UM, and I felt in a medical school
library they would be valuable to people doing
medical history studies. They could pick out any
type of history they were interested in and there
would be a textbook to fill in the blanks.”
The Raskin family legacy of medicine has a
promising future. His granddaughter is now in
medical school in New York. And Raskin hopes his
books will have an endless shelf life; he refers to
them as an education in perpetuity.
- Jeanne Antol Krull
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