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United States National Library of Medicine National Institutes of Health

Finding Aid to the Wilbur A. Sawyer Papers, 1899-1952

TABLE OF CONTENTS


Descriptive Summary

Biographical/Historical Note

Collection Summary

Index Terms

Administrative Information

Restrictions

Series I: Personal and Biographical, 1919-1994

Series II: Correspondence, 1911-1995

Series III: Diary Books, 1899-1951

Series IV: Account Books, 1904-1951

Series V: Photographs and Motion Pictures, [1879]-1951

Series VI: Printed Material, 1943-1951


Archives and Modern Manuscripts Program, History of Medicine Division

Processed by John P. Rees; Michele Tourney; Processing Completed March 2003

Additional Processing April 2005


Descriptive Summary

Collection Number:MS C 69
Creator:Sawyer, Wilbur Augustus, 1879-1951
Title:Wilbur A. Sawyer Papers
Dates:1879-1995
Quantity:4.2 linear feet

Biographical/Historical Note

Wilbur Augustus Sawyer (1879-1951) was born in Appleton, WI. His family moved first to Oshkosh, and later to Stockton, CA in 1888. He first attended the University of California at Berkeley, but soon transferred to Harvard where he received his bachelor's degree in 1902 and his medical degree in 1906. In 1911 he married Margaret Henderson and they had four children.

After his internship at Boston General Hospital, Sawyer started his medical career as a medical examiner at the University of California. In 1914 he also began teaching hygiene and preventive medicine at the university's medical school. He also worked for the California state board of health between 1910-1915 -- first as director of its hygienic laboratory, then as secretary and executive officer of the board. It was during this part of his medical career that Sawyer headed a team of public health physicians to defeat an outbreak of typhoid fever in Hamford, CA.

Sawyer joined the Army Medical Corps during World War I where he served in the surgeon-general's office and the Inter-Departmental Social Hygiene Board. While simultaneously serving as head of the American Social Hygiene Association, his primary work during this time was in preventing the spread of venereal disease among servicemen stationed in the U.S. In 1919 Sawyer cemented his career track as a public health researcher and administrator by moving to a position with the Rockefeller Foundation's International Health Board (IHB). His first assignment was overseeing a campaign against the spread of hookworm disease in Australia, a project that occupied the next five years of his life. His fourth child, Wilbur Henderson Sawyer, was born there. Sawyer returned to New York in 1929 as director of IHB's Public Health Laboratory Service, which provided lab support for other Foundation public health activities taking place around the world.

Sawyer is best known for his role in developing a vaccine for yellow fever and working to eradicate the disease as a public health threat--he himself contracted a mild case. In 1926 he joined the Rockefeller Foundation's West Africa Yellow Fever Commission. Three of its most important discoveries were that the disease is viral, that rhesus monkeys could contract the disease and therefore be used for laboratory testing, and that the African and South American strains are epidemiologically the same. The IHB was renamed the International Health Division (IHD) and Sawyer became its associate director in 1928; that same year he was also appointed director of its Yellow Fever Laboratory. Sawyer, Wray D.M. Lloyd and Stuart F. Kitchen produced a vaccine by combining an attenuated virus, developed in mice by IHD researcher Max Theiler, with human immune serum. However, the serum was so scarce that its limited production resulted in only enough vaccine to inoculate researchers. In a broader application of his research, Sawyer modified Theiler's testing mechanism to determine an individual's yellow fever immunity, leading to a program that mapped the disease's global distribution.

He became IHD's director in 1935 and continued the laboratory's yellow fever work, resulting in Theiler's development of 17D in 1937. 17D was a strain of yellow fever that thrived on nervous system tissue that could be used without modification as a vaccine, unlike Sawyer's serum vaccine. 17D contained enough virulent to induce human immunity yet was gentle enough to prevent contracting the disease. The foundation provided free vaccine to American troops during World War II. Sawyer opted to use a combination of 17D and human serum to help prevent encephalitis despite Theiler's insistence that his vaccine could be produced without causing encephalitis. However reports emanated from Brazil that showed people immunized using this combination often developed hepatitis. Eighty-four American soldiers died after contracting hepatitis from the vaccine, whereafter Sawyer received condemning criticism for not only his vaccine choice, but for making his decision without due consultation. The controversy damaged an otherwise brilliant career and many believe prevented his sharing Theiler's 1951 Nobel Prize for developing the yellow fever vaccine.

Sawyer did have other successes during the war, specifically as supervisor of several military and civilian commissions related to the control of tropical disease such as the International Sanitary Convention and the Board to Investigate the Spread and Control of Influenza in the Army. He also organized and directed the Rockefeller Foundation Health Commission to prevent a major European typhus epidemic. Immediately after the American occupation of Naples, Italy in 1943, he organized a team to delouse the entire population via the first widespread application of DDT (dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane). This effort had an even larger impact in that by war's end, virtually all refugees coming into Allied-occupied areas were deloused with DDT, preventing typhus from becoming a major health threat.

Sawyer retired from the Rockefeller Foundation in 1944 and joined the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration as its director of health. Again using DDT, he organized a program to rid Sardinia of its mosquito population by spraying the entire island, thus ridding it of malaria. He fully retired in 1947 and returned again to live in Berkeley, CA.

Sawyer traveled to the world's most remote areas in Africa, Asia, the Pacific, and South America during the 1920s and 1930s working in the field to develop relationships and projects with local public health officials and governments. With colleagues such as Fred Soper, the IHD helped spread the science of public health to underdeveloped populations and cultures. His international reputation garnered him many awards and honors. He was president of several tropical medicine societies, including the American Academy of Tropical Medicine. He served as chairman of the U.S. Public Health Service's national advisory health council in 1940 and was Secretary General of the 1948 International Congress of Tropical Medicine and Malaria. He was awarded knighthood in Norway's Order of St. Olaf in 1926, the League of Nations' Leon Bernard Prize in 1939, grand officialdom in Cuba's Order of Carlos Finlay in 1940, and the American Foundation of Tropical Medicine's Richard B. Strong Medal in 1949.

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Collection Summary

Correspondence, diaries, photographs, financial records, and ephemera (1879-1995; 4.2 linear feet) document the professional life of Wilbur A. Sawyer and primarily his yellow fever research for the Rockefeller Foundation's International Health Board and International Health Division. Much of Sawyer's professional work consisted of traveling abroad for the Rockefeller Foundation (RF) and as part of its official reporting mechanism, field workers kept daily diaries of their travels for progress reports noting contacts, summaries of meetings, topics discussed, and general opinions and thoughts. The original donation by RF colleague Fred Soper consisted of the complete collection of Sawyer's diaries, including those related to his RF fieldwork. Roughly between 1925 and 1937, Sawyer traveled to some of the most remote regions of the world where few Westerners had ever been--places such as Australia, Java, Ceylon, India, South Africa, French Equatorial Africa, Belgian Congo, Palestine, Egypt, Brazil, Ecuador, and Panama. Sawyer's public health work establishing yellow fever laboratories, eliminating hookworm disease, constructing drainage canals to eradicate malaria, providing sewers and systems to provide for good sanitation and fresh water, and erecting the infrastructure needed to protect native populations against typhus is documented in these diaries. There are no materials regarding Sawyer's laboratory or administrative work at the Yellow Fever Lab or other RF duties. Researchers should contact the RF Center Archives for these materials.

Moreover, Sawyer was an avid photographer. Series V: Photographs and Motion Pictures contain a vast image collection of the places and people he encountered and activities in which he engaged. This series is perhaps the most intellectually significant portion of the collection. The photograph albums contain a mixture of personal and professional activities showing Sawyer, his family, professional colleagues, and local people and are chronologically arranged for the most part. Images of personal travel as well as professional field activities are intermixed. Each photograph bears detailed identifying notes written by Sawyer with places, dates, and people named. Two of the earliest albums date from 1920-1923 and document Sawyer's time in Australia where he organized a campaign to eliminate the spread of hookworm disease. This group of photographs also documents his travels to Java, Ceylon, India, and other Pacific, Middle Eastern, and Asian countries. Many of the photographs can be described as richly panoramic, showing the broader landscapes and towns he visited with colleagues and their fieldwork, rather than clinical pictures of laboratories. There are no pictures, and few other materials, which document Sawyer's work with the U.S. military during World War II. His work during the 1930s developing a vaccine for yellow fever took place primarily in the western African countries collectively referred to as the Gold Coast. The four films made by Sawyer as part of the West African Yellow Fever Commission are a rare documentary source. These films show Sawyer in the laboratory and in the field.

Series II: Correspondence contains both personal and professional correspondence subseries. Nearly all of the personal correspondence contains letters to Sawyer's wife Margaret while he was traveling abroad for the RF between 1920-1937. While they do not usually contain details of his clinical work, they do provide detailed evidence of the unique daily life public health fieldworkers experienced. Much of the topics include his mundane travel arrangements and his general observations of places and people, but taken as a whole these letters provide an almost daily account of the work documented in the photographs found in Series V. There is also a large collection of condolence letters written to Margaret Sawyer after his death in 1951. The bulk of the professional correspondence subseries contains mainly routine letters of thanks between colleagues, as well as Sawyer's letters of resignation from his many professional groups as he retired from professional life. The bulk of these letters date between 1948-1951.

Sawyer's personal life is reflected in both the correspondence and photograph series. He often comments on family matters in his personal letters to his wife. There are also many pictures of the extended Sawyer family, including the family of Wallace Carroll to whom his daughter Peg was married. Many portraits of Sawyer, his wife, children and grandchildren can be found throughout the albums. Family gatherings in California, Michigan and North Carolina are documented, as well as the Sawyer home in Hastings-on-Hudson, NY. There are some later pictures taken by Sawyer from his house in Berkeley, CA. The Sawyers were also active vacationers and the collection contains pictures of the family camping and horseback riding in Yosemite National Park in California, hiking in Glacier National Park in Montana, and climbing Mt. Shasta. There are also many pictures of family vacations when the family lived in Australia or when Sawyer visited Europe, Africa, Asia, or the many other countries in which he lived while working. Finally, the Personal and Biographical Series contains an interesting "friendship calendar" presented to Sawyer at his RF retirement. Friends and colleagues, many famous scientists in their own right, wrote individual sentiments, poems, quotes, and caricatures for each day of the year, relating their personal reminiscences of their relationship. Many of the cartoons are quite remarkable.

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Restrictions

Restrictions

Collection is not restricted. Contact the Reference Staff for information regarding access. For online customer service, please visit custserv@nlm.nih.gov.

Copyright

Copyright was transferred to the public domain. Contact the Reference Staff for details regarding rights. For online customer service, please visit custserv@nlm.nih.gov.

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Index Terms

These terms are indexed in the National Library of Medicine's online catalog LocatorPlus. Researchers wishing to find related materials should search the catalog using these terms.
MeSH Subjects
Malaria--epidemiology
Tropical Medicine
Yellow Fever--epidemiology
Corporate Names
Rockefeller Foundation. International Health Division
Yellow Fever Commission (West Africa)
Geographic Names
Africa
Australia
Indonesia
South America

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Administrative Information

Alternate Forms Available

Portions of the Collection have been digitized and are available at: http://profiles.nlm.nih.gov

Preferred Citation

Sawyer, Wilbur Augustus, 1879-1951. Wilbur A. Sawyer Papers. 1879-1995. Located in: Modern Manuscripts Collection, History of Medicine Division, National Library of Medicine, Bethesda, MD; MS C 69.

Provenance

Gift of Fred Soper and Margaret Carroll, 1966, 2002, and 2004. Acc. #15; 2002-79; 2006-006.

Processing Information

Photograph scrapbooks disassembled by conservation staff, re-sleeved and foldered. Photocopies of original pages made prior to disassembly to retain original context and layout.

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Series I: Personal and Biographical, 1919-1994

BoxFolder
11 Biographical data, c.v., tributes, 1944-1953
12 Obituaries, 1951
13 Articles, clippings, speeches, bibliography, [1932]-1994
14 Legal and financial records, 1930-1947
15 Honors and awards, 1926-[1951]
16 Vital statistics and professional certificates, 1938-1951
17 Employment records, 1944-1948
18 Military records, 1919
5 Friendship calendar, 1944
5 Addresses and notes, n.d.
5 Addresses, anniversaries, cash account books, n.d.
5 Commemorative silver boomerang: Australian Hookworm Campaign, 1919-1924, 23 Nov 1922

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Series II: Correspondence, 1911-1995

BoxFolder
Personal correspondence, 1911-1995
114 1911
115 1915
116 1916
117 1918 Feb-May
118 1918 Jun-Jul
119 1918 Aug-Oct
21 1920
22 1921
23 1923
24 1924
25 1925
26 1926
27 1927
28 1928
29 1930
210 1932
211 1933
212 1934
213 1936
214 1937
215 1938
216 1939-1941
217 1942
218 1943
219 1944
220 1945
221 1946-1947
31 1949
32 1950
33 1951
34 1952
19 Condolence letters, A-C, 1951-1952
110 Condolence letters, D-H, 1951
111 Condolence letters, I-R, 1951
112 Condolence letters, S-Y, 1951
113 Condolence letters, unidentified, 1951
44 Sawyer family correspondence re: vaccination / hepatitis controversy, 1952-1995
Professional correspondence, 1917-1952
35 1917-1928
36 1931-1939
37 1940-1943
39 1944-1946
310 1947
311 1948
312 1949
313 1950
314 1951
315 1952
5 Index of correspondents noting letters sent and received by Sawyer, 1946-1951

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Series III: Diary Books, 1899-1951

BoxFolder
6 I, 12 Jul 1899-22 Jul 1900
6 II, 23 Jul 1900-23 Mar 1901
6 III, 24 Mar-3 Oct 1901
6 IV, 3 Oct 1901-1 Jun 1902
6 V, 1 Jun 1902-30 Dec 1903
6 VII, 30 Dec 1903-19 Sep 1905
6 IX, 20 Sep 1905-7 Jun 1908
6 X, 11 Jun 1908-20 Sep 1911
6 XII, 24 Sep 1911-17 Nov 1914
6 XIV, 22 Nov 1914-13 Nov 1918
6 XV, 14 Nov 1918-31 Dec 1921
6 XVI, 8 Jan-19 Oct 1922
6 XVII, 23 Oct 1922-8 Jan 1924
6 XVIII, 8 Jan-5 Apr 1924
6 XIX, 5 Apr-10 Oct 1924
6 XX, 8 Oct 1924-12 Nov 1926
6 XXI, 12 Nov 1926-1 Jun 1930
6 XXIII, 2 Jun 1930-18 Jul 1932
6 XXIV, 24 Jul 1932-16 Feb 1933
6 XXV, 17 Feb 1933-27 Dec 1934
6 XXVI, 1 Jan 1935-23 Mar 1937
7 XXVIII, 23 Mar 1937-7 Feb 1938
7 XXIX, 7 Feb 1938-4 Jan 1939
7 XXX, 4 Jan 1939-10 Dec 1940
7 XXXI, 30 Dec 1940-31 May 1944
7 XXXII, 1 Jun 1944-12 Aug 1945
7 XXXIII, 13 Aug 1945-10 May 1946
7 XXXIV, 12 May 1946-26 May 1949
7 XXXV, 26 May 1949-29 Jan 1950
7 XXXVI, 29 Jan 1950-9 Feb 1951
7 XXXVII (W.A.S. died 12 Nov 1951), 10 Feb-17 Oct 1951
7 XXXVIII (includes list of publications and papers; record of his health while hospitalized), 18 Jun 1951-27 Oct 1951
38 Diary, typed sheets, 5 Apr 1940-10 Mar 1941

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Series IV: Account Books, 1904-1951

BoxFolder
8 VI, cash account, 15 Oct 1902-7 Sep 1904
8 VIII, cash account, 7 Sep 1904-19 Nov 1908
8 XI, cash account, 18 Nov 1908-22 Mar 1910
8 XIII, cash and various accounts, 24 Apr 1912-13 Jul 1927
8 XXII, cash and various accounts, 7 Apr 1913-27 Feb 1936
8 XXVII, accounts, 27 Feb 1936-31 Dec 1951

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Series V: Photographs and Motion Pictures, [1879]-1951

BoxFolder
Albums, 1913-1951
412 [Medical school mock treatment exercise? Pictures Sawyer and senior classmates], [ca. 1913]
91-3 Yosemite; typhoid epidemic, Hanford, Ca.; Idylwild; family photos near Sacramento, Ca.; Sequoia / Kings Canyon National Park; Williamsburg and Yorktown, Va., 1914-1919
413 Australia: hookworm campaign colleagues, children, other tourist photos; China: Great Wall, Peking, 1919-1921
94-7 Australia and New Guinea, hookworm campaign; Siam [Bangkok, Thailand]; India; Ceylon, 1920-1921
101-4 Australia: family in Brisbane; Queensland; hookworm campaign; Java trip: Singapore, Kuala Lumpur, Batavia, Sawarang, 1920-1923
105-9 Leesburg, Ga. (Sawyer in the field); family in Melbourne, Australia; Ceylon (Colombo, Jaffra); Palestine; India; Egypt; Switzerland; France; England, 1923-1924
98 Leesburg, Ga. (gathering mosquitoes); Ceylon; India (Calcutta; vaccinations, dispensaries, latrines); Palestine, 1924-1925
111-5 Family: North Carolina; Mississippi; Woodside and Waterford, Ca.; Georgia; Hastings-on-Hudson, N.Y. house; portraits of Margaret and Wilbur Sawyer; France vacation; Professional: Columbia (Bogata, Magdalena); Panama Canal Zone; Curacao; Venezuela; Puerto Rico; China; African "Gold Coast" (Lagos, Nigeria, Sierra Leone, Ghana), 1925-1935
121-8 Personal: Waterford, Ca.; Hastings-on-Hudson house; Professional: Rockefeller Foundation offices and laboratories; Rockefeller Center; African "Gold Coast" ; French Equatorial Africa and Belgian Congo yellow fever laboratories (Republic of the Congo, Democratic Republic of the Congo [Zaire]); Zimbabwe; Rhodesia (quarantine camps for miners, malaria control ditches, mosquito capture squads); South Africa (Cape Town, Pretoria); Nigeria; Morocco (Algiers); Azores; Holland; Germany; Italy; China (anti-malaria billboard), 1930-1937
116-10 Switzerland; Yosemite vacation; Wallace Carroll family; India (Delhi, Coonoor); Uganda; Cairo, Egypt; Cuba; Costa Rica; California (family reunion); Columbia (Villavicencio, Thomas Parran images); Ecuador; Brazil; Chile; Bolivia; UNRRA office and staff (Poland, China); International Sanitary Convention signing ceremonies, 1936-1946
99 Entebbe, Africa (children, fauna, infrastructure): inscribed "to WAS from AFM", 1938
131-4 Sawyer family and house in Washington, D.C.; family portraits; house in Berkeley, Ca.; Oregon and Yosemite vacation (Mt. Shasta); China; Mexico; Panama (yellow fever vaccinations); 4th International Congresses on Tropical Disease ephemera; Walter Reed commemoration meeting (Washington, D.C.), 1945-1951
Loose pages and individual photographs, [1879]-1945
45 Sawyer as infant with grandmother [tintype], [1879]
46 Photographs of Sawyer, 1906-1925
47 W.A.S. in lab at Pasteur Institute (1912); Japan (1913); Panama canal zone (1937); typhoid epidemic team, California (1914); International Sanitary Convention signing ceremony (1945); Board for investigation and control of influenza in the army (1942), 1913-1945
48 Columbia, Nigeria, France, 1925-1935
49 Panama; Spain; India; Cartegana, Columbia; Bolivia; unidentified [India?], 1925-1939
410 Photographs of J.H. Bauer, Fred L. Soper, 1935
411 Austria; Hungary; Germany; Turkey [loose leaf from album], 1936
Scenes in West Africa: West African Yellow Fever Commission [motion pictures], 1923
14 Film 1 [VHS tape], 1923
Contents: street scenes in Lagos; the Commission's compound in Yaba; the opening of the legislative council of Nigeria; fumigating after yellow fever in Lagos; collecting mosquito larvae in Lagos; down the Ogun River in Nigeria; scenes from Oshogbo at end of Ramadan; from Oshogbo to Ogbomosho; road to Ibadan; scenes from Ibadan; a trip to Iwopin in Nigeria; trooping the colors in Lagos; Beiram Festival of the Mohammedans in Lagos.
14 Film 2 [VHS tape], 1923
Contents: school on a Lagos street; natives and their homes in Lagos; an official's home in Ikoyi; a tennis party at the Medical Research Institute; local scenes; river scenes; collecting mosquito larvae.
14 Film 3 [VHS tape], 1923
Contents: collecting mosquito larvae; scenes from Oshogbo at end of Ramadan; a visit to Ilesha; collecting cotton; Baptist Hospital African Mission; Oyo (the Yorba capital); road to Ibadan; scenes in Ibadan (thatched mud huts; goat herding; market place; inside a hospital).
14 Film 4 [VHS tape], 1923
Contents: trip to Iwopin in Nigeria; trooping the colors in Lagos; Beiram festival of the Mohammedans in Lagos.

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Series VI: Printed Material, 1943-1951

BoxFolder
41 "Precautions Against the Introduction of Tropical Diseases into the United States by Returning Military Personnel: A Report to the Subcommittee on Tropical Diseases of the National Research Council", 10 Mar 1943
42 "Jaundice in Army Personnel in the Western Region of the United States and Its Relation to Vaccination against Yellow Fever", 1944
43 "Max Theiler, Nobel Laureate in Medicine," The Rockefeller Foundation, 1 Nov 1951

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Last reviewed: 01 November 2006
Last updated: 01 November 2006
First published: 25 June 2004
Metadata| Permanence level: Permanent: Dynamic Content