Eloise Blaine Cram
Eloise Blaine Cram was born in Davenport, IA in 1897. She graduated Phi Beta Kappa from the University of Chicago in 1919, and received her Ph.D. from George Washington University in 1925. In 1920, Cram entered government service as a zoologist for the USDA's Bureau of Animal Industry (BAI), where she became noted as a world authority on the parasites of poultry, and eventually rose to the position of Head, Parasites of Poultry and Game Birds.
In 1936, Cram left the BAI to take a position at the Zoology Lab of the National Institutes of Health, where she remained until her retirement in 1956. While at the NIH, Cram contributed to the scientific study of pinworm, but her major contribution to parasitology and to science in general was her pioneering research into the curbing of the helminthic (produced by worms) disease Schistosomiasis. She made intense studies of the snails that transmit the often-fatal disease to humans and aided in reducing the health threat caused by the disease.
By the time of her retirement, ram had produced over 160 papers and monographs on various subjects relating to animal parasitology, had become an international authority on helminthic diseases, and was working in the NIH's lab on tropical diseases. In 1955, the year before her retirement, she served a term as the only woman president of the American Society of Parasitologists. She died in San Diego, CA, on February 9, 1957.
Maurice Crowther Hall
Maurice Crowther Hall was born on July 15, 1881 in Golden, CO. He obtained his BA at Colorado College in 1905, and his Ph.D. at George Washington University in 1915. In 1906-1907, Hall worked as a high school biology/chemistry instructor at Canon City (CO) High School, and in 1907 he became a zoologist for the Bureau of Animal Industry at USDA. He served in this capacity until 1916, when he left the Bureau to take a job with Parke, Davis and Co.'s research laboratory. In 1918-1919 he served in the United States Army's Veterinary Corps, and upon his leaving the army returned to his old post at the BAI. In 1925 he was made head of the BAI's Zoological Division.
While at the BAI, Hall, among his many other parasitological researches, made a momentous discovery in 1921. He found that the chemical compound carbon tetrachloride was incredibly effective as an anthelminthic in eradicating hookworm, and this discovery played a vital role in the worldwide destruction of hookworm. Hall's revelation was hailed as a vital discovery in the field of tropical medicine. Furthermore, during his tenure at the BAI, Hall oversaw the construction of the Zoological Division's first field station, in Beltsville, MD.
In April 1936, Hall left the BAI to assume the post of Head of the Zoological Laboratory at the National Institutes of Health, where he remained until his death in 1938. He was renowned by his colleagues as a witty man, a master of verse who published many poems in various magazines. In 1936 his essay "Romantic Government vs. Unromantic Government" was published in the textbook Structure and Style as an example of superior prose. He served in 1930 as the president of the
American Veterinary Medical Association, and in 1932 as president of the American Society of Parasitologists.
Albert Hassell
Albert Hassell was born in England in 1862. He was educated at private schools and at the Royal Veterinary College in London. In 1887 he first began serving the USDA as a Veterinary Inspector for the Bureau of Animal Industry in Baltimore. In 1891 he was made an Assistant in the Bureau's Division of Pathology; in 1904 he became an Assistant in Zoology in the BAI's Zoological Division, and in 1910 was promoted to the post of Assistant Zoologist. In 1928 he became the Assistant Chief of the Division, and served in that capacity until his forced retirement in 1932.
Hassell made his mark in many ways while at the BAI, not least of all in assisting Charles Stiles in establishing the Zoological Division's collection of parasites, but his most important achievement began in 1902 and lasted until his death and beyond. In 1902 Hassell began compiling the Index-Catalogue of Medical and Veterinary Zoology, a comprehensive reference work on parasitology that was initially published over the course of a decade, from 1902-1912. The Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons in London awarded Hassell the coveted Steele Medal in 1932 for his work on this crucially important reference and research tool. Hassell was required, due to government regulations, to retire from the BAI in July 1932, but he continued to work on the Index-Catalogue several days a week, unpaid. Because of his dedication to this project, in 1932 Hassell was awarded the special title of Collaborator on the Index-Catalogue, a title he maintained until his death from a heart attack in 1942.
Brayton Howard Ransom
Brayton H. Ransom was born on March 24, 1879. He was educated at the Universities of Nebraska and Missouri, and, before his tenure with the Bureau of Animal Industry began in 1903, served as Assistant in the Zoological Division of the Hygiene Laboratory of the Public Health and Marine Hospital Service (now the U.S. Public Health Service).
In June of 1903 Ransom was appointed Scientific Assistant in charge of the BAI's Zoological Laboratory. In this capacity he helped carry out a multitude of scientific investigations into the subject of parasitology. In 1906 he was promoted to the position of Principal Zoologist and Chief of the Zoological Division, which he held until his death. While serving as Chief of Division Ransom made many important scientific contributions that included monographic systematic works on parasites, the discovery of many of the most economically important parasites, contributions to the understanding of the basis of parasite-induced pathology, and the development of measures for controlling stomach worms in sheep.
Ransom died unexpectedly on September 17, 1925, leaving more than 160 published titles to his credit. After Ransom's death, his colleague Maurice Hall stated that "it was a great tribute to Dr. Ransom's scientific achievements that despite his extensive and highly important contributions to Parasitology and Medical Zoology covering a quarter of a century, none of his major scientific work has ever been challenged."
Daniel Elmer Salmon
Dr. Daniel E. Salmon was born on July 22, 1850, in Mt. Olive, NJ. He was trained at Cornell University and at the Alford Veterinary School in Paris. On May 1, 1883 Salmon was put in charge of the USDA's Veterinary Division by Commissioner of Agriculture George B. Loring, and a year later, in 1884, became the first Chief of the new Bureau of Animal Industry (BAI). While Chief of the BAI Salmon served the bureau as an investigator of animal diseases and as a veterinary surgeon. He established a pathological laboratory that would eventually evolve into the BAI's Division of Animal Pathology.
1897 marked the BAI's first major triumph under Salmon's leadership. The BAI's original charge was the control and eradication of livestock diseases, and the agency's efforts in this area led, in 1897, to the eradication of cattle pleuropneumonia, the first disease to be eradicated in the history of the United States.
In 1897 Salmon also served as president of the American Veterinary Medical Association, and, following his resignation from the BAI in 1905, became in the following year the director of the National Veterinary School in Montevideo, Uruguay. He left the school in 1912, and died August 30, 1914. Salmon was immortalized in the realm of bacteriology when the "Salmonella" group of pathogenic bacteria was named for him.
Charles Wardell Stiles
Charles W. Stiles was born in 1867, and was educated at Wesleyan University, and at the College de France and the University of Berlin. In 1890 he received his Ph.D. from the University of Leipzig. The following year, Stiles was made Head of the Bureau of Animal Industry's Zoological Division. In 1902 Stiles resigned from the USDA to be Chief of the Zoological Division of the Hygiene Laboratory of the Public Health and Marine Hospital Service, at the same time maintaining his post at the BAI until June 1903 in order to establish a cooperative agreement between the two agencies.
In 1898-1899, Stiles served as an agricultural attache to the United States Embassy in Berlin. There he investigated charges by Germany that trichinosis outbreaks among Germans were due to imported American pork products. Stiles concluded that these charges were untrue, and furthermore made the important discovery that microscopic inspection of pork was ultimately futile due to the incredibly tiny size of trichinosis bacteria.
While at the BAI, Stiles, conducting research into the pernicious phenomenon of hookworm, became the first to discover the presence of American hookworm in man, in the process establishing that the disease was a major health hazard in the American South. Up to this point Southerners, often living in conditions of poor hygiene and health conditions, had been frequently tainted with the charges of "shiftlessness" and "laziness," but Stiles' discovery meant that much of Southerners' poor health and physical appearances could be traced to the presence of hookworm. His research contributed much to the improvement of physical health and hygiene amongst Southerners.
Stiles conducted many other investigations on animal parasites while at the BAI, and assisted Albert Hassell in the creation of the important Index-Catalogue of Medical and Veterinary Zoology. He died in 1941.