Robert Moors Smith, M.D. (1912-2009) Papers
Scope and Contents
The collection consists primarily of published article reprints by Robert M. Smith and other authors. Smith’s published articles span the years 1939 to 1996, most of which are recorded in an index filed with the reprints. There is also a small set of unidexed materials. The articles by smith and the others focus on the topics of anesthesia, anesthesia technique, cardiac arrest, cardiac hypothermia, cardiac surgery, cardiology, coarctation of the aorta, electrocardiograms, history of anesthesia, patent ductus arteriosus, pediatric surgery, pulmonary edema, pulmonary hypertension, and ventricular function. The collection also contains several manuscript versions of lectures and speeches by Smith as well as some unpublished articles.
One very small file of correspondence pertains to the results of a study by Massachusetts General Hospital on anesthesia for cardiac surgery in which Smith took part, a query by a doctor in Rotterdam about anesthesia for cyanotic infants, and Smith’s reply. A single file of Smith’s notes is contained in the collection and consists of notes on cardiac surgery and anesthesia, and article citations.
The collection contains photographic prints and negatives apparently used to illustrate Smith’s Anesthesia for Infants and Children, showing various charts, graphs, and techniques. Series III: Lantern Slides contains similar materials in addition to two photographs of the Farley Building at Boston Children’s Hospital when it was constructed in 1955, numerous pathology slides of infants and children, and many diagrams and charts of surgical statistics.
Series I, Personal Papers, 1939-1996, undated (#1.1-1.14), contains an index of Smith’s published articles, reprints of those articles as well as others not included in the index, correspondence, case study materials on diaphragmatic hernias, manuscripts of lectures and speeches, negatives, notes, photographs, and VHS tape version of Microscopic Live Blood Analysis.
Series II, Articles and Papers by Other Authors, 1897-1981, undated (#1.15-1.34), consists of reprints on various topics in anesthesia and cardiology. The series is arranged by topic and thereafter chronologically.
Series III, Lantern Slides, 1949-1960, undated (LS 6719 – LS 6787), consists of 69 lantern slides of the Farley Building (2 views); charts and diagrams on surgeries, causes of death, premature infants, postoperative fluid maintenance, supportive care, fluid therapy, thoracic surgery, and mouth-to-mouth resuscitation. There are many pathology slides, mostly concerning tumors, hernias, and encephaloceles. There are also many slides demonstrating correct intubation technique, the administration of anesthesia, equipment, tracheostomies. Some are restricted due to patient information – check the Lantern Slide Inventory for this collection.
Dates
- 1897-1996
- Majority of material found within 1960 - 1975
Conditions Governing Access
The collection is unrestricted, with the exception of the folder 1.10, and the many of the lantern slides [see the inventory the Image Collection spreadsheet in the Photos.Slides Collections area] which are restricted.
Copyright and Use
Request for permission to publish material from the collection should be discussed with the hospital archivist.
Biographical Note
Dr. Robert Moors Smith was born in Winchester, Massachusetts. While becoming an Eagle Scout, he and his four older siblings were home-schooled by their mother. He then entered Browne and Nichols School and subsequently graduated from Dartmouth College in 1934 and Harvard Medical School in 1938. After a rotating internship at the Faulkner Hospital near Boston, Dr. Smith underwent two years of surgical training at Boston City Hospital where each surgeon participated in anesthetizing patients. He then opened an office in a small town south of Boston and supplemented his income providing anesthesia for patients at a local community hospital helping establish a department of anesthesia at what is now South Shore Hospital in Weymouth, MA. When the United States entered WW II, his brief time as a general practitioner ended with his enlistment in the Army as a surgeon. However, because of the great need for anesthesiologists in the military, he was given a three-month training course in anesthesia at the Army Air Force Hospital in Greensboro, NC under the leadership of Dr. Frederic Clement and for the next four years he served as the Chief of Anesthesia with the 100th General Hospital in France and Germany including at the Battle of the Bulge rising to the rank of Major.
Like many servicemen who became anesthesiologists during WW II, Dr. Smith pursued a post-war career in anesthesiology in a hospital near his hometown. In 1946 after he was released from the Army, he was appointed the first physician Chief of Anesthesia at Children’s Hospital Boston, a position he held until 1980 before moving to the nearby Franciscan (Rehabilitation) Hospital for Children where he worked until the age of 80. Though he initially had little experience caring for children, he supervised several nurses at Children’s Hospital Boston who until then provided the majority of anesthesia at the institution. The chief nurse anesthetist, Betty Lank, showed him the small blood pressure cuffs and masks an engineer at the hospital had fashioned for pediatric patients at her direction before any of these were commercially available. She used these items when providing anesthesia for the surgeon, Dr. Robert Gross, when he initiated the field of congenital cardiac surgery in 1938 by ligating the first patent ductus arteriosus. Dr. Gross went on to become Chairman of the Department of Surgery at Children’s Hospital Boston, and he and Dr. Smith worked together to help establish the modern era of pediatric surgery and anesthesia. In the days before the advent of cardiopulmonary bypass machines, they often did repairs of congenital heart lesions inside a hyperbaric chamber. Dr. Smith was particularly proud of the fact that the first intensive care unit which opened at the hospital in 1980 had two floors, one named in honor of him and the other in honor of Dr. Gross. Dr. Smith also worked with Ms. Lank for more than 20 years until her retirement in 1969 and they remained close friends until her death in 2001 at the age of 97.
During his time at Children’s Hospital Boston, Dr. Smith was a superb and compassionate clinician continually advancing practices in pediatric anesthesia to enable surgeons to perform increasing complex operations on smaller and younger patients. He was an advocate of “patient safety” many decades before the term became central to medicine. He was an early and adamant advocate of routine intubation of the trachea during anesthesia for children, with sterile and appropriately-sized tubes in order to prevent tracheitis and tracheal stenosis, and he encouraged wrapping small patients in order to prevent heat loss. In the 1950s when the monitoring of infants and children consisted primarily of visual observation of the patient and intermittent palpation of the patient’s pulse, Dr. Smith pioneered a new approach of continuous physiological monitoring by using a (precordial) stethoscope, taped on the chest wall over the trachea and heart, to assess ongoing changes in heart and breath sounds, as well as the regular use of the infant blood pressure cuff (sometimes referred to as the “Smith cuff”). These were progenitors in the development of elaborate monitoring systems that are the core of current and safe anesthesia care.
In addition, Dr. Smith was an excellent educator and father-like figure to many of his former trainees. He attracted students from all over the world who came to Boston to learn from him and witness the rapid growth of pediatric surgery during this time. He welcomed all who wanted tutelage regardless of experience or credentials. One former student tells how when he called Dr. Smith requesting to study under him, Dr. Smith’s response was a simple, “When can you be here?” More than 800 physicians received training with Dr. Smith at Children’s Hospital. He was also a faithful and regular visitor to the anesthesia residents at the nearby (but now defunct) Chelsea Naval Hospital; despite his heavy work load at Children’s, he was grateful for the anesthesia training he received in the Army and this was one way he showed his appreciation.
In 1959 he published a comprehensive textbook entitled “Anesthesia for Infants and Children” which was one of the first of its kind specifically focused on the anesthetic management and care of young patients. It soon became a classic and he revised it through four editions before he retired from Children’s Hospital Boston in 1980. Shortly thereafter, Dr. Smith asked Dr. Etsuro K. Motoyama, one of his former fellows, to take over the editorship. He, together with Dr. Peter J. Davis as a co-editor, modified and expanded the book to a multi-authored volume and renamed it “Smith’s Anesthesia for Infants and Children” in Dr. Smith’s honor. It continues after more than half a century in its 8th edition, the longest ongoing textbook of pediatric anesthesiology in the world.
During his lifetime, Dr. Smith was the President of the Children’s Hospital Medical Staff, Chairman of the Committee on Pediatric Anesthesia of the American Academy of Pediatrics, and President of both the Massachusetts and New England Societies of Anesthesiologists. He received several prestigious awards and honors including being one of the few pediatric anesthesiologists to receive the Distinguished Service Award from the American Society of Anesthesiologists. In addition, he received a Special Recognition Award from the Section of
Surgery of the American Academy of Pediatrics, and the Section on Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine of the American Academy of Pediatrics gives an annual Robert M. Smith Award to a pediatric anesthesiologist for a lifetime of achievement in the field. He was also an honorary Fellow of the Faculty of Anesthetists of the Royal Academy of Surgeons of Ireland and an honorary member of the Brazilian and Pan American Societies of Anesthesiologists. He was Clinical Professor of Anaesthesia at Harvard Medical School.
Dr. Smith died on November 25, 2009, in Winchester, two weeks before he would have been 97.
Source: Rockoff, Mark A.; Bird, Harry; et.al. “Robert Moors Smith.” Memorial Minutes. Office of Faculty Affairs, Harvard Medical School and Harvard School of Dental Medicine, 2 Jul. 2010. Web. 29 Dec. 2014.
Extent
1.67 Linear Feet (1 carton, 1 lantern slide box)
Language of Materials
English
Acquisition
The records were donated to the Hospital Archives in 1999 by Robert Moors Smith, MD.
- Title
- ROBERT MOORS SMITH, M.D. (1912-2009)
- Subtitle
- Papers, 1897-1996 (bulk, 1960-1975)
- Status
- Completed
- Author
- Rebecca M. Fullerton, Archivist
- Date
- January 2015
- Description rules
- Describing Archives: A Content Standard
- Language of description
- English
- Script of description
- Latin
Repository Details
Part of the Boston Children’s Hospital Archives Repository
300 Longwood Ave, Boston, MA 02115
Boston MA 02115 United States
(617) 355-5286
archives@childrens.harvard.edu