Saturday, December 10, 2016

Hermon Hasseltine -Years Served: 1942-1944




Hermon Hasseltine was born August 13, 1881 in Bristol, Addison County, Vermont the son of Erwin and Jenny Searls Hasseltine.  Hermon prepared for college in Bristol High School and attended Middlebury College (1898-1899). He completed his college education at Kansas University (1899-1900). He then attended Baltimore Medical College (1900-1904) graduating with an MD in 1904.[1] He served his internship at Manhattan State Hospital (1904-1905) in New York City. He held a contract surgeon position in the United States Army, in Washington DC and Fort Thomas, Kentucky (1905-1908).  He then became a first lieutenant in the military reserve Corps, United States Army, Fort Thomas Kentucky and Fort Snelling Minnesota (1908-1919).He was commissioned an assistant surgeon in the Public Health Service on July 21, 1909 and four years later became a passed assistant surgeon on August 7, 1913.  As part of the war effort, in 1917 he was temporarily assigned to work for the Quartermaster General’s Office of the U.S. Army to make tests of the Barbe method of cleaning and sterilizing garments at the Bornot Brothers plant in Philadelphia.[2] In May 1920 he was requested to assist the Kentucky’s State Health Officer and public health laboratory in the proper manufacture of typhoid vaccine.[3] In April 1921 Hasseltine was appointed the director of the Leprosy Investigation Station where he conducted extensive research on the transmission of leprosy.[4] He was relieved of his directorship on July 14, 1924 when Surgeon M.H. Neill assumed command.[5]
In 1925 he was given command of the Fort Monroe, Virginia quarantine station located on Craney Island which served the ports of Norfolk and Newport News.[6] His work on controlling rat harborage on board vessels entering Norfolk prompted him to start an important study of the rat flea the results of which were published. In 1929 he conducted a four year nationwide field investigation of undulant fever while domiciled in Washington DC. His epidemiologic work determined that contact with infected livestock and or raw milk was the cause of the epidemic.[7] His research titled, Current Studies of Undulant Fever, was published on July 12, 1929 in Public Health Report Number 1298.[8]
On May 1, 1942 he was appointed Medical Director and Officer in Charge of the Boston Quarantine Station and twelve nearby sub-ports within Massachusetts.  Taking over quarantine operations at the start of World War II, Hasseltine saw a noticeable drop in quarantine activity. In fiscal year 1942, his staff boarded 848 vessels of which only 64 vessels carried passengers. In that year only 17,097 aliens were examined in Boston including 521 passengers. Hasseltine reported that 213 of the 521 passengers were seeking permanent admission into America. Hasseltine may have been ordered to stop radio pratique due to the onset of war. There were no vessels given clearance by radio in 1942 whereas 13 were given such clearance the previous year – all of which were naval vessels.  With war in high gear, suspicious activity and the unauthorized entry of spies was of great concern. Since the outbreak of the war, the station was used as a detention station for enemy aliens suspected of hostile activities. As of June 30, 1942 Hasseltine disclosed that 138 passengers were considered aliens suspected of hostile activities and these persons were “disposed of” without indicating what such a phrase meant. Were they turned over to the military, local law enforcement or the FBI – Hasseltine may not have been at liberty to say.
During 1942 Gallops Island was turned over to the U.S. Maritime Commission for their use due to the rapid expansion of their activities from war conditions. The boarding office was also moved from the Army Base to Central Wharf to release space and facilities for use of the U.S. Army. His report to the Surgeon General reveals the degree to which the war took hold of Boston harbor. A total of 93 army and navy vessels were permitted entry into the harbor without quarantine. These vessels were not counted in the official tally of 848 vessels inspected by Hasseltine’s staff. Understandably, Boston’s quarantine priorities were secondary to the smooth running of naval operations and the Public Health Service stepped aside to let the navy press on with war efforts.
With all of his wide ranging accomplishments within the Service, Hasseltine found time to publish a wide array of articles on public health and communicable disease. His expertise in chemistry and medicine served him well with his literary pursuits. During World War I and in ensuing years, he published an extensive number of technical articles on the treatment and quarantine of leprosy (Public Health Bulletin Number 141, July, 1924)[9] as well as articles on the preparation of public health laboratory specimens (Public Health Report #438, 1918), the bacteriologic examination of water, a rat flea survey of the port of Norfolk, Virginia (Public Health Report Number 1270, 1929)[10] and a report on pneumococcus inoculation in New York state institutions (JAMA, September 30, 1922).[11]
He served in a wide range of quarantine and research stations including Buffalo New York (1909-1910); on board the U.S. Revenue Cutter “Rush” in Alaskan waters (1910-1911); San Francisco, California (1911-1912); The Public Health Service Hygienic Laboratory (1912-1920); Molokai, Hawaii (1921-1924); Fort Monroe, Virginia (1925-1929), Washington DC (1929-1933), San Francisco, CA (1933-1935), Carville, LA (1935-1940), Cincinnati, OH (1940-1942) and Boston, Massachusetts (1942-1944).  These assignment involved him leading edge research on leprosy, stream pollution, psittacosis disease and undulant fever.
He married Bertha M. Mohl June 6, 1905 and had three children; Jennie; Catherine Luther and Lee Luther.[12] Bertha died on January 31, 1947. Hermon then married Gertrude Armstrong. During his retirement years he returned to his home town. However, Hermon’s heart was not in good condition, in early June he was taken to the University of Vermont Medical Center. He passed away, June 8, 1968 in Burlington, Vermont and is buried in Greenwood Cemetery in his home town of Bristol.[13]  Gertrude survived him, passing away on September 20, 1978.




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