Dr. Milton J. Rosenau M.D.

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Dr. Milton Joseph Rosenau, M.D.

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Philadelphia, Philadelphia County, Pennsylvania, United States
Death: April 09, 1946 (77)
Chapel Hill, Orange County, North Carolina, United States
Place of Burial: Chelten Hills Cemetery Philadelphia Philadelphia County Pennsylvania
Immediate Family:

Son of Nathan Rosenau and Mathilda Rosenau
Husband of Maude H. Rosenau and Myra Rosenau
Father of Bertha Pauline Ilfeld; Milton Joseph Rosenau, Jr and Baby Son Rosenau
Brother of Philip Rosenau; Esther Harris; Charles Rosenau; Selina Rosenau; Simon Rosenau and 1 other

Managed by: Jeff Meyerson (c)
Last Updated:

About Dr. Milton J. Rosenau M.D.

http://photoarchive.lib.uchicago.edu/db.xqy?show=browse1.xml|1597

http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=136921935



https://www.hsph.harvard.edu/news/centennial-milton-j-rosenau/

“We find monuments erected to heroes who have won wars, but we find none commemorating anyone’s preventing a war. The same is true with epidemics.”

So observed Milton J. Rosenau, the Harvard Medical School professor who, along with M.I.T.’s William T. Sedgwick and Harvard’s George C. Whipple, launched the 1913 Harvard-M.I.T. collaboration that ultimately evolved into Harvard School of Public Health.

Rosenau was a leader in efforts to make U.S. milk supplies pure and safe. As late as 1900, raw milk remained the norm in part because pasteurization imparted an unpleasant “cooked” taste. It was Rosenau who established that “low temperature, slow pasteurization … killed pathogens without spoiling taste, thus eliminating a key obstacle to public acceptance of pasteurized milk, ” according to a CDC essay describing his career.

An early and avid supporter of independence for Harvard’s nascent school of public health, Rosenau went so far as to write to the Rockefeller Foundation in 1914 seeking $7.5 million over the course of 10 years for grounds, buildings, and endowment. Harvard University President Abbott Lawrence Lowell received word of the initiative in a single after-the-fact sentence: “Enclosed is a copy of an enterprise that I am sending to Mr. Abraham Flexner at his request and trust it meets your approval,” Rosenau wrote to Lowell.

As it happened, it did not.

“I presume you have made it clear to Mr. Flexner that at present at least, the suggestion is a purely personal one. The amount asked for seems very large,” was Lowell’s terse response.

In 1936, Rosenau left Harvard to help establish the public health school at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, where he served as the School’s first dean—and, in fact, is honored with a monument of sorts, the eponymous Rosenau Hall, completed in 1962.

While Rosenau’s Rockefeller proposal went nowhere, the foundation would go on to become a major supporter of the School, starting with a 1921 gift of more than $1.5 million – 38 million in today’s dollars.

Also prescient was Rosenau’s vision of an independence, which presaged today’s Harvard School of Public Health, and which Rosenau lived—though just barely—to see. The University’s announcement that the School of Public Health would begin to operate on a separate budgetary basis from the Medical School came on January 8, 1946. Rosenau died just three months later.

Is there an event, person, or discovery in Harvard School of Public Health history that you’d like to read about? Send your suggestions to Centennial@hsph.harvard.edu.




https://www.ncpedia.org/biography/rosenau-milton-joseph

Milton Joseph Rosenau, epidemiologist and founder of the School of Public Health at The University of North Carolina, was born in Philadelphia, Pa., the son of Matilda Blitz and Nathan Rosenau, a Jewish merchant. He attended the Philadelphia public schools before entering the University of Pennsylvania, where he received the M.D. degree in 1889. Later he studied at the Hygienic Institute in Berlin (1892–93) and at the Pathological Institute in Vienna and the Pasteur Institute in Paris (1900).

Rosenau served as assistant surgeon with the U.S. Marine Hospital Service (now the U.S. Public Health Service) in Washington, D.C. (1890–92) and as quarantine officer at San Francisco (1895–98) and in Cuba (1898). In 1899 he was appointed director of the Hygienic Laboratory (the nucleus of the National Institute of Health) of the U.S. Public Health Service, a research facility, where he produced important work on the epidemiology of diphtheria, typhoid fever, yellow fever, malaria, botulism, and the tubercle bacillus, and where his studies on milk sanitation greatly helped popularize the pasteurization process in the United States.

In 1909 Rosenau was appointed Charles Wilder professor of preventive medicine at the Harvard Medical School, where in 1913 he established and served as director of the first school of public health in the United States; from 1922 until his retirement in 1935, he was professor of epidemiology in the school. Also in 1913 Rosenau published his most important work, Preventive Medicine and Hygiene, which in its tenth edition remains the standard text on the subject. With his long teaching career and his influential textbook, Rosenau was so instrumental in educating health workers in the advances of microbiology and immunology that he was regarded as the father of preventive medicine in the United States.

At his retirement from Harvard in 1936, Rosenau went to Chapel Hill to establish the Division of Public Health within the School of Medicine; in 1940 it became a separate school with Rosenau as dean. The school was the result of the collaborative efforts of Dr. Charles S. Mangum, dean of the medical school, Dr. Carl V. Reynolds, state health officer, and Consolidated University president Frank Porter Graham to set up a major training and educational center for public health personnel in the Southeast. It was the eighth school of public health organized in the United States, and the only one between those at the Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore and Tulane University in New Orleans.

Securing the services of Rosenau, with his national reputation and proven administrative skills, ensured the success of the school, which immediately attracted students from across the country as well as from Central and South America. In 1936 the U.S. Public Health Service transferred its venereal disease laboratory and its training center for health personnel for the states from Delaware to Florida to the new school. The first project funded by the Z. Smith Reynolds Foundation was for a venereal disease study by the North Carolina State Board of Health, which subcontracted much of the work to the new school in 1939. Rosenau secured funding for further venereal disease research from the Rockefeller Foundation, as well as funds from the Kellog Foundation for establishing a field training program for public health workers. In 1946 he had assembled a faculty of twenty-four, the largest of the schools of public health, which offered public health courses in administration, education, nursing, sanitary engineering, nutrition, industrial hygiene, biostatistics, parasitology, and other disciplines. Rosenau saw the school move in 1939 from cramped quarters in Caldwell Hall to a new building shared with the medical school, MacNider Hall, built with federal funds largely secured by Rosenau's efforts.

At the time of his death from a heart attack, he was president-elect of the American Public Health Association; in 1935 he had received the Sedgwick Memorial Medal, the association's highest award for distinguished service in public health. In 1912 he was awarded the Gold Medal of American Medicine for service to humanity.

Rosenau was married in 1900 to Myra F. Frank of Allegheny, Pa., and they were the parents of William Frank, Milton Joseph, and Bertha Pauline. Myra Rosenau died in 1930, and Rosenau married the widow Maud Heilner Tenner in 1935. The Rosenaus lived on Laurel Hill Road in Chapel Hill where they pursued their interests in gardening; he was also an avid tennis player. When the university built a handsome new building for the School of Public Health in 1963, it was named in Rosenau's honor. Portraits of Rosenau can be found at the schools of public health at Chapel Hill and Harvard.

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Dr. Milton J. Rosenau M.D.'s Timeline

1869
January 1, 1869
Philadelphia, Philadelphia County, Pennsylvania, United States
1901
May 4, 1901
Pittsburgh, PA, USA
1902
June 6, 1902
Washington, District of Columbia, District of Columbia, United States
1904
July 6, 1904
Washington, District of Columbia, United States
1946
April 9, 1946
Age 77
Chapel Hill, Orange County, North Carolina, United States
????
Chelten Hills Cemetery Philadelphia Philadelphia County Pennsylvania