Stephen Smith (surgeon)

Three-quarters head and shoulders photograph of a middle-aged white man with dark eyebrows and white mutton-cop sideburns wearing a dark coat.
Stephen Smith as first president of the American Public Health Association, 1872-1875

Stephen Smith (February 19, 1823 – August 26, 1922) was a New York City surgeon and civic leader who made important contributions to medical education, nursing education, public health, housing improvement, mental health reform, charity oversight, and urban environmentalism. Smith maintained an active medical practice, was an attending physician at Bellevue Hospital for thirty-seven years, and authored three surgical texts, but he was best known for his public service. Three mayors, seven governors, and two U.S. presidents appointed Smith to almost fifty years of public responsibilities. Shortly before Smith’s death in 1922, Columbia University President and future Nobel Peace Prize winner Nicholas Murray Butler awarded him the school’s highest honor and pronounced Smith, “the most interesting figure in American medicine and in American public service today.”[1] The New York Academy of Medicine initiated the annual Stephen Smith Medal for lifetime achievement in public health in 2005.

  1. ^ "Dr. Smith at 100 Receives Degree from Columbia". The Evening World. June 7, 1922. p. 1. Retrieved November 5, 2023.

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