William Stewart Halsted
(1852-1922)

image of William Halsted
The "father of American surgery" took morphine for the last thirty years of his extremely successful life. From 1889, William Stewart Halsted was first chief of the Department of Surgery at Johns Hopkins Hospital. In 1892 he was promoted to Professor of Surgery. Halsted's drug habit was revealed in William Osler's posthumously published The Inner History of Johns Hopkins Hospital. Few of Halsted's colleagues had any idea that their brilliant mentor was addicted to morphine.

Halsted had ready access to inexpensive, high-grade morphine. So he did not encounter some of the problems common to users of street narcotics in prohibitionist society.


HOME
Opioids
Morpheus
Paracelsus
Opium People
Opium Images
Opium Timeline
Hans Kosterlitz
Heinrich Dreser
Marcus Aurelius
The Plant of Joy
The SuperPoppy
Solomon Snyder
Warren Hastings
Sir Richard Burton
Charles Baudelaire
Thomas Sydenham
Thomas de Quincey
Morphine: 200 anniversary
Into the Arms of Morpheus
Snapshots: Opium in History





The Good Drug Guide