| Solomon
Carter Fuller: First Black Psychiatrist
by Lucy Ozarin, M.D.
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Photo
by BU Photo Services |
The
first known black psychiatrist was Solomon Carter Fuller,
M.D., who attained sufficient recognition and distinction
as a neuropathologist and clinician to warrant an obituary
in the New England Journal of Medicine when he died in
1953. His portrait hangs with those of psychiatry’s
founding fathers at APA headquarters in Washington, D.C.
Fuller was
born in Liberia. He came to the United States in 1889
to attend Livingston College in Salisbury, N.C., which
50 years later awarded him an honorary Doctor of Science
degree. He graduated from Boston University Medical School
in 1894 and began an internship at Westboro State Hospital.
Two years later he was promoted to pathologist and also
named to a faculty post at his alma mater. He remained
on staff at Westboro for 45 years as a pathologist and
later a consultant.
In 1904 Fuller
went to Munich, Germany, for a year to study psychiatry
with Kraepelin and in the laboratory of Alzheimer.
On his return
to Westboro he continued his interest in brain pathology
and began to publish. His first publication in 1904 was
a report on pernicious anemia in the insane, but after
his return from Germany, his papers were on neuropathology.
In 1907 the American Journal of Insanity (AJI), later
the American Journal of Psychiatry, published his "Study
of Neurofibrils in Dementia Paralytica, Dementia Seniles,
Chronic Alcoholism." In 1911 AJI published his paper
on plaques in the brain of aged people, which stated,
"The plaques were the deposits in brain tissue of
a chemical substance resulting from pathological metabolism
of nervous elements." In a later paper he used the
term "amyloid."
The
Journal of Nervous and Mental Diseases published his report
of the ninth case of Alzheimer’s disease in 1912.
Fuller
was a member of APA early in his career, dropped out for
a period, and in 1942 applied for reinstatement as a fellow,
which was granted. (This application is in the APA archives.)
When the Veterans Administration opened the Tuskegee (Ala.)
Hospital to serve black veterans, Fuller was instrumental
in recruiting and training black psychiatrists for key
positions.
In the early
1970s the APA Black Caucus introduced the Solomon Carter
Fuller Award at the APA annual meeting. The first lecture
was delivered by the lieutenant governor of California
in 1975.
A community
mental health center in Boston bears Fuller’s name.
Boston psychiatrist
Charles Pinderhughes, M.D., knew Fuller and wrote of him:
"This remarkable man on his own initiative achieved
excellence in psychiatry and neurology as a clinician,
scientist, educator, and scholar at a time when opportunities
and recognition…were not available to him because
of his color."
Solomon
Carter Fuller was indeed a remarkable man to achieve what
he did.
Originally printed in Psychiatric News
September 6, 2002, Volume 37, Number 17.
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