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  1. Halsted did not have a private office in town, but would see his patients at the hospital or examine them in their homes. Out-of-town patients were examined pre and postoperatively in their hotel rooms.

    • J Scott Rankin
    • 10.1097/01.sla.0000201546.94163.00
    • 2006
    • Ann Surg. 2006 Mar; 243(3): 418-425.
  2. Following his discharge from Butler in 1886, Halsted moved to Baltimore, Maryland, to join his friend William Welch in organizing and launching the new Johns Hopkins Hospital. Halsted began working in Welch's experimental laboratory, and he presented a paper at Harvard Medical School.

  3. Mar 1, 2007 · Although Halsted was considered a reclusive person by his contemporaries, the discovery of correspondence between Halsted at 60 years of age with a woman 40 years younger revealed that he was a much warmer and personable individual in private. 45 Halsted continued working until the spring of 1922. While at his country estate in August 1918, he ...

    • Michael P Osborne
    • 2007
  4. Halsted was first educated by a private tutor at home before being sent to boarding school at the age of 10 years (figure 2). Despite briefly running away, he graduated from Andover School, MA, USA, in 1869 at 17 years of age.

    • Michael P Osborne
    • 2007
  5. His private class went to his office 2 nights a week at 9 o’clock where they were quizzed until 11 or 12 o’clock. Lived with an intern Thomas McBride on East 25th Street (between Madison and 4th Ave).

  6. In Baltimore, he was more reserved and distant and more sarcastic in his dealings with colleagues and subordinates and often slacked on administrative matters that he was responsible for as the Chief Surgeon and Professor at the Hopkins Hospital and Medical School.

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  8. Halsted returned to Baltimore in early 1888, and, after the endorsements of Welch and Osler to the trustees, was later appointed surgeon in chief to The Johns Hopkins dispensary and acting surgeon at the hospital for 1 year.

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