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Home / Lifestyle / Hidden Black History / Hidden Black History: The First Open-Heart Surgeon Was Black

Hidden Black History: The First Open-Heart Surgeon Was Black

Daniel Hale Williams

Up to the late 1800s, many doctors believed that an injury to the heart was too complex to treat. As a result, many patients who presented with heart problems that needed to be corrected with surgery were turned away. Fortunately, Daniel Hale Williams opened the door to the possibility of operating on the heart successfully.

Who was Daniel Hale Williams?

In a biographical article, Who Was Dr. Daniel Hale Williams?, written by Jackson State University, it’s shown that Daniel Hale Williams was born in Pennsylvania on January 18, 1856. While he spent some time as a shoemaker’s apprentice and in the family’s barbering business, Williams eventually decided to further his education. In 1883, Williams obtained his medical degree from the Chicago Medical College. 

Though he was considered to be a skillful surgeon, he was working at a time when African Americans weren’t allowed to be employed in hospitals. Disliking this practice, Williams decided to found the Provident Hospital and Training School for Nurses. It was the first hospital in the U.S., to institute a nursing and intern program that employed Black people. That hospital is now called Provident Hospital of Cook County in Chicago. 

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He carried on fighting for the rights of African American doctors and Black people in general for many years.

How He Changed Cardiac Surgery

It was at Provident Hospital that Williams performed the first open-heart surgery on a human being in the summer of 1893. According to his history article in Britannica, Williams performed this surgery without the aid of modern technology like blood transfusions, anesthetics, antibiotics, or X-ray guidance. 

He was still able to open the patient’s thoracic cavity to examine the heart and suture a wound to the pericardium – the sac that surrounds the heart. Upon repairing the wound, he closed the patient’s chest successfully. Though little is known about the patient after the surgery, it’s been said that he was discharged within 51 days of the surgery and lived for another 20 years after the procedure. 

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After Williams’ groundbreaking surgery, doctors became more open to performing cardiac surgery and their approaches to heart injuries were revolutionized. 

This is a part of our new series – “Hidden Black History” where we highlight uncommon facts throughout Black history. Join us every day in Black History Month for interesting facts about Black people and places that you likely haven’t heard before!

 

References:

https://www.jsums.edu/gtec/dr-daniel-hale-williams/

https://www.britannica.com/biography/Daniel-Hale-Williams

https://www.rbht.nhs.uk/blog/history-cardiac-surgery#:~:text=The%20early%20years,and%20cardiac%20surgery%20was%20born.

By Karen Heslop | Published February 10, 2025

February 10, 2025 by Karen Heslop

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