John C. Norman Jr: Cardiovascular Surgeon and Artificial Heart Pioneer

1 Posted by - October 29, 2023 - Black History, BLACK MEN, History, LATEST POSTS

John C. Norman Jr. was a pioneer cardiovascular surgeon and artificial heart pioneer. Norman was born May 11, 1929, in Charleston, West Virginia. His mother Ruth Stephenson Norman was a longtime educator in Kanawha County; his father John Norman Sr. was an architect and structural engineer.

After graduating valedictorian from Garnet High School in 1946, John Norman entered Howard University and later transferred to Harvard where he graduated magna cum laude and Phi Beta Kappa in 1950. Noman received his M. D. from Harvard Medical School in 1954. Following an internship and residency in New York, he served aboard the aircraft carrier Saratoga in 1957 and 1958 before completing his cardiac surgical training at the University of Michigan. In 1962, Norman was a National Institutes of Health fellow at the University of Birmingham, England.

In 1962, Norman was a National Institutes of Health fellow at England’s University of Birmingham and, in 1964, he joined the surgical staff at Boston City Hospital while serving as an associate professor of surgery at Harvard Medical School.

Norman became an associate professor of surgery at Harvard Medical School and joined the surgical staff at Boston City Hospital in 1964. Norman was also involved in several medical research projects involving organ transplants. In 1967, he successfully transplanted the spleen of a healthy dog into a hemophiliac beagle. As a result of their research on the liver, Norman and his associates were able to use a pig’s liver to keep a patient alive for eighteen days.

 

source:

http://www.wvculture.org/history/archives/blacks/norman.html

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