History

historic photo of pioneers of the Children's Center sitting on the steps in front of Harriet Lane Home for Invalid Children

When we opened our doors in November 1912, we became the nation’s first pediatric hospital affiliated with an academic research institution — Johns Hopkins University. And for more than a century, the Johns Hopkins Children’s Center has been pushing the boundaries of American pediatric medicine and developing world-class, compassionate and comprehensive care that supports the individual child as well the entire family. Learn more about our history of developing and delivering a revolutionary brand of medicine.

Meet the innovators — past and present — who have been developing and delivering our revolutionary brand of medicine.

 
Harriet Lane portrait

Harriet Lane and Henry Johnston: Pediatric Medicine is Born of Grief

Baltimore banker Henry Johnston and his wife Harriet Lane bequeathed their estate to Johns Hopkins at the end of the 19th century to establish a curative home for ill children and advance the study of pediatric disease. Their own two sons had died in childhood from rheumatic fever. When the new Harriet Lane Home for Invalid Children opened at Hopkins in 1912, it was a model of its time. The Home not only featured electricity and isolation wings for children with infectious disease, but incorporated laboratories in which to discover treatments for the era’s greatest pediatric scourges, such as rheumatic fever, polio and rickets. The Johnstons’ generous donation merged with The Johns Hopkins Medical School’s initiative to create a center for children’s care that would propel the practice of pediatric medicine from relative medical obscurity into a prominent light.
 
Howland at Children's Center

John Howland: Moving Cures from the Lab to the Bedside

In 1912, The Johns Hopkins Hospital appointed John Howland, M.D., as chairman of its newly opened Harriet Lane Home for Invalid Children, Hopkins Children’s predecessor. Howland focused efforts on broadening the scope of pediatric medicine by applying quantitative analysis and chemical techniques to the discovery of causes and cures for children’s diseases. Howland contributed to the study of Rickets, where he proved the effectiveness of cod-liver oil as a preventive measure. 

 
Edward Park, M.D., the 3rd director of the Harriet Lane Home

Edwards A. Park: Pioneering Comprehensive Pediatrics

Pediatrician Edwards A. Park, M.D., was the third director of the Harriet Lane Home, 1927-1946, and John Howland’s successor. As pediatrician in chief at Johns Hopkins Hospital, he pioneered a holistic approach to the medical care of children, combining it with intense research, training and community outreach. Current pediatric departments at Hopkins are still structured in ways Park pioneered. A scientist as well, he is credited with the discovery of vitamin D in preventing rickets. 

 
Historical photo of Dr. Leo Kanner

Leo Kanner: Father of Child Psychiatry

Leo Kanner, M.D., is widely considered as one of the founders of child psychiatry as a specialty. An early advocate of psychiatric care for children, Kanner was appointed to head Johns Hopkins’ Behavior Clinic in 1931, where he worked to clarify common childhood behavioral issues for both his colleagues and the general public. He not only increased awareness for early infantile autism (Kanner syndrome), but he also documented the exploitation of individuals with mental retardation. His textbook, Child Psychiatry, published in 1935, was the first English language textbook to focus on the psychiatric problems of children. 

 
Dr. Helen Taussig, first female director of the Harriet Lane Home’s Cardiac Clinic

Helen Taussig: Restoring Life to Blue Babies

Following a rejection from Harvard Medical School due to gender discrimination, Helen Taussig, M.D., was appointed director of the Harriet Lane Home’s Cardiac Clinic. Although best known for helping develop the Blalock-Taussig so-called Blue Baby reparative surgical procedure for tetralogy of Fallot, Taussig’s interests varied from the study and treatment of rheumatic fever to the dangers of thalidomide, a widely used drug at the time. Having achieved national recognition as a pediatric cardiologist, she became the first woman and the first pediatrician to serve as president of the American Heart Association.

 
Dr. Blalock with a portrait of a blue-baby patient on the wall

Alfred Blalock: Heart Surgery for Children Becomes a Reality

In 1941, at the suggestion of Johns Hopkins pediatric cardiologist Helen Taussig, surgeon Alfred Blalock and his associate Vivian Thomas developed the first Blue Baby operation, demonstrating that heart surgery was possible in children. The technique would save thousands of young lives. Blalock became chief of the Department of Surgery at The Johns Hopkins Hospital and established pediatric cardiovascular surgery as a departmental specialty. 

 
Vivien Thomas to the development of the Blalock-Taussig “Blue Baby” operation.

Vivien Thomas: “Something the Lord Made”

A longtime technician for Johns Hopkins surgeon Alfred Blalock, M.D., Vivien Thomas proved essential to the development of the Blalock-Taussig “Blue Baby” operation, helping to save the lives of countless children with congenital heart defects. Thomas facilitated ideas and constructed surgical tools as a surgical assistant to Blalock, who would first perform the revolutionary surgery in 1941. In 1976, the Johns Hopkins University presented Thomas with a doctor of laws degree. A modern TV movie, Something the Lord Made, tells the story of Thomas’ distinguished career and the surgery that would place him and his colleagues in the annals of medicine.

 
Janet Hardy, first director of newborn surgery at Johns Hopkins

Janet Hardy: Mapping the Effects of Environment

In 1946, Janet Hardy, M.D., became the first pediatrician to direct the newborn nursery at Johns Hopkins, eventually heading both the premature nursery and a long-term study on tuberculosis. In an era of limited awareness regarding infants, she formulated an intensive program of care for premature babies. Her extensive sociological studies of urban families helped established public programs for the economically disenfranchised and inspired further investigation into the effects of environment on children’s health.

 
Barton Childs relaxes on his desk

Barton Childs: Genetics and Human Disease

An acclaimed teacher and role model at the Harriet Lane Home and Hopkins Children’s (its predecessor), Barton Childs, M.D., is nationally renowned as an early champion of the crucial role genetics plays in human disease. He is credited with helping establish the study of medical genetics as part of the general curriculum in American medical schools. His visionary text, Genetic Medicine: A Logic of Disease, was published in 1999.