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William Augustus Hinton was born in Chicago, Illinois on December 15, 1883.
After two years at the University of Kansas (1900-1902), he earned a
Bachelor of Science from Harvard University in 1905. Lacking the funds for
medical school, William Hinton taught at Walden University, Nashville,
Tennessee, and in Langston, Oklahoma for four years. During the summer
months he continued his studies in bacteriology and physiology at the
University of Chicago. William Hinton entered Harvard Medical School in 1909
and earned a M.D. from Harvard Medical College (with honors) in 1912,
completing his degree in only three years. After graduation from Harvard
Medical School in 1912, Hinton worked for the Wasserman Laboratory, which at
that time was part of the Harvard Medical School. In the mornings he was a
volunteer assistant in the Department of Pathology of the Massachusetts
General Hospital. At the Wasserman Laboratory, Hinton began teaching
serological techniques. Dr. Hinton served as Assistant Director of the
Division of Biologic Laboratories and chief of the Wasserman Laboratory when
it was transferred from Harvard to the Massachusetts Department of Public
Health (1915). In 1918 he was appointed as instructor in preventive medicine
and hygiene at the Harvard Medical School, while continuing his work as
Chief of the Wasserman Laboratory.
From 1921 to 1946 Hinton served as instructor in bacteriology and
immunology at Harvard and as lecturer until 1949 when he was promoted to
the rank of clinical professor. Dr. William A. Hinton was the first
black to become a professor at Harvard Medical School in its 313 years,
where he taught Bacteriology for 36 years. Hinton retired in 1950 with
the status of professor emeritus. Even after his retirement from Harvard
he taught there for some time (Source: Boston Daily Globe, Sept. 15,
1952) and served until 1953 as Physician-in-Chief of the Department of
Clinical Laboratories of the Boston Dispensary. He also taught at the
Harvard School of Public Health, Tufts University Schools of Medicine
and Dentistry, and for many years after 1919 was a lecturer at Simmons
College, Boston. He was a special consultant to the U.S. Public Health
Service and a consultant (1946-1949) at the Massachusetts School for
Crippled Children, Boston.
Dr. Hinton is responsible for the Hinton test for syphilis, which was
found to be as effective and, in some respects, superior to the
Wasserman test. Dr. Hinton was responsible for the discovery of the
Davies-Hinton test of blood and spinal fluid. The test, named after
Hinton, was used by the Public Health Service in the United States as
the best for determining the presence of syphilis, being extensively
used in World War II by the Army. Dr. Hinton was a instructor of
preventive medical hygiene, immunology, and bacteriology at Harvard
Medical School. Pathologist and Director of Research at the Boston
Dispensary. Head of the Wasserman Laboratory at the State Health
Department of Massachusetts.
American Men of Science. 1944 p.816.
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