Zimmerman L E
Georgetown University Medical Center, Department of Ophthalmic Pathology, Armed Forces Institute of Pathology, Washington, DC, USA.
Doc Ophthalmol. 1995;89(1-2):39-43. doi: 10.1007/BF01203399.
William Thomson and Joseph Janvier Woodward were two of several exceptionally versatile and highly productive young physicians who volunteered for service with the Union Army at the outbreak of the Civil War, and then were subsequently assigned to the Washington Area where they played significant roles and made major contributions towards the development of the Army Medical Museum. Both pioneered in photomicrography. While Thomson deserves priority, Woodward was the more prolific contributor whose work and publications helped draw attention to the Army Medical Museum as a center for excellence in pathology. After the War Thomson returned to Philadelphia where his interests in photography stimulated his pursuit of optics and eventually his becoming one of the first American physicians to specialize in ophthalmology. He became Professor of Ophthalmology at Jefferson Medical College.
威廉·汤姆森和约瑟夫·詹维尔·伍德沃德是内战爆发时自愿为联邦军队服役的几位格外多才多艺且高产的年轻医生中的两位,随后他们被派往华盛顿地区,在那里他们发挥了重要作用,并为陆军医学博物馆的发展做出了重大贡献。两人都开创了显微摄影技术。虽然汤姆森应居首位,但伍德沃德是贡献更为丰硕的人,他的工作和出版物有助于使陆军医学博物馆成为病理学卓越中心而受到关注。战后,汤姆森回到费城,在那里他对摄影的兴趣激发了他对光学的追求,并最终使他成为首批专门从事眼科的美国医生之一。他成为了杰斐逊医学院的眼科教授。