Scan Times
Weblog of the Department of Radiology
Lifetime Achievement Award: Dr. Henry H. Jones
Posted 10:43 AM, November 16, 2007, by jaruiz
(Image courtesy of Mark Riesenberger)
"My greatest achievement is that I survived," Dr. Jones said to me after I spoke with him about our "Lifetime Achievement Award." In his 68 years of serving Stanford Radiology, Dr. Henry H. Jones, professor emeritus, has done much more than survive. He has left a long legacy of achievements and a lasting impression on those who have had the opportunity to interact with him.
Born on June 9, 1917, in Altoona, Pennsylvania, he was the second son of Henry O. and Euphemia Heilman Jones. His older brother, Howard, died in infancy. His father was a urologist, and his mother was the superintendent of music for the Altoona school system and, later, was a writer of style reviews and producer of fashion shows for the William F. Gable Department Store. "She was so successful," Dr. Jones told me, "that department stores as far away as Pittsburgh wanted to hire her to produce their style reviews."
After graduating from Haverford College in 1939 with a BA in chemistry, Dr. Jones attended the graduate chemistry program at Harvard. "I spent a year pretending to be a chemist at Harvard and learned that I wasn't really going to be the kind of chemist I wanted to be because I didn't fully comprehend the application of partial differential equations." In 1940, he applied and was accepted to medical school at Yale. In medical school, he was reminded that medicine requires a life time of learning, which is something he had observed throughout his childhood because both his father and grandfather were physicians. "In your first- and second-years of medical school, you realize that what you are learning today you will use for the rest of your life," Dr. Jones remarked. Because of his interest in chemistry and mathematics, Dr. Jones felt a natural affinity for radiology.
At the end of 1941, he was inducted into the army to serve in World War II, but he was assigned back to finish his medical studies. After completing a rotating internship in 1943 at Metropolitan Hospital in New York City and a residency in radiology at Yale in 1946, he served in the army as an instructor at the Army School of Roentgenology at Fort Sam Houston in San Antonio, Texas, where he trained physicians to be radiologists or "90-day wonders," as they were commonly called. "That was a great experience," he told me. "I had just finished my residency in radiology and now I was teaching what I had learned. If you want to learn something, teach it!" After three cycles of training, he was assigned as head of radiology in Bad Constadt, Germany, which was the orthopedic center for the army of occupation.
After his discharge from the army in 1948, he went to speak with the chair of the Radiology Department at Yale, Henry Kaplan, MD, who had taught him during residency and who had recently been hired to head the Stanford Radiology Department. Dr. Jones' reputation preceded him, and it was the impression he had left on Dr. Henry Kaplan that led to his hire at Stanford. "After I was discharged from the army, I was looking for a position as an academic radiologist so I went to talk to Henry Kaplan. I asked him, 'Do you know of any available academic jobs in radiology?' He answered, 'Why? You already have one at Stanford.' It's the only job application I've ever done in my life! It was very inexpensive; I didn't fill out any forms or anything." So, Dr. Jones came to Stanford at the end of June 1948. Because Dr. Kaplan did not leave Yale for Stanford until September, Dr. Jones ran the Department until his arrival. As the only senior, full-time faculty member, he worked 7 days a week for 14 to 16 hours a day, and he taught all the radiology courses until Kaplan arrived in September of 1948.
After 68 years in our Department, he has left an enduring legacy and the results of his life time of learning are reflected in the plaques that line the walls of his office, such as the Robert Reid Newell Memorial Award and the Broad Street Pump Award. Conferred by Physicians for Social Responsibility (PSR), the Broad Street Pump Award is bestowed upon physicians who apply their medical knowledge in socially responsible ways. Dr. Jones was a founding member of PSR and a leader in the movement to eliminate nuclear war and weapons of mass destruction. "I was very surprised and extremely pleased. I'm delighted to have this award," he commented. Dr. Jones was also the first chief of the radiology service at the Palo Alto Veterans Administration Hospital, and he earned the moniker "Bones Jones" in recognition of his subspecialty regarding the skeletal system. His research focused on the mechanisms governing the growth and modeling of the skeletal system.
Dr. Jones has accumulated a great number of roentgenograms throughout his career, and he has donated them to our departmental resident and medical student teaching library: "I used to teach the bone and joint part of the radiology clerkship, and I have bequeathed the set of films I accumulated through my teaching to the library for use by the medical students and residents. I think it's useful, and it's organized so that people can teach themselves. People do very well teaching themselves by the time they get to medical school. If you can't teach yourself by then you're in deep trouble." The Stanford University Medical Media and Information Technologies (SUMMIT) is compiling his extensive collection of radiographs. For more information on this project, please see http://summit.stanford.edu/pdfs/mediaserver_ts.pdf and http://summit.stanford.edu/pdfs/meadiaserver_tearsheet.pdf. His collection is also featured in Dr. Amy Ladd's Paget's Disease E-Book, which can be viewed at http://paget.stanford.edu/, and he has given several detailed and informative online lectures on bone disease, including one on osteomyelitis (http://osteomyelitis.stanford.edu/pages/hjones.html) and one on osteosarcoma (http://osteosarcoma.stanford.edu/pages/EbookInfo.html).
After retiring on December 31, 2006, he worked part-time until January of 2007. I asked him how he spends his time, and he told me, "I'm reorganizing my film collection, and I'm cleaning my desk, which could take a while. I make a little progress on it, and I come back to find it's grown back again; I don't understand how it piles up, but it does." He also enjoys spending time with his grandchildren, Emmerson (age 11) and Elliott (age 6).
To read more about what our Department was like when Dr. Jones began at Stanford, please see his first-author publication, "A History of the Department of Radiology at Stanford University" published in the American Journal of Roentgenology 1995 Mar;164(3):753-60 (http://www.ajronline.org/cgi/reprint/164/3/753).
"HAPPY DAY!"
