Sectioning embryos with a
wet knife technique. A revolving dish with ten small containers held the
sections after they were cut. Sections were handled with a camel's hair
brush.
|
|
In 1913, the Carnegie Institution of
Washington was eleven years old. Though the trustees had provided grants in
embryology to several individual researchers (Mall himself had received one
in February 1913), there had been no organized attempt to support a
department devoted to embryology. A likely reason is that no "exceptional"
scientist had stepped forward to lead such a venture, no person with the
necessary judgment, skill, and command.
But now there was Mall. Mall's JAMA plea caught the eye of Carnegie
president Robert Woodward. Woodward found Mall "uncommonly frDuitful in
original ideas and possessed of unusual capacity to work in cooperation and
harmony with other men." By 1914, plans were under way to start a new
department of embryology in Baltimore. Although a European site was
originally considered, Baltimore seemed the better choice. It was one of the
first American cities to develop a department of public health, and Mall
believed that cooperation from physicians at public health clinics would
help in the collection of additional embryos for his collection. Indeed,
after six months of intense campaigning, Mall was able to augment his
collection by 150 new specimens.
|