16 FARRERAS
- For a history of St. Elizabeths Hospital, see Frank Rives Millikan, Wa rds of
the Nation: The Making of St. Elizabeths Hospital, 1852-1920 (Washington,
D.C., 1989) and Frank Clark, St. Elizabeths Hospital for the Insane
(Washington, D.C., 1906). See also: St. Elizabeths Hospital Medical Society,
Proceedings of the Annual Meetings (Washington, D.C.); St. Elizabeths
Hospital, Clinics and Collected Papers of St. Elizabeths Hospital (St. Louis);
and Arcangelo R. T. D’Amore and A. Louise Eckburg, Symposium on William
Alanson White: The Washington Years 1903-1937 (St. Elizabeths Hospital,
Washington, D.C.: U.S. Dept. of Health, Education and Welfare, Publica
tion No. (ADM) 76-298, 1976). - Federal Security Agency, Public Health Service, National Institutes
of Health, National Institute of Mental Health, The Organization and
Functions of the National Institute of Mental Health, August 15, 1950,
Organization 1950, Box 1, “1935,” Historical Development of NIMH,
RG 511, NARA, hereafter cited as NIMH Organization-1950, Box 1);
Parascandola, “Background Report.” - 46 Stat. L. 585.
- Mental Health Challenges, 4.
- Brand “Antecedents of the NIMH;” Williams, USPHS.
- Brand “Antecedents of the NIMH,” 7.
- Edward D. Berkowitz and Susan LaMountain, “Organizational Change at
the National Institutes of Health: Historical Case Studies, National Institute
of Mental Health,” (Prepared at the request of the Institute of Medicine,
National Academy of Sciences, January 13, 1984), unpublished paper, 2. - Brand “Antecedents of the NIMH;” Robert A. Cohen, “Studies on the Eti
ology of Schizophrenia,” in NIH: An Account of Research in its Laboratories
and Clinics, eds. DeWitt Stetten, Jr., and W. T. Carrigan (New York: Academic
Press, 1984), 13-34; Lewis P. Rowland, NINDS at 50: An Incomplete History
Celebrating the Fiftieth Anniversary of the National Institute of Neurological
Disorders and Stroke (Bethesda, MD: National Institutes of Health, Publica
tion No. 01-4161, 2001). - James G. Miller, “Clinical Psychology in the Veterans Administration,”
American Psychologist 1 (1946): 181-9. - Berkowitz and LaMountain, “Organizational Change at the NIH.”
- Brand “Antecedents of the NIMH.”
- Meredith P. Crawford, “Rapid Growth and Change at the American
Psychological Association: 1945-1970,” in The American Psychological
Association: A Historical Perspective, eds. Rand B. Evans, Virginia Staudt
Sexton, and Thomas C. Cadwallader (Washington, D.C.: American
Psychological Association, 1992). - Kolb had succeeded Treadway in 1938.
- Dale Cameron, oral history interview by Eli Rubinstein, 1978, transcript,
NIMH Oral History Collection, 1975-1978, OH 144, NLM.