Medical writing was a passion for longtime Quincy physician

William Harold Swanberg was a physician, scholar, writer, editor, educator and a philanthropist. Although not a native of the area, he lived in Quincy more than 50 years and left a lasting legacy.
Swanberg was born in Philadelphia in 1891. In 1916, he graduated from the Chicago College of Medicine and Surgery, later Loyola University. He applied to the army medical corps in 1917. He received a commission and studied at the School of Military Roentgenology in Chicago before being sent to Fort Riley, Kan.
Roentgenology was the new science of radiology named for William Conrad Roentgen, who discovered X-rays in 1895. Swanberg finished his active service at Fort Sheridan in Illinois while remaining in the U.S. Army Reserve until 1924.
In 1919, while at Fort Sheridan he opened his postwar practice in Quincy, perhaps at the suggestion of Dr. Thomas B. Knox, who was an Adams County physician also serving at Fort Sheridan. Swanberg opened his X-ray laboratory at 731 Hampshire in October 1919. In December, he married his assistant, Zoe Johnson, who had accompanied him to Quincy. They had a son, William.
When the Women's Auxiliary of the Adams County Medical Society was organized in 1921, Zoe Swanberg was its first president. The couple later divorced, and he married Mildred Wilber, with whom he had a daughter. They later lived in the Col. Edward Prince Home at 1680 Maine.
Swanberg was instrumental in founding the Physicians and Surgeons Radium Association of Quincy in 1921. According to the Jan. 23, 1921, Quincy Daily Journal, 19 Adams County physicians set up the association whose purpose was "to disseminate a knowledge of the use of radium and to maintain hospitals." Both Blessing Hospital and St. Mary Hospital installed new X-ray equipment that same year.
In 1923, Swanberg was elected secretary of the Adams County Medical Society. While in that post, he suggested the society publish a monthly bulletin to be sent to area physicians. In its first issue, dated February 1924, one of the stated purposes of the Quincy Medical Bulletin, originally called the Adams County Medical Society Bulletin, was to "help build Quincy into a larger and better medical center."
The issue went on to list all of the advantages of the Quincy medical community from its location to the hospitals, to the number of physicians, specialists and trained nurses. At its peak, the bulletin reached hundreds of physicians and continued to be published until 1970.
Swanberg's educational and scholarly pursuits did not end with the bulletin. He organized the Adams County Medical Library and was librarian for over 30 years. He was a charter member of the Quincy Physicians Club, which met twice a month, and served as a medical study club whose members presented cases and led scholarly discussions. In 1926, he began organizing an all-day conference to be held annually. These clinical conferences were held every year until the Great Depression interfered. But the idea remained, and out of it came the Mississippi Valley Medical Society, organized in Quincy in 1935. There were 250 charter members with Swanberg as secretary-treasurer. The society held annual meetings in various cities within 100 miles of the Mississippi River in Iowa, Illinois and Missouri. By 1945 it had 800 members.
All the while Swanberg maintained a private practice, worked as a radiologist at both Quincy hospitals and at some of the smaller area hospitals. He found the time to take a graduate course at Harvard and spent six months in graduate studies in Vienna in 1931.
The Radiologic Review, sometimes known as the Radiological Review, was another of Swanberg's projects, which he began publishing and editing in Quincy in 1924. This medical journal became the Mississippi Valley Medical Journal in 1939 and then Clinical Medicine in 1960 with Swanberg continuing as editor. The publication ceased in 1978.
In addition to editing this journal and practicing medicine, writing and encouraging others to write was a passion. Medical writing for journals was fairly new in the early 1900s and was producing an expanding body of knowledge. By 1940, Swanberg, along with colleagues, formed the Mississippi Valley Medical Editors Association. Its purpose was to encourage and support the editors of medical society bulletins and the physicians who were writing for these smaller medical publications. This organization became the American Medical Writers Association in 1948 and continues today. Swanberg was the recipient of the group's distinguished service award in 1952. In 1962 the award was renamed the Swanberg Distinguished Service Award in his honor as the founder of the association.
Perhaps Swanberg's most lasting contribution to Quincy was the founding of the Swanberg Medical Foundation in 1943. This not-for-profit trust fund was administered by the Adams County Medical Society. According to the Mississippi Valley Medical Journal article of 1945, "The purpose of the Foundation is to enable the Adams County Medical Society of Illinois to sponsor ... things of a charitable, scientific, literary or educational nature ... which would bring public and professional honor and respect to the medical profession. ..."
In later years, the foundation and the Adams County Medical Society were principal sponsors of the awards program of the Society for Academic Achievement (SAA) headquartered in Quincy. The SAA was founded in 1959. According to an undated speech Swanberg gave to the Kiwanis, the SAA "is dedicated to motivate youth to achieve academic excellence ... (and) to lead the academically talented to pursue the proper subjects so they can procure a college education and become future intellectual leaders."
As stated in the February 1964 Quincy Medical Bulletin, "Dr. Swanberg has led an extremely busy life and is probably one of the greatest public relation(s) men for the physician in this area."
Swanberg's career ended in the 1960s when he had a heart attack. He died in 1970 and is entombed in the Woodland Mausoleum in Quincy.
Arlis Dittmer is a retired medical librarian. During her years with Blessing Health System, she became interested in medical and nursing history--both topics frequently overlooked in history.
Sources:
"Charter is issued to radium Ass'n Here." Quincy Daily Journal, Jan. 23, 1921, p. 3.
"Dr. Harold Swanberg dies at 78 in Houston." Quincy Herald Whig, June 27, 1970.
"The Harold Swanberg Anniversary Issue." Quincy Medical Bulletin, February 1964.
McReynolds, Ralph. "Adams County Medical Society of Illinois 1850-1945." Mississippi Valley Medical Journal, 67 (January 1945): pp. 19-33.
"The Medical Bulletin." Quincy Daily Herald, Jan. 18, 1924, p. 14.
"The Purpose of the Bulletin." The Official Monthly Bulletin of the Adams County Medical Society, February, 1924, p. 3.
"Swanberg-Johnson Wedding in Chi." Quincy Daily Herald, Dec. 10, 1919, p. 16.
"X-Ray Laboratory is Formally Opened." Quincy Daily Whig, Oct. 24, 1919, p. 3.
"X-ray Laboratory To Be Open Here Soon." Quincy Daily Whig, Sept. 19, 1919, p. 3.





