Robert Milton Zollinger, M.D., 1903 -
1992*
by Laura Lewis,
Zollinger Archivist
Robert
Milton Zollinger, M.D. was one of the giants of American Surgery. With a career that spanned much of the 20th
century, Dr. Zollinger was respected by his peers, feared by his students and
loved by his patients. Zollinger
had a knack for being successful at whatever he did.
He was the president of almost every society he belonged to, including
the American Board of Surgery, the American Surgical Association, the American
College of Surgeons and even the American Rose Society.
Born September 4, 1903, Zollinger was raised on
his family’s farm in Millersport, Ohio. He
attended grade school in a one room schoolhouse a mile from his home.
For high school, he had to travel three miles into town, so he rode his
pony, Bob, and stabled him at the barbers during classes.
Zollinger was industrious, even at an early age.
Utilizing his pony and a cart, he developed a thriving business
delivering milk and vegetables from the farm to his neighbors.
This was considered his job and he had to tally his receipts each night
after supper with his parents. Besides
running his business, he also found time to letter in basketball while in high
school. Zollinger learned all of the plays during lunch, since his
delivery route and farm chores kept him from staying after school to practice.
As
a young man, Zollinger wanted to attend West Point.
That dream faded when he decided to become
a surgeon, even though he hated the sight of blood.
When he told his parents his plans, his father gave him one piece of
advice, “If you’re going to be a doctor, be a good one.”
His parents always expressed an absolute confidence that he and his
brother Richard would be successful at anything they attempted and they
instilled this belief in their sons. This
was a trait that Zollinger carried into his adult life, always expecting the
best from everyone and keenly disappointed when he did not get it.
Showing
early on that he was not afraid to do things differently, Zollinger was the
first person from his high school to attend college.
He graduated from the Ohio State University in 1925 with his B.A. and
earned his M.D. two years later. After
graduation, he was offered an internship at the Peter Bent Brigham Hospital in
Boston, under the tutelage of another surgical master, Harvey Cushing.
Cushing sent Zollinger to Western Reserve in Cleveland for six months
before he began his internship to work with one of
Cushing’s favorite pupils,
Elliott C. Cutler. Their
association would span the next twenty years and Cutler would become one of the
great influences in Zollinger’s life. At
Western Reserve, Zollinger worked in the dog labs as a voluntary assistant.
His main job was to classifying Cutler’s collection of brain tumors.
This work led to his first publication, an article in the April 1929
issue of The Ohio State Medical Journal.
Zollinger
returned to PBBH in 1928 to begin his internship.
There he was regarded as a country boy from that “cow town” Columbus.
He was determined to know the answer to every question in order to prove
that his education was every bit as good as his Ivy League peers.
This endeavor proved time consuming, but provided Zollinger with a strong
core knowledge of his subject matter. When his internship was over Zollinger renewed his association with Cutler by
returning to Western Reserve in 1929 for his residency.
That same year he finally married Louise Kiewet; while he had been at
PBBH interns were forbidden to marry. Louise
supported the couple in their early days of marriage by teaching, since Z was
only making 50.00 dollars a week as a resident.
Dr.
Cutler returned to PBBH to take over for Cushing as the Moseley Professor of
Surgery in 1932.Zollinger went
with him as his chief resident and by 1939, he was an Assistant Professor of
Surgery. During their time together
at Harvard and PBBH Zollinger and Cutler would publish the first of seven
editions of the now famous Atlas of Surgical Operations.
Zollinger did much of the work on the text; yet, Cutler’s name appeared
first on the cover. When Zollinger
asked him whose name should be first Cutler had responded that they should be
listed alphabetically.
Zollinger
joined the army in 1941, when war seemed imminent for the United States.
In so doing, he gave up a thriving practice and four years
with his family. He felt that if he
joined the Harvard Unit so would many of his younger colleagues.
Zollinger hoped to be commissioned as a colonel and the commanding
officer of the unit.
Instead, he was made a major and the Assistant Chief of the
Surgical Service. Immediately upon
reaching camp in Ireland he called upon his early farm experience and began
planting a garden. He had gathered
money from everyone in the unit and purchased seeds before they had left the US.
Because of this foresight he was soon appointed the Post Beautification
Officer, a job which allowed him to nurture another of his passions, roses.
Over the next four years, Zollinger would rise to the rank of colonel and
the command of the 5th General Hospital.
He would also earn the Legion of Merit Award, for the development of
mobile surgical teams, and Battle Stars for Normandy, Northern France and
Rhineland.
Zollinger
returned to Harvard in 1946 and was soon offered a position as a professor of
surgery at The Ohio State University. Within a
year he became the chairman of the Department of Surgery at his alma mater, beginning a nearly thirty year reign.
In 1955, working with Edwin Ellison, he discovered the Zollinger-Ellison
Syndrome, which dealt with the relationship between non-beta islet cell tumors
of the pancreas and diseases of the gastrointestinal tract.
He also started the medical illustration division as a part of the
Department of Surgery.
This was surely influenced by the need for new illustrations
for each subsequent edition of the Atlas of Surgical Operations.
Despite
his busy schedule Zollinger was the editor-in-chief of the American Journal of
Surgery from 1958 to 1986.He
traveled the country lecturing on Zollinger-Ellison Syndrome and received
numerous awards for his efforts. He
was the recipient of honorary degrees from the University of Lyon, France (1965)
and held honorary fellowships in the Royal College of Surgeons of England (1965)
and the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh (1966).
The American Medical Association bestowed their highest honor, the Sheen
Award, upon him, recognizing him as the Outstanding Doctor of Medical Science in
the United States for 1977.Zollinger
was even offered the presidency of The Ohio State University, but turned it
down. He felt that he would not
have any time left for surgery. Besides,
he reasoned, “There are a lot more out of work college presidents than
surgeons.”
Zollinger
was a difficult taskmaster who expected nothing less than perfection from
himself and his colleagues. On
rounds he was known to fire a resident on the elevator for some misdemeanor,
only to rehire them by the time they had reached the 7th floor.
As hard as he was on his students, he was equally kind to his patients.
He believed that they
should always be the top priority of a surgeon.
When he felt that his staff was moving away from that principle, he often
felt the need to remind them. He
once had a large chart made showing the golf handicaps of each surgery
department member, clearly showing where he felt that their priorities lie.
Outside of surgery,
Zollinger was a man of many interests. He
raised prize-winning gourds. He
loved roses and was an accredited rose judge.
He constantly grumbled that his frequent lecturing and travel kept his
roses from winning first prize. He
also developed a passion for photography, which he indulged every winter on
Sanibel Island.
Despite
his numerous honors and international recognition, Dr. Zollinger never rested on
his laurels. Even after his
retirement in 1974, Zollinger continued to lecture around the world.
He remained involved in the Department of Surgery as Professor and
Chairman Emeritus. His quest for
excellence continued up until his death in 1992 from pancreatic cancer.
Perhaps he is best described in his own words.
Once, when asked how he would like to be remembered he replied, “They
should write on my tombstone: ‘teacher, surgeon, soldier and farmer.’
And my wife may remember that she says I’m an amusing fellow to live
with.”
* The information in this article is based on
research at the Medical Heritage Center, Prior Health Sciences Library, The Ohio
State University, Columbus, Ohio. Work on this article was supported by the
Zollinger Legacy Fund.See
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