A century of editors
R. W. Riley
They are unalike and far apart, these 13 past editors of The Journal.
Between Nathan S. Davis's first issue and William R. Barclay's retirement,
there was almost a century of change in medicine, society, the American
Medical Association, prose style, and editorial needs. During these years,
the editors ranged from the brilliant organizers John B. Hamilton and
George H. Simmons to the diligent John H. Hollister and the devoted Johnson
F. Hammond. There were editors with the hot determination of James C.
Culbertson, John H. Talbott, and Robert H. Moser, and there were those with
the cool precision of Austin Smith and Hugh H. Hussey. They varied from
Morris Fishbein, who wrote and spoke "with the grade of an eagle in its
unhindered soar," to Truman W. Miller, who wrote scarcely a word. Here,
briefly, they are together.