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Contact Info
Home Town West Quincy, MA
Last Address Lake Wales, FL
Date of Passing Mar 17, 1983
Location of Interment Arlington National Cemetery (VLM) - Arlington, Virginia
Wall/Plot Coordinates 3 1857
Official Badges
Unofficial Badges
Additional Information
Last Known Activity:
Bartholomew William Hogan (born on January 29, 1901 in West Quincy, Massachusetts) was a psychiatrist, professor and Naval officer. Hogan graduated from Boston College in 1923 and received his medical degree from the Tufts College, School of Medicine, in 1925. He was appointed a lieutenant, junior grade, the same year.
Dr. Hogan trained at Washington's St. Elizabeth's Hospital and in the thirties he taught at Georgetown University, School of Medicine. In 1940 he was appointed chief of psychiatry at the U.S. Naval Hospital in Annapolis, Maryland. During World War II, he served as a Senior Medical Officer on several ships in the Atlantic and Pacific. He was appointed to the rank of Rear Admiral in 1952 and became Surgeon General of the United States Navy in 1955.
After he retired from the U.S. Navy in 1961, he served as Deputy Medical Director of the American Psychiatric Association until 1971.
Rear Admiral Hogan died on March 17, 1983 and was buried in Arlington National Cemetery. He was a member of the Army & Navy Club, the Chevy Chase Club and the New York Yacht Club. He was also chairman of the John Carroll Society.
Rear Admiral B.W. Hogan, Surgeon General of the Navy was presented with the MEDAILLE DE VERMEIL, the Medal of Honor of the French Navy Medical Service, at a special ceremony held in the office of the Surgeon General at the Navy's Bureau of Medicine and Surgery on January 10, 1957. The Medal was presented to Admiral Hogan by Rear Admiral Louis Mornu, Naval Attache for the French Embassy, Washington, D.C.
Other Comments:
Navy Distinguished Service Medal
Awarded for Actions During Cold War
Service: Navy
General Orders: All Hands (May 1961)
Citation: The President of the United States of America takes pleasure in presenting the Navy Distinguished Service Medal to Rear Admiral (MC) Bartholomew W. Hogan, United States Navy, for exceptionally meritorious and distinguished service in a position of great responsibility to the Government of the United States as Chief, Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, and Surgeon General of the Navy, from February 1955 to February 1961. Rear Admiral Hogan established new objectives in all branches of Navy medical practice, patient care and internship and residency training. He initiated significant changes which doubled the size and scope of the Navy's Internship and Residency Training Programs and raised standards of training. The increased residency training opportunities, as well as improvements in morale, have resulted in a reduction of approximately 50 per cent in the annual turnover of Navy doctors. Under his skillful direction, the scope of medical research has been broadened in all area.
Navy and Marine Corps Medal
Awarded for Actions During World War II
Service: Navy
Rank: Commander
General Orders: Bureau of Naval Personnel Information Bulletin No. 315 (June 1943)
Citation: The President of the United States of America takes pleasure in presenting the Navy and Marine Corps Medal to Commander (MC) Bartholomew W. Hogan, United States Navy, for heroism at the risk of life not involving conflict with an armed enemy as Senior Medical Officer of the U.S.S. WASP (CV-7) when that vessel was torpedoed by Japanese forces on 15 September 1942. Commander Hogan immediately took active charge of caring for the many painfully injured aboard a United States destroyer which had rescued him from the flaming oil-covered sea and continued his supervision of medical attention to the more seriously wounded until the early hours of the following morning, all in spite of serious burns on both hands and several fractured ribs.
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Congress authorized the construction of a Naval Hospital on the grounds of the Naval Home and Asylum. Designed by John MacArthur, Jr., who later designed Philadelphia's City Hall, the new hospital accommodated up to 100 patients (U.S. Department of the Navy 1993a:10).
Naval expansion during the late nineteenth century and World War I required larger ancillary services throughout the Navy, including the hospital system. As a result, in 1917 Philadelphia's naval hospital again moved to new facilities, this time to the grounds of the Philadelphia Naval Yard on League Island, a short distance south of the current Naval Hospital Philadelphia. Sixteen one-story frame pavilions or wards, with a capacity for 40 persons, were built of pine and supported by concrete pillars.
Eventually, the League Island facility had a capacity of 750 persons in a total of 35 permanent buildings. During World War I, the capacity increased to 1,500 by constructing temporary buildings, which were demolished after the war. After the war, the League Island hospital served Veterans Administration patients as well as active-duty naval personnel. During the 1920s, the Navy's and the Veterans Administration's requirements out-paced the League Island hospital's physical capabilities, and plans began for the new, larger facility that became Naval Hospital Philadelphia.