Fonds F006 - Edward James Moran Campbell fonds

Title and statement of responsibility area

Title proper

Edward James Moran Campbell fonds

General material designation

  • Graphic material
  • Textual record

Parallel title

E.J. Moran Campbell fonds

Other title information

Title statements of responsibility

Title notes

  • Source of title proper: Title based on provenance of fonds

Level of description

Fonds

Reference code

CA ON00425 F006

Edition area

Edition statement

Edition statement of responsibility

Class of material specific details area

Statement of scale (cartographic)

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Issuing jurisdiction and denomination (philatelic)

Dates of creation area

Date(s)

  • 1904, 1945-1946, 1950, 1964-2004, predominate 1968-1991 (Creation)

Physical description area

Physical description

1.245 meters of textual records
2 photographs
18 photographs (jpg, png, bmp)
1 drawing

Publisher's series area

Title proper of publisher's series

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Archival description area

Name of creator

(1925-2004)

Biographical history

Edward James Moran Campbell (better known as Moran) was a physician, scientist, and educator. His career spanned decades, and he was considered the foremost clinical respiratory physiologist of his generation, and directly influenced how respiratory medicine is taught in England and Canada.

E.J.M Campbell was born August 31, 1925, in Yorkshire, England, to father Edward Gordon Campbell, a general practitioner; and mother Clare Irene O’Callaghan. Campbell’s early education took place at Clifton High School, a private preparatory school in Harrogate and at King James’ Grammar School in Knaresborough. Campbell would later attend the Harrogate Technical College night school where he became a pathology technician. After working as a technician, Campbell attended Middlesex Hospital Medical School where he completed a BSc in 1949, his MD in 1951, and a PhD in 1954.

From 1953-1954 Campbell was the Registrar at the Middlesex Hospital and following that became the Comyns-Berkeley Fellow of the Middlesex Hospital and Gonville and Caius College in Cambridge, which he held at the John Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore, Maryland. In 1955, Campbell would be appointed an assistant professor at the Post Graduate Medical School (later the Royal Postgraduate Medical School) while also being a practicing physician at the Hammersmith Hospital. In 1957 Campbell married Diana Mary Elizabeth Green (1931-2021), who was a nurse at Middlesex Hospital. The two would eventually have four children: Fiona, Susan, Robert, and Jessica.

Campbell would publish the book “The Respiratory Muscles and the Mechanisms of Breathing” in 1958 which was based on his PhD thesis on “The Muscular Control of Breathing in Man”, and in 1960 would submit a paper that would lead to the creation of the Venturi mask. The following decade would see Campbell become the Editor in Chief of the “Clinical Science” Journal and would go on to edit the “Clinical Physiology” textbook with John Dickinson. In 1965 Campbell would deliver a lecture (on “Respiratory Failure”) for the Goulstonian Lectures at the Royal College of Physicians, London; and in 1967 would be the youngest scientist to give the J. Burns Amberson Lecture of the American Thoracic Society.

In 1968 Campbell was approached by John Evans, the founding Dean of the McMaster University Medical School, to become a R.S. McLaughlin Professor of Medicine, and the founding Chair of the Department of Medicine at McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario. Realizing that he would rather create something new then staying in England, Campbell would accept the position and moved to Hamilton with his family that same year. From 1968-1975 Campbell would be the Chair of the Department of Medicine and was known as an incredible recruiter and resource for the department. After ending his seven-year run as Chair of the Department, Campbell would continue as Professor of Medicine. Campbell would become a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada in 1983 and would also publish a memoir in 1988 called “Not Always on the Level”, which detailed his life and work while living with bipolar disorder. In 1991 Campbell would retire from his position at McMaster University with his achievements being honored at the “International Breathlessness: Campbell Symposium”. From 1991-2004 Campbell would be designated as a Professor Emeritus of the university, and in 2001 was inducted as an Officer of the Order of Canada by then Governor General Adrienne Clarkson.

Campbell was an avid cyclist, picking up the hobby while moving to Hamilton, and was a vocal supporter of cycling tracks and lanes in the city. Throughout the span of his life, E.J.M Campbell would write a multitude of scholarly articles and had many of his opinion pieces published in various newspapers.

Campbell would die on April 12, 2004, from colon cancer.

Custodial history

Scope and content

Fonds consists of records documenting Edward James Moran Campbell's professional and personal activities, predominately from 1968-1991 while employed by McMaster University (Hamilton, Ontario). Included is correspondence, agendas, minutes, letters, reports, proposals, articles, papers, postcards, draft manuscripts and chapters, handwritten material, re-prints, notes, notices, newspaper clippings, memos, photographs (print and digital), booklets, documents, a poem, a magazine, and a drawing. Records primarily reflect activities that cover the development and growth of the McMaster University Department of Medicine; the creation process of the book "Not Always on the Level" published in 1988; and general writing endeavors.

Fonds is organized into the following series:

  1. Personal Records
  2. Correspondence
  3. McMaster Department of Medicine records
  4. "Not Always on the Level" book drafts and other material
  5. Writings and publications

Notes area

Physical condition

Immediate source of acquisition

A box of reprints and book chapters was donated to the Health Sciences Archives (HSA) by D. Keane on March 5, 2002. Three boxes of correspondence were collected from the office of Edward James Moran Campbell on September 25, 2003, and subsequently donated to the HSA. On March 5, 2005, two additional boxes of material were retrieved from E.J.M. Campbell’s office and donated to the HSA. News clippings, obituaries, and photographs were copied and digitized from a scrapbook provided by Diana Campbell (E.J.M. Campbell’s wife) and returned to her later in 2005. On February 17, 2006, a bag of Campbell’s personal papers was transferred to the HSA by Diana Campbell. In May 2008, Diana Campbell also transferred a bound three-volume bibliography of E.J.M. Campbell to the HSA.

Arrangement

Records reprocessed. Received order was maintained for the majority of records, with some series and files renamed and rearranged for clarity and access.

Language of material

  • English

Script of material

    Location of originals

    Availability of other formats

    Restrictions on access

    Open

    Terms governing use, reproduction, and publication

    The preferred citation for this fonds is: McMaster University, Health Sciences Archives. Edward James Moran Campbell fonds. F006.

    For citations tailored to a specific style or general citation help with archival material, please connect with the Heath Sciences Archives.

    Material can only be used or reproduced for research and private study. Any use for a different purpose may require the authorization of the copyright owner. Please connect with Archives' staff for any copyright inquiries or concerns.

    Finding aids

    File list for Series 2: Correspondence uploaded and linked to series as a searchable digital object.

    Associated materials

    Related materials

    Accruals

    No further accruals expected.

    General note

    General note

    Accessions: 2002-15, 2003-29, 2005-14, 2005-76, 2006-10, 2008-039.1-.3

    General note

    30 cm of duplicate material was removed during reprocessing.

    Alternative identifier(s)

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    Standard number

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    Description record identifier

    Institution identifier

    Rules or conventions

    Status

    Final

    Level of detail

    Full

    Dates of creation, revision and deletion

    August 2022- Description created by Jackson Charbonneau.

    Language of description

    • English

    Script of description

      Sources

      Accession area