- William Berenberg
William Berenberg, M.D. (
October 29 ,1915 –September 14 ,2005 ) was an Americanphysician ,Harvard professor , and pioneer in the treatment and rehabilitation ofcerebral palsy .Berenberg was born in
Haverhill, Massachusetts to immigrant parents. Growing up inChelsea, Massachusetts , he proved a bright and studious young man and earned admission toHarvard University on scholarship. However, his father was reportedly too proud to allow his son to take the "hand-out" and Berenberg worked his own way through theIvy League institution, commuting from home and cleaning dishes for extra income.He graduated from
Harvard cum laude in 1936 and enteredBoston University Medical School later that year, earning hisM.D. in 1940. In 1941, Dr. Berenberg entered thepathology department of Children's Hospital in Boston as an intern. Thus began his extraordinary sixty year relationship with the hospital.He was Chief, Interim Chief or Associate Chief of seven divisions, including serving as Associate Physician-in-Chief from 1969 to 1974, and Chief of the Cerebral Palsy Division for 44 years. He was a worldwide leader in the study and treatment of
cerebral palsy and opened the first cerebral palsy kindergarten inWellesley, Massachusetts . In 1968, he was elected president of theAmerican Academy of Cerebral Palsy . Along with friend and fellow cerebral palsy advocateLeonard Goldenson , Dr. Berenberg appeared before the U.S.House Appropriations Committee in 1973. He successfully lobbied for theRehabilitation Act , which was arguably the first piece of landmark legislation enacted to protect the disabled, outlawing discrimination based on handicap. In it, public funding was secured for orthopedic equipment. Dr. Berenberg became an adjunct professor atMIT and, from 1974-1988, directed theHarvard -MIT Rehabilitation Engineering Center, where he coordinated research to create devices to help those with disabilities.A Professor of
Pediatrics atHarvard Medical School , Berenberg trained over 1,000 pediatricians and treated many thousands of children, including PresidentJohn F. Kennedy 's late son Patrick. Housecalls in eastern Massachusetts were common, but he also built a large international practice, with patients from Mexico to Saudi Arabia. Dr. Berenberg was the official medical consultant to theU.S. Virgin Islands .Dr. Berenberg received numerous honors and awards during his long career. Early on, he was lauded by President
Franklin D. Roosevelt for his research ingamma globulin . In 1970, thePresident of Ecuador awarded him theNational Order of Merit with the grade of commander for service to that nation's children. In 1980, he was awarded the Janeway Award for Excellence in Clinical Teaching from the house staff. In 1990, Dr. Berenberg received a distinct honor when many of his colleagues, supporters, and former patients raised funds to endow theWilliam Berenberg Professorship of Pediatrics atHarvard Medical School . Dr. Fredrick Lovejoy was the first to hold the chair.Formally retiring in 2001, William Berenberg remained a Harvard professor, emeritis, until his death on September 14, 2005 in
Norwood, Massachusetts . He is buried atSharon Memorial Park inSharon, Massachusetts . Berenberg married Blanche Berger (dec. 1989) in 1939 and the couple had three children. Two became physicians, Dr. Jeffrey L. Berenberg, and Dr. Richard A. Berenberg (dec. 1984), and one became a social worker, Barbara Berenberg.References
*http://www.boston.com/news/globe/obituaries/articles/2005/09/16/dr_william_berenberg_godfather_at_childrens/
*http://focus.hms.harvard.edu/2005/Sep30_2005/bulletin_in_memoriam.shtml
* http://www.childrenshospital.org/clinicalservices/Site1173/mainpageS1173P5sublevel10.html
*http://www.vard.org/jour/02/39/6/sup/reswick.html
*http://www.ucp.org/ucp_generaldoc.cfm/1/3/42/42-6593/218
*http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2005/04/12/health/main687379.shtml
*http://spauldingrehab.org/body.cfm?id=263
*http://www.harvardmagazine.com/on-line/0700120.html
*http://www.thecrimson.com/article.aspx?ref=240502
*http://www.news.harvard.edu/gazette/2007/02.22/12-mm.html
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