JAMES D. HARDY M.D.
May 14, 1918 – February 19, 2003
IN MEMORY OF
DR. JAMES D. HARDY
Remarks at the Memorial Service
University of Mississippi School of Medicine
Monday, March 3, 2003
Dr. James D. Hardy, the first
professor of surgery at the University of Mississippi School of Medicine
and one of the founding faculty members of the medical school, died February
19, 2003. I’m privileged to have the opportunity to say a few words
about Dr. Hardy. Like me, there are residents, new faculty, and support
staff in the Department of Surgery who knew Dr. Hardy a shorter time than
many of you who are here. In my case, the first meeting I had with Dr.
Hardy was during the summer of 1998, as I was being interviewed for the
job that I occupy currently. I asked to meet with Dr. Hardy, and prior
to the meeting, I obtained and read a copy of his autobiography. Dr. Hardy
was on the way to becoming one of my heroes.
Dr. Hardy’s life was
gigantic. He produced 24 books, 139 book chapters, 466 papers, and over
200 films. He held 36 visiting professorships, and he presented 37 invited
lectureships. He was president of most of the major surgical societies
in the world including the American College of Surgeons. He was a “physiological
surgeon” (his words) in the mold of Wangensteen, Dragstedt, Blalock,
and Moore. He was a memorable teacher, an exemplary father, and a devoted
husband.
Dr. Hardy’s life is inspirational.
It is sustaining as a means of surviving disappointment and fatigue. It
is humbling in its ability to demonstrate what the human spirit can do
when expressed at its finest. Dr. Hardy had the persistence to nurture
and to bring to life a vision. He described that vision thusly+;
“I had a very clear idea
of what I hoped to do with the Department of Surgery. Teaching, patient
care, and research would all be given strong emphasis …. All decisions
would be made solely on the basis of what was good for the Department
of Surgery and the Medical Center…. We planned to provide the students
and residents with a broad spectrum of learning and experience that would
enable them to be whatever they wished to be…. To achieve these
objectives, we obviously had to have not only good patient care but effective
and ongoing research. Above all, I and my colleagues in surgery were dedicated
to ensuring that our residents would be able to operate and take care
of patients effectively when they completed their training…. Each
surgical resident was required to spend a few months on a research project,
following which he could spend additional time in the laboratory if he
had found some problem he wished to pursue further…. The objectives
were to have the resident learn how to derive statistically valid data,
and how to write a paper for publication and present the work at some
national meeting…. I believed then, and still do, that such laboratory
experience enriches the physician’s critical approach to the physiologic
management of his patient, and this program was, on the whole, very successful.”
In the early days of our institution,
and in those first decades that he was our department’s first chairman,
Dr. Hardy faced enormous hurdles. There were the scientific shortcomings
that had to be overcome in the establishment of the new field of heart
surgery. Dr. Hardy was one of the participants in the birth of modern
heart surgery. There were the ethical questions raised by the scientific
achievements in the new field of solid organ transplantation. Dr. Hardy
found himself in the eye of a scientific and ethical storm involving transplantation
of the heart. The tempest that surrounded the first human heart transplant
involving a graft from a chimpanzee touched people all over the world.
Throughout this, Dr. Hardy never lost his focus on his vision or his resolve
to bring that vision to reality.
What is most remarkable to
me is that Dr. Hardy overcame these formidable scientific and ethical
challenges during a period in our state’s history when societal
upheaval threatened to consume everything. While Dr. Hardy and his colleagues
were working out the techniques of lung transplantation in our department’s
laboratories in 1962, the Battle of Oxford raged over the admission of
James Meredith to the University of Mississippi. The Hardy laboratories
produced some of the most important work in the field of lung transplantation.
Dr. Hardy forged onward. He
performed the world’s first human lung transplant in 1963 on the
night that Medgar Evers died in our University Hospital’s emergency
room. Dr. Hardy’s chief resident, Dr. Martin Dalton, left the operating
room in an attempt to save Mr. Evers’ life. When Dr. Hardy emerged
from having successfully completed this climax to years of laboratory
effort, he found that the clamor outside the operating room suite was
not about the world’s first lung transplant but about the horrific
thing that had just happened. News of the lung transplant appeared in
the bottom corner of the front page of the newspaper. However, Dr. Hardy
had just opened one of history’s great doors from the Mississippi
side.
Dr. Hardy kept working. Seven
months later, he performed the first human heart transplant in January
1964. The ethical debate that this operation incited may have been temporarily
overshadowed only by the events of Freedom Summer, 1964. But the operation
demonstrated that a heart transplant could be performed in a human being.
A second historical door had been opened from the Mississippi side.
The teams involved in these
operations trained in Dr. Hardy’s laboratories. The operative procedures
were literally transported from the laboratories. Mrs. Ruby Nell Winters,
a nurse who was scrubbed on the first heart transplant, has joined us
to celebrate Dr. Hardy. She was part of a team of incredible people. During
the heart transplant, Dr. Hardy polled them while the patient was on cardiopulmonary
bypass concerning the propriety of doing a xenographic transplant. They
made a decision that changed things forever.
Over the ensuing years, countless
patients benefited from Dr. Hardy’s expertise as a surgeon, as a
teacher, and as a scientist. His trainees fanned out all over the world.
Dr. Hardy’s publications and his lectureships told the story of
the remarkable achievements that were occurring in the Department of Surgery
at the University of Mississippi School of Medicine. Our state continued
to struggle with its demons, but in this fledgling medical school in the
most southern place on earth, Dr. Hardy became a world-renowned figure,
inspiring respect for our institution and for what was being accomplished
here.
Dr. Hardy weathered the ethical
storm that his pioneering work incited and the social upheaval that gripped
our state. Many people came to stand on his broad shoulders. Countless
numbers benefited as the patients Dr. Hardy treated, as the surgeons,
nurses and technicians whom Dr. Hardy trained, and as those of us whom
he continues to inspire.
Dr. Hardy’s memory will
become richer as our appreciation of the historical perspective of his
life grows. The Department of Surgery could have had no better person
to be its first professor than Dr. Hardy. Our state was fortunate beyond
measure to have had such a citizen devote his life to us.
Having spent time reading and
viewing his voluminous work, I am convinced that Dr. Hardy realized from
an early age that his was a life destined to matter significantly. Perhaps
unconsciously, he was compelled to record that life in so many different
ways – personal journals, correspondence, publications, films, talks,
and the training of students. That compulsion has left us with a record
of priceless value. There will always be something that we can learn from
Dr. Hardy.
One of the last things that
Dr. Hardy said to his daughters as he was close to death was a comment
about his life … “I had a good run.” Run you did Dr.
Hardy, and you did not stumble in a remarkable and inspirational pursuit
of a vision. Your department is honored to celebrate your life, and we
will never forget you.
+ The World of Surgery 1945-1985:
Memoirs of One Participant, James D. Hardy, M.D.
William W. Turner, Jr. M.D.
James D. Hardy Professor
Chair, Department of Surgery
University of Mississippi School of Medicine
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