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History

You are here: Census.govHistoryAgency HistoryNotable Alumni › John Shaw Billings
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John Shaw Billings

Dr. John Shaw Billings



John Shaw Billings, MD (1838-1913): A very gifted student, Billings enrolled at Miami University in Ohio at 14 and graduated from the Medical College of Ohio at only 20. Billings worked on the 1880 and 1890 censuses with pioneering work on vital statistics. While involved with this effort, he proposed the idea of mechanization of census data tabulation to Herman Hollerith. Later, he was instrumental in the adoption of the Hollerith tabulating equipment for processing the 1890 census.

Billings was a distinguished surgeon, hygienist, educator (he developed Johns Hopkins University's medical curriculum), bibliographer, museum curator, medical planner and administrator. While serving as deputy surgeon general of the U.S. Army, he founded the National Library of Medicine. His last major undertaking was to supervise the merger of the Astor, Lenox and Tilden private collections to form the New York City Public Library. He also designed the main building of that library, and developed its classification and cataloging systems.


Source: U.S. Census Bureau | Census History Staff | Last Revised: March 31, 2014