The National Museum of Dentistry will be closed to the public Tuesday November 26th through Friday, November 29th in recognition of the Thanksgiving and Indigenous Peoples Day holidays. We will reopen to the public on Tuesday, December 3rd. We wish everyone a happy and healthy holiday full of smiles.

Are you an ADA member visiting after reading the ADA News article?

Mexican American War (1846-1848) Sound Beautiful Teeth

“We remember numbers who went to the Mexican war with sound and beautiful teeth, and returned within a year or two with most of them destroyed, and in some cases entirely so, and almost all much diseased.”

Taft, Johnathan, The Influence of Camp Life Upon the Teeth in The Dental Register of the West, v. 15, 1861.

Prior to the Mexican American War (1846-1848), the world’s first dental college, the Baltimore College of Dental Surgery (BCDS) was established, along with the first national professional society and national journal.

Although dentistry was growing in reputation, and more trained dental surgeons existed, little had changed in terms of dentistry in the military since the War of 1812, with the Army’s medical department still being responsible for treating any dental related issues.

Anesthesia was the newest innovation in surgical care, with nitrous oxide and sulphuric ether being discovered by Horace Wells in 1844 and William T.G. Morton in 1846 respectively. Most military surgeons, however, did not trust the new discoveries, and anesthesia was left generally unused on the battlefield until the Civil War.

hours

Tuesday - Friday: 10am to 4pm

Address

31 S. Greene St. Baltimore, MD 21201

Phone

410-706-0600

The Dr. Samuel D. Harris National Museum of Dentistry is an auxiliary enterprise of the University of Maryland, School of Dentistry at the University of Maryland, Baltimore.

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