Dr. Joseph Giordano, the man credited with saving President Ronald Reagan’s life on the day he was shot in 1981, passed away last June at age 84.  Dr. Giordano was among the many ethnic Italians that stand out in history.

You find them in the most unlikely of places. Russia’s Peter the Great (1672-1725) had a personal physician named Gregory Carbonari, an ethnic Italian of Austrian citizenship.  Among his ancillary services to the Czar was reviving prisoners being tortured so they could suffer yet again.  Napoleon’s last doctor on St Helena during his exile was Dr. François Antommarchi an Italian physician. He was appointed at the request of Napoleon’s mother, Maria Ramolino.  He was on the job for only two years but performed the Emperor’s autopsy—he died of stomach cancer.

Dr. Tullio Verdi

I recently learned that President Lincoln’s right hand man Secretary of State William Seward was attended to by Dr. Tullio Verdi.  Seward was the man who advocated the purchase of Alaska (“Seward’s Folly”) from the Russians.  (He should have purchased Greenland and saved us the angst today!)  More relevant to this essay is that on the very night Lincoln was assassinated a hitman went to Seward’s home in Washington, DC and nearly stabbed him to death.  It was Dr. Verdi who was called in to assess the wounds.  Luckily, the wounds were not life-threatening but did damage Seward’s facial muscles.  Dr. Verdi was able to stop the bleeding and bandage the Secretary of State.  To spare Seward any further trauma, the doctor ordered that news of the president’s death be withheld from the Secretary.  But Seward soon wondered why the boss hadn’t visited his bedside the next day.  Seward went on to serve President Andrew Johnson and closed the Alaska purchase in 1867.

Dr. Verdi had come to America in 1850, a refugee from the failed Italic revolt against Austrian occupation.  With a recommendation from Giuseppe Garibaldi (Garibaldi was also in exile on Staten Island at the Antonio Meucci house.), Verdi found a job at Brown University in Rhode Island teaching French and Italian.  In 1857 he moved to Washington, DC and married a Brahman Anglo lady.  The Seward family made him their family doctor in 1865.

Dr. Naclerio attending to Martin Luther King after lifesaving surgery.

In addition to the examples mentioned above, Martin Luther King’s life was saved by Dr. Emil Naclerio in 1958 after the civil rights leader was stabbed by a Black woman during a book signing in Harlem. During the AIDS epidemic, it was Dr. Robert Gallo and Italian colleagues who discovered the HIV inhibitors capable of slowing the disease in 1995.

Considering this, isn’t it odd that Hollywood rarely casts television or movie doctors with Italian surnames?  I suppose for “balance” Tony Soprano’s family doctor (Dr. Bruce Cusumano) and his shrink (Dr. Jennifer Melfi) are paesani.  But multi-ethnic doctor/hospital television series relegate Italic professionals to the janitor’s closet.

Both in Italy and here, there is a plethora of Italic pioneering in medicine.  Whole areas of medicine were “fathered” by Italians: 

  • The science of pathology was launched by Antonio Benivieni in 1507 whose work was improved upon by Giovanni Battista Morgagni (1682 – 1771), “The Father of Modern Anatomical Pathology.”
  • Gaspare Aselli described parts of the circulatory system in 1625 before Willian Harvey’s more complete work (1628).
  • Biologist Francesco Redi (1626 – 1697) is considered the “Founder of  Experimental Biology” and “Father of Modern Parasitology.”
  • Marcello Malpighi (1628 –1694) was the Father of Microscopic Anatomy.  Some body parts are named for him.
  • Girolamo Fabrizio (1533 – 1619) is the Father of Embryology.
  • Scientist Gabriello Fallopio (1522 – 1562) explored the anatomy of the ear and reproductive system.  The Fallopian Tubes are named for him.

To explain how Italy was able to produce such genius one must appreciate the Roman Empire and its power to aggregate both the knowledge and DNA of three continents into a relatively small peninsula – something many of our community in their ignorance still cannot fathom.  Even during the “Dark Ages” Europe’s first medical school was founded at Salerno around the year 802.

Before the media can relate our achievements beyond being “cooks & crooks,” we must restore our own Classical mindset. –JLM