• Harry John Haiselden (March 16, 1870 – June 18, 1919) was an American physician and the Chief Surgeon at the German-American Hospital in Chicago, Illinois.
  • After conferring with the father, the doctor awakened Harry J. Haiselden, the hospital’s forty-five-year-old chief of staff.
  • Harry J. Haiselden is known for The Black Stork (1917), Pathé News, No. 94 (1915) and Animated Weekly, No. 194 (1915).
  • The silent film14 then tells the story of “Dr. Dickey,” a melodramatic version of Haiselden’s 1915 refusal-to-operate on a newborn boy. ... Harry J. Haiselden.”
  • Photo of Harry J. Haiselden. ... Harry J. Haiselden. Screenwriter. Actor.
  • The story of The Black Stork begins with the involvement of Chicago surgeon Harry J. Haiselden in the treatment of a severely disabled newborn, a boy...
  • * In Chicago, someone else was making propaganda, only his was deadly. Harry J. Haiselden, M.D., was the head of the city’s German-American Hospital.
  • The case occurred when Dr. Harry J. Haiselden of the German-American Hospital in Chicago faced trial after refusing surgery to the Bollinger infant, who was...
  • Dr. Harry J. Haiselden was vindicated but at the same time inferentially criticized, yesterday.
  • [This is a continuation of Part 1.] One of Dr. Harry Haiselden's refrains when defending his behavior in the Baby Bollinger case was that doctors everywhere routinely...
  • ...and Mrs. William Meter of 121 North Cicero Avenue, died today at the German-American Hospital, where Dr. Harry J. Haiselden refused to perform an operation...