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Sigmund
Waterman
1819-1899
M.D.
1848
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According to Dan A.
Oren's study Joining the Club: A History of the Jews and Yale, the first
Jewish student to attend the University was Moses Simons (Class of 1809). Soon
after, Judah Benjamin, of a Southern Jewish family, quit Yale after two years
and embarked on a fascinating career. Benjamin was elected as the first Jewish
U.S.senator in 1852, served as secretary of war and secretary of state in the
Confederacy, and after the Civil War, fled to England where he practiced law
in the highest circles.
Sigmund Waterman
has the distinction of having been the first Jew to teach at Yale. An immigrant
from Bavaria, he served for three years as an instructor of German, which
had become important with the increase in the teaching of science.
Waterman's contact
with Yale led him to enroll in the medical department of the College. On receiving
his M.D. (the first of his religion to do so at Yale), Waterman moved to New
York. In a long, distinguished medical career, he was a police surgeon for
30 years, a professor of urology at the Eclectic Medical College of the City
of New York, and founder and medical director of a B'nai B'rith-sponsored
elders hospital. A specialist in the use of the spectroscope, Waterman published
and lectured often on the instrument.
