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History
The Dittrick Museum of Medical History, located in Cleveland, Ohio, is a collection of reproductive technology. A prominent figure in making the Dittrick Museum was a man by the name of Dudley Peter Allen who was a surgeon in the late 19th century. In 1894 when the committee for the museum came to be, Allen was a major contributor who donated throughout his life and until he died in 1906. He steadily continued to add to the museum’s collection. After his death his wife Elizabeth Severance Allen continued to donate funds in order to build a library in her husband’s memory named the Allen Memorial Medical Library as well as a museum. In 2017, the museum serves as a study center for the College of Arts and Sciences at Case Western Reserve University as well as a museum. (Include Mission statement)

Dudley Peter Allen

Allen was born on March 25, 1852 in Kinsman, Ohio. His father Dudley Allen and grandfather Peter Allen were both doctors as well. He went on to study at Oberlin, where he received his A.B in 1875, and then onto Harvard Medical School where he received his M.D in 1879. After college he chose to return to Ohio and settled in Cleveland in 1883. Allen was one of the first physicians in Cleveland to confine his medical practice to surgery. He went on to have a successful medical career, teaching surgery at Western Reserve Medical College from 1884 to 1890, becoming the Professor of Principles & Practice of Surgery in 1893, and finally the professor emeritus of surgery in 1910 and senior professor of surgery in 1911.

Membership
Like other museums the Dittrick Museum of Medical History offers a membership program. There are different levels: for students it is $10 annually, associate friends are $30 annually, friends are $55 annually, and sustaining friends are $100 annually. There are two different options of payment. Credit card users can pay online and anyone paying with a check can call into the museum’s personal phone line.There has been a push to make the museum more visible to people. Initiatives such as keeping the museum open till 7PM for people who work and other initiatives have been implemented in the past.

Collections
The Museum has collections on everything from archives of Darwin’s letters to a visual collection of contraception. In 2015 the Museum added a new collection named "Reconceiving Birth 1840 to 1940" that focuses on home births and midwifery. This collection explores the practice of birthing with immigrant communities and then the shift to birthing in hospitals after World War I.

The Blaufox Hall of diagnostic instruments is known as on of the most comprehensive of its kind, displaying medical instruments over the years that have been used in hospitals and show the growing relationships between doctors and patients.

The museum has a wide display of reproductive and medical history: however, majority of their collection is not displayed in the museum due to space. Instead, this information such as their collection on smallpox and dermatology as well as other exhibits can be found online trough their website. Category:History