The Forsyth Institute
The Forsyth Institute, located in Cambridge, Massachusetts, is one of the leading centers for dental and craniofacial research in the world. It was envisioned in 1908 by James Forsyth, who left $500,000 in his will for the establishment of a dental infirmary for poor children in Boston. Forsyth would pass away before establishing the institute leaving his two brothers, Dr. Thomas Alexander Forsyth And John Forsyth, the task of establishing the dental infirmary. [1]
The institute was once an infirmary for Pediatric Dental Care in Boston. The Forsyth Dental Infirmary for Children was founded in 1914 by Dr. Thomas Alexander Forsyth and John Hamilton Forsyth in memory of their brothers, George Henry Forsyth and James Bennett Forsyth.[2][3]
It had been located for over a century in the Fenway–Kenmore area of Boston, at 140 The Fenway (Fenway Street), next to the Museum of Fine Arts which acquired the institute's Fenway property prior to its move to Cambridge in 2010.[4] The new headquarters in Cambridge was designed by the architectural firm, ARC/Architectural Resources Cambridge, Inc.[5]
The Forsyth Institute is affiliated with the Harvard School of Dental Medicine, and also collaborates with many other institutions worldwide.[6]
References
- History of Forsyth
- "Fine Tribute Paid to Founder of Forsyth Dental Infirmary", The Boston Post, May 7, 1919
- "THE FORSYTH DENTAL INFIRMARY FOR CHILDREN", Science, 1 January 1915: Vol. 41 no. 1044 pp. 32-33
- Reidy, Chris, "Forsyth Institute moves to Cambridge", The Boston Globe, August 5, 2009
- "Portfolio: The Forsyth Institute, Cambridge, MA / Headquarters Relocation", ARC website.
- "Affiliations", Forsyth Institute website
External links
- Forsyth Institute Official Website
- Harvard School of Dental Medicine website
- Bela Lyon Pratt sculptures of Thomas Alexander Forsyth. Sculptures of some of the Forsyths were commissioned in 1912–1914 to the American sculptor, Bela Lyon Pratt.