
The HSHSL will be closed Monday, January 16 in honor of the Martin Luther King holiday.
601 West Lombard Street
Baltimore MD 21201-1512
Reference: 410-706-7996
Circulation: 410-706-7928
The HSHSL will be closed Monday, January 16 in honor of the Martin Luther King holiday.
The Health Sciences and Human Services Library Historical Collections’ strives to provide broad access to our diverse collections both in person and digitally. Materials in our collections appear as they originally were published or created and may contain offensive or inappropriate language or images and may be offensive to users. The University of Maryland, Baltimore does not endorse the views expressed in these materials. Materials should be viewed in the context in which they were created.
If you have walked along Lexington Street on the University of Maryland, Baltimore’s (UMB) Campus you have most certainly passed the L.G. Eberhardt, Druggist store sign painted on the side of 631 West Lexington Street. While faded the sign is still legible and is one of many “ghost” signs in Baltimore; these signs advertise a bygone or ghost establishment and remind us of the rich history in this city.
The sign is also part of a historic section of Lexington Street, known as the Rieman Block after Joseph Rieman (1822-1898), a real estate developer. The block from 617 to 631 West Lexington Street between Pearl and Arch Streets is now owned by UMB and is on the National Register of Historic Properties. The Rieman Block was constructed in the 1880s and at the time were the most elaborate buildings around Lexington Market. The Rieman family owned the buildings until 1952.
The L.G. Eberhardt drug store ghost sign stands where the store once stood, on the south-east corner of West Lexington and Arch streets. The store was founded by Louis Boucsein (1831-1910), a druggist from Germany around 1889. Before Boucsein’s store the building was occupied by John Luntz and William C. Kraft owners of Luntz & Kraft Provision or Grocery.
Before moving to 631 West Lexington Street, Boucsein owned drug stores throughout the city. While Boucsein was not a graduate of UMB, two of his eight children graduated from the University or a predecessor school: William G. Boucsein, Maryland College of Pharmacy (MCP, predecessor to UMB’s School of Pharmacy) class of 1895 and Gustav F. Boucsein, University of Maryland School of Medicine class of 1885.
Louis Boucsein sold the store to Louis George Eberhardt (1875-1935) around 1899. Like Boucsein, Eberhardt was from Germany where he graduated from the University of Marburg in 1854. After moving to Baltimore, Eberhardt attended the MCP for the 1894-95 school year under the preceptorship of William H. Lotz (Class of 1870). There is no record of Eberhardt’s graduation, however the Medical Directory of Maryland and Washington D.C. for 1900-01 has him listed as a Ph. G. (Graduate of Pharmacy).
In addition to owning a drug store, Eberhardt served as Inspector of Pharmaceutical Sales in Baltimore, a position created by city hall to ensure all scales used in pharmacies met standards established by the official weights and measures department. Eberhardt was also one-quarter owner of a patent for a non-refillable medicine bottle. The bottle was designed to keep people from tampering with the medicine in the bottle by adding other liquids. The other partial owners were Gould O. Hildebrand—the primary patent owner, Timothy O. Heatwole, and William Atschild. Finally, Eberhardt was president of the Ros-Mar Chemical Company, a patent and proprietary medicine company in Baltimore.
Around 1921, Eberhardt sold the store at 631 West Lexington Street to Simon Solomon (1896-1975), a 1918 prize-winning graduate of the University of Maryland School of Pharmacy. Solomon owned the store along with two other drug stores with his twin brother Samuel.
Solomon was also active in local and national pharmaceutical associations, serving as President of the Baltimore Retail Druggist Association and Vice-President of National Association of Retail Druggists. He was also director of the Calvert Drug Company, a wholesale drug company in Baltimore.
Most importantly to UMB, Solomon was very active in the School of Pharmacy’s Alumni Association receiving the award as honorary president in 1961-62. Solomon also created a $50 prize for the graduating student who performed the “most satisfactory work in pharmacy” during their 2-3 years of school.
Sometime around 1935, the Solomons’ consolidated their stores, closing the store at 631 W. Lexington Street and operating out of 524 W. Baltimore Street. Today, the building on the corner of Lexington and Arch streets no longer serves as a pharmacy, yet the sign remains reminding those who pass by of the buildings’ rich pharmaceutical history.
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HSHSL’s 2023 Fatal Beauty Calendar is on sale for the reduced price of $6.00 and is available for purchase. Calendars can be picked up at the HSHSL’s 1st-floor Information Services Desk or shipped for an additional $6.25.
This year’s calendar was inspired by the Fatal Beauty exhibit installed in the Weise Gallery this past summer. The calendar features a selection of stunning botanical plates from volumes in the HSHSL’s Historical Collections Pharmacy Collection.
Questions? Contact Information Services at 410-706-7995 or hshsl@umaryland.edu.
The HSHSL is happy to start 2023 with you. Please make a note of our early January hours. Regular semester hours begin January 17.
Between 6:00 a.m. – 8:00 a.m., Monday – Friday, UMB ID holders may enter the HSHSL through the Campus Center.
Monday – Friday | 6:00 a.m. – 8:00 p.m. |
Saturday – Sunday | 8:00 a.m. – 8:00 p.m. |
Martin Luther King Day | Monday | January 16, 2023 | CLOSED |
Staying cozy at home, travelling, or just need a break? Check out a book from our Leisure Reading Collection.
Choose a book (or a whole stack) to take with you over the holidays. The collection is on the first floor of the library. Questions? 410-706-7995 or hshsl@umaryland.edu.
The HSHSL is proud to share our FY2022 Annual Report. View it here to learn about the many successes and accomplishments we achieved.
Read about:
In the United States, the holiday and winter seasons traditionally elicit a variety of spices and flavors, as well as traditional floral decorations. Join the HSHSL in celebrating the season with Season’s Greenery, a new exhibit featuring seasonal botanicals from the Historical Collections. The botanicals featured come from Julius Leo’s Taschenbuch der Arzeneipflanzen (1826-27), Robert Bentley and Henry Trimen’s Medicinal Plants (1880), and Botanical Magazine (1806).
While the botanicals featured in the exhibit are found in food and decorations today, some were once used for medicinal and health reasons. The exhibit highlights these pharmaceutical uses alongside displays of beautiful pieces found in the historic pharmacy collection.
The exhibit will run from December through January in the Weise Gallery, on the first floor of the HSHSL.
In this issue:
Holidays, at all times of the year, elicit a variety of memories, stories, tradition, and culture. However, the winter holidays seem to hold some of the deepest traditions. As these times come closer, the HSHSL is asking you to think about your own holiday or winter stories and share them with our Woven Stories Project.
The following example speaks to the Christmas season, perhaps you have a story for Hanukkah, Kwanzaa, or a winter tradition. No matter the holiday or season the HSHSL wants to hear about it. For inspiration read on about Maria Pinkas’, HSHSL metadata management librarian, Puerto Rican tradition of Parrandas Navideñas.
A Puerto Rican tradition that I hold dear are the Parrandas Navideñas. A parranda is a gift of lively music taken by an ad hoc group to a relative or friend during las Navidades (Christmas season). There are some typical instruments that are played while singing a parranda.
The pictures includes the güiro with scraper, and palitos with maracas. When the parranda is a surprise musical visit, it is called asalto. The surprised hosts correspond offering everything from picaera (small bites of food) and drinks to a sopón (heavy soup) depending on how long the party is expected to go on. Often parrandas go to several houses in one night, adding to the musical group the people they have visited before.
There are songs composed especially for Parrandas that tell of waking up the unexpected hosts, the food that is eaten, etc. Puerto Rican Navidades are not complete without a night of parrandas. They are a cultural proof of friendship or family fondness so typical of the season that I most love.
To submit your own story go to the Woven Stories Website. Submissions should be in the form of a photograph with a description of its importance to you. Descriptions can be as brief as a sentence or as long as a paragraph. Photographs must be at least 1200 x 1200 pixels. Multiple submissions are welcome. Submissions can be made anonymously by leaving the name and email fields on the form blank.
For addition inspiration see our more blog posts featuring Woven Stories.
For questions or concerns, contact: diversity@hshsl.umaryland.edu
Back by popular demand, the HSHSL is pleased to announce that a select number of the 2023 HSHSL Calendar, Fatal Beauty, are available for purchase. The calendar is a fantastic gift for even the most difficult recipient and at only $12, will sell out fast! Calendars can be picked up at the HSHSL’s 1st-floor Information Services Desk or shipped for an additional $6.25.
This year’s calendar was inspired by the Fatal Beauty exhibit installed in the Weise Gallery this past summer. The calendar features a selection of stunning botanical plates from volumes in the HSHSL’s Historical Collections Pharmacy Collection.
For centuries, plants have been used to treat a variety of ailments. Fatal Beauty showcases botanicals that if used improperly can be deadly. Each month features a different fatal beauty with information on its toxicity and pharmaceutical uses.
The HSHSL is appreciative of the help of Dr. Mordecai “Mordy” Blaustein, Professor Emeritus and Past-Chair of the UMSOM Department of Physiology, in the planning and research for the calendar. Dr. Blaustein is a huge supporter of the library and was initially responsible for suggesting the Fatal Beauty theme.
Questions? Contact Information Services at 410-706-7995 or hshsl@umaryland.edu.