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Dr. Blair E. Batson

1920 - 2018

Dr.  Blair E. Batson obituary, 1920-2018, Jackson, MS

Blair Batson Obituary

Dr. Blair E. Batson

Jackson - Dr. Blair E. Batson, the first chairman of pediatrics at the University of Mississippi Medical Center in Jackson, died November 26, 2018. He was 98.

"Dr. Batson's importance to the health of children in the state cannot be underestimated," said Dr. LouAnn Woodward, UMMC vice chancellor for health affairs and dean of the School of Medicine. "He truly is the father of organized pediatrics in Mississippi and the lives of countless children in our state have been touched through his work. What a wonderful legacy."

"He was a living archive of pediatric diseases and experiences," said his successor as chair, Dr. Owen B. Evans. "And he was a role model for me in how to be a gentleman."

Born Oct. 24, 1920, Batson grew up in Pearl River County in the sawmill town of Orvisburg, where his grandfather, Ran Batson, owned the mill and his grandmother, Mary Bryan, was principal of the three-room, eight-grade school. For three years of his childhood, at the start of the Great Depression, Batson's family lived in West Point, Mississippi, where the local librarian, Miss Lucy Heard, cultivated his life-long love of books and learning.

He earned the B.A. and M.D. from Vanderbilt University and completed a residency in pediatrics at Vanderbilt. While an undergraduate at Vanderbilt, he was president of the student council and of his fraternity, Sigma Chi. He served as chief resident at Vanderbilt from 1949-50 and had a faculty appointment there from 1949-1952.

He completed a one-year residency at the Johns Hopkins Hospital and was on the faculty of the Johns Hopkins School of Public Health and the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine from 1952-1955. He also held a master of public health degree from Johns Hopkins University.

He served in the U.S. Army during World War II and in the U.S. Army Medical Corps from 1946-1948 in Giessen, Germany, as ward officer for contagious diseases and pediatrics for the 388th Station Hospital.

At 34, he was named chairman of the Department of Pediatrics at UMMC just two months after the Medical Center opened its doors to patients in 1955. He officially retired in 1989 although he still taught for years afterward. During his long career, he taught more than 3,500 medical students and 240 pediatric residents. Among those residents was the late Dr. Aaron Shirley, who, under Batson's leadership, in 1965 became the first African-American learner in any program at UMMC.

Dr. Joe Donaldson, a former member of the pediatrics faculty, said Batson was "superbly trained" and read all the time. "He had seen virtually every interesting pediatric case in Mississippi since 1955." Another faculty member Dr. Will Sorey, said he was "a wonderful teacher." He "knew infectious diseases not from lab reports that we rely on now, but from clinical presentation."

Batson was honored often for his contributions to the health of children in Mississippi. He was recipient of the 2000 Humanitarian of the Year tribute from the Epilepsy Foundation of Mississippi. In 1996, he was Vanderbilt's Distinguished School of Medicine Alumnus of the Year. In 1995, he was inducted into the University of Mississippi Alumni Hall of Fame. He received awards for outstanding service from the March of Dimes, the National Easter Seal Society, the American Academy of Pediatrics, District VII, and an award for leadership and devotion to child health care from the Mississippi Academy of Pediatrics.

He was an examiner for the American Board of Pediatrics from 1963 until 1990, a member of the executive board of the American Academy of Pediatrics from 1974 to 1980, and president of the pediatric section of the Southern Medical Association.

In 1997, the new children's hospital was named the Blair E. Batson Hospital for Children in recognition of Batson's lifetime contributions to the health of children in Mississippi. A new wing of the hospital is currently under construction.

He was married twice, first to Dr. Margaret Batson, a distinguished pediatrician in her own right and member of the original pediatric faculty, and then to Blanche Batson, a well-known artist, both deceased.

Survivors include Dr. Batson's only brother, John O. Batson II; his six nieces and nephews, John O. Batson, III of Lake Oswego, Oregon, Molly Batson Smith of Atlanta, Georgia, Blair Batson of Portland, Oregon, Bryan Batson Jauregui of Todos Santos, Mexico, Andrew Graves Batson, of Seattle, Washington, and Virginia Batson of Collingswood, New Jersey; and his four grand nieces and nephews, Bryan Smith of Athens, Georgia, Annie Smith of San Francisco, California, and Griffin Batson Grant and Tristan Batson Grant of Collingswood, New Jersey.

A memorial service will take place January 11, 2019 at 12:00pm at the University of Mississippi Medical Center Convention Center at 350 W Woodrow Wilson Ave. In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be made to: Blair E. Batson Hospital for Children, c/o Office of Development, 2500 N. State St., Jackson, MS 39216 or Friends of Children's Hospital, 3900 Lakeland Drive, Suite 205, Flowood, MS 39232.

To plant trees in memory, please visit the Sympathy Store.

Published by Clarion Ledger on Dec. 2, 2018.

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5 Entries

Tristan Batson Grant

September 22, 2023

Blair Batson is my great uncle. When I knew him, he was cheerful, kind and caring. He was and still is one of my idols and a role model for what I want to be. I hope to honor Blair and make him proud.

John Montgomery

December 3, 2018

Dr.Batson sparked my interest in Pediatrics when I was an intern & I remained as a !st yr resident & developed an interest in academic medicine. He helped me decide to go to Baylor Col. of Medicine where I ultimately became a faculty member & one of the team for the patient who became known as "The Boy in The Bubble" . I retired as Chief of Pediatrics at UAB , Huntsville Campus in 1997. Thanks to you, Dr. Blair for being such a guiding mentor & friend all these years.

December 3, 2018

May our Lord Jesus Christ and God our Father give everlasting comfort to the hearts of family and friends for the loss of their beloved Blair. 2 Thessalonians 2:16, 17

Barbara Shaidnagle

December 2, 2018

To the family of Dr. Batson:
He was a very nice man to work for when I was a secretary in the Pediatrics Clinic in like 1977. May angels comfort you in this time of loss.

Jay Wiener

December 2, 2018

Margaret and Blair were friends of my parents when I was a boy and Blanche and Blair, after I was grown. All of the articles and tributes to Dr. Batson address his professional life. I seek to add that he was a splendid human being, from a personal aspect, and it added to my boyhood that I had the pleasure of knowing Margaret and Blair (not to forget Blanche, but that came later, when I was equally fond of her). We used to see the Batsons at the Olde Tyme Delicatessan if we ate there on Sunday evenings they must have eaten there on every Sunday evening and they used to come to dinner parties at our house (and, conversely, my parents would go to dinner parties at the Batsons' home, on Crane Boulevard, and tell my siblings and me about the riveting conversations, at the Batsons' dinner table, over breakfast, the next morning. They were all fine people, whose passing leaves voids. Fortunately, the Batson Children's Hospital memorializes Blair Batson. Hopefully the good-nature and warmth of Dr. Batson can be imparted to those who enter the building, as it is diminished without a personality to augment a name in isolation. It would be particularly helpful inasmuch as the children confined there, and their families, would benefit from knowing of Dr. Batson's positive, upbeat nature, when confronting illness at an age that ought not be clouded with despair. Blair Batson was iconic and is irreplaceable.

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Memorial service

12:00 p.m.

University of Mississippi Medical Center Convention Center

350 W Woodrow Wilson Ave., MS

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