Baltimore City Council
File #: 15-0531    Version: 0 Name: City Property - Naming the Marble Fountain in Patterson Park to be the Dr. Levi Watkins, Jr. Memorial Fountain
Type: Ordinance Status: Enacted
File created: 5/4/2015 In control: City Council
On agenda: Final action: 5/13/2015
Enactment #: 15-351
Title: City Property - Naming the Marble Fountain in Patterson Park to be the Dr. Levi Watkins, Jr. Memorial Fountain FOR the purpose of naming the marble fountain in Patterson Park, located at the entrance on Patterson Park Avenue at Lombard Street, adjacent to the property known as 27 South Patterson Park Avenue, to be the Dr. Levi Watkins, Jr. Memorial Fountain.
Sponsors: James B. Kraft, President Young, Bill Henry, Eric T. Costello, Warren Branch, Helen L. Holton, Brandon M. Scott, Sharon Green Middleton, Mary Pat Clarke, Rochelle Spector, Edward Reisinger, Robert Curran, William "Pete" Welch, Carl Stokes, Nick Mosby
Indexes: City Property, Naming
Attachments: 1. Planning 15-0531, 2. City Solicitor 15-0531, 3. Real Estate 15-0531, 4. Rec and Parks 15-0531, 5. 15-0531~1st Reader, 6. 2nd Reader Amendments 15-0531, 7. 15-0531~3rd Reader
* WARNING: THIS IS AN UNOFFICIAL, INTRODUCTORY COPY OF THE BILL.
THE OFFICIAL COPY CONSIDERED BY THE CITY COUNCIL IS THE FIRST READER COPY.
INTRODUCTORY*

CITY OF BALTIMORE
COUNCIL BILL

Introduced by: Councilmember Kraft

A BILL ENTITLED

AN ORDINANCE concerning
title
City Property - Naming the Marble Fountain in Patterson Park to be the Dr. Levi Watkins, Jr. Memorial Fountain
FOR the purpose of naming the marble fountain in Patterson Park, located at the entrance on Patterson Park Avenue at Lombard Street, adjacent to the property known as 27 South Patterson Park Avenue, to be the Dr. Levi Watkins, Jr. Memorial Fountain.
body

BY authority of
Article 5 - Finance, Property, and Procurement
Section 20-2
Baltimore City Code
(Edition 2000)

Recitals

Dr. Levi Watkins, Jr. was the first African American admitted to the Vanderbilt School of Medicine, in Nashville, Tennessee. In 1968, at the time that Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. was murdered, he was still the only African American at that medical school. In 1970, he graduated from Vanderbilt and was the first African American to do so.

After graduation, he moved to Baltimore where he was the first African American intern at Johns Hopkins University Medical School. From 1973 to 1975, he studied at Harvard Medical School?s Department of Physiology, performing breakthrough research into the role of the renin angiotensin system in congestive heart failure. When he returned to Johns Hopkins in 1975, he became the first African American chief resident in heart surgery at the university.

At Johns Hopkins in 1980, he was a pioneer in performing the first implantation of an automatic defibrillator, a small battery-powered device that detects...

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