George Foster Herben

George Foster Herben
Black and white photograph of George Foster Herben
Foster Herben aged around 23
Born
George Foster Herben

(1893-03-17)17 March 1893
Died17 March 1966(1966-03-17) (aged 73)
NationalityAmerican
OccupationPhysician
Known forWork on treatments for tuberculosis
RelativesJohn Onesimus Foster, Stephen J. Herben, Grace Foster Herben, Stephen J. Herben Jr.
Signature

George Foster Herben (17 March 1893 – 17 March 1966) was an American physician. He spent his career in New York, predominantly treating tuberculosis. After interning at Brooklyn Hospital, Herben worked at the Loomis Sanitarium by Liberty, and then at the House of Rest at Sprain Ridge, a tuberculosis hospital and preventorium in Yonkers. At the House of Rest he variously served as physician in chief and as medical director. Herben developed and published several new treatments during this time, including a replacement for conventional iron lungs.

Herben was the son of Stephen J. Herben and Grace Foster Herben, a Methodist minister and missionary, respectively. His father's influence occasioned a number of high-profile acquaintances, from meeting President Theodore Roosevelt as a boy to knowing his father's friend Thomas Edison. He was the older brother of Stephen J. Herben Jr., a professor of philology at Bryn Mawr College.