“James E. Higgins rightfully brings to the fore the life and career of Samuel G. Dixon, someone largely known as a member of the tuberculosis sanitarium movement. As Higgins demonstrates, Dixon was so much more, from his exemplary and important research agenda to his most important role as founder and leader of a powerful state health department. No hagiography, Higgins’s deeply researched and lively book introduces a prominent figure to the public health history canon.”—George Dehner, author of Global Flu and You: A History of Influenza