Grace Goldin (September 13, 1916âÂÂJuly 18, 1995) was an American poet, medical historian, and photographer known for her poetry on aging and her research on the history of hospitals. After early literary success in her twenties, she became recognized later in life for her poetic explorations of old age and for her scholarship on historic hospital architecture and culture.
Grace Goldin (née Aaronson) was born in 1916 and grew up in Tulsa, Oklahoma, in an Orthodox Jewish household. Her parents were Alfred Enoch Aaronson and Millicent Lubetkin Aaronson. She graduated from Barnard College in 1937, and in 1938 married the scholar and rabbi Judah Goldin, with whom she spent decades in academic communities across the United States.
At age 28, Goldin published Come Under the Wings, a long narrative poem based on the biblical Book of Ruth. The book won the National Jewish Book Award and was adapted for radio. She collaborated intellectually with her husband, noting that many evenings were spent developing the poemâÂÂs characters together.
Despite its success, she experienced what she later described as a âÂÂ35-year case of writerâÂÂs blockâ before returning to poetry in her sixties.
During her long pause from poetry, Goldin became a medical historian. While ghostwriting a public health book, she began researching nursing care prior to Florence Nightingale. This led to more than twenty years of travel across Europe and North America documenting historic hospitals.
Her major publications included:
In her research, Goldin discovered that historic hospitals, despite poor conditions, offered spiritual care, social connection, and human presence, qualities she believed modern hospitals often lacked.
She published articles in major medical history journals and exhibited her photography in both the United States and Canada.
Goldin resumed writing poetry at age 63, an experience she described as awakening with a line of poetry from a dream: the gates opened. Between 1981 and 1991 she published three major collections focused on aging:
Her poetry addressed physical decline, loss of friends, diminished expectations, and daily challenges of growing old. Despite these themes, reviewers and audiences noted her honesty and lack of sentimentality.
Many readers found comfort in her approach, while others found it emotionally difficult. Goldin maintained that American culture needed truthful depictions of aging rather than euphemisms.
Goldin lived in Swarthmore and later Haverford, Pennsylvania. Despite severe orthopedic problems and declining eyesight, she continued to write, publish, lecture, and take photographs. She was scheduled to address the annual Clinical Congress of the American College of Surgeons before her death in 1995.
Goldin was married for 57 years to the rabbinic scholar Judah Goldin. Together they had two children. She died on July 18, 1995, of a cerebral hemorrhage at age 78.
Goldin's archives are kept at the Cushing/Whitney Medical Library at Yale University.