Bartemeier was born on September 12, 1895, in Muscatine, Iowa, into a Roman Catholic family. He attended the local parochial school and then enrolled in St. Mary's College (Kansas), a Jesuit center, and completed two years of college. He learned shorthand and typing when working for the Associated Press. He transferred and completed college at The Catholic University of America in Washington, DC, earning a Bachelor of Arts and Master of Arts degrees, following acceptance of his thesis on animal research. He entered Georgetown Medical College and earned his MD in 1920. His first medical residency was at the Henry Ford Hospital in Detroit and then, in 1924, he began his second residency in psychiatry in Baltimore, Maryland, under Adolf Meyer (psychiatrist). During this period, he published his first paper, "Decerebrate Rigidity of the Sloth", in 1926.
He returned to Detroit in 1926 to begin his private psychiatric practice. In 1930, he began psychoanalytic training in Chicago, and in 1938, he became a training analyst. He was the first psychoanalyst in Detroit and helped to found the Detroit Psychoanalytic Society in 1940. He was president of the Society from 1940 to 1946. In 1945, during World War II, he was Chairman of a Commission to study combat exhaustion in Europe, and served as a consultant to the U.S. Army Surgeon General. After 1944, he was an associate professor at Wayne State University Medical School (1946-1950), director of the Veterans Psychiatric Clinic at the Harper Hospital (1946-1950), and the first visiting professor of psychiatry at the University of Michigan (1950-1954). In 1954, Bartemeier moved to Baltimore to head Seton Hospital, a private mental hospital, where he practiced until 1980.
Richter, Curt P., and Bartemeier, Leo H. "Decerebrate Rigidity of the Sloth", Brain, 49(2) (1926): 207–225.
Bartemeier, Leo H., and L. S. Kubie. "Combat Exhaustion", Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease 104(4) (July/December 1946): 358–389; and 104(5) (November 1946): 489–525.
Bartemeier, Leo H. "The Attitude of the Physician", JAMA 145(15) (April 14, 1951): 1122–1125.
Bartemeier, Leo H. "Presidential Address", The American Journal of Psychiatry 109(1) (1952): xiii-7.
Bartemeier, Leo H. "American Medicine and the Development of Psychiatry", JAMA 163(2) (1957): 95–97.
References
Andrews, Jonathan, et al. The History of Bethlem. London; New York: Routledge, 1997.
Braceland, F. J. "Leo H. Bartemeier, M.D., 1895-1982", American Journal of Psychiatry, 140 (May 1, 1983): 628–630.
Hunter, Richard A., and Ida Macalpine. Three Hundred Years of Psychiatry, 1535–1860: A History Presented in Selected English Texts. London: Oxford Univ. Press, 1963.
Martin, Peter A., A. W. Richard Sipe, and Gene L. Usdin, eds. A Physician in the General Practice of Psychiatry: The Selected Papers of Leo H. Bartemeier. New York: Brunner/Mazel, 1970.
Parry-Jones, William L. I. The Trade in Lunacy: A Study of Private Madhouses in England in the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1972.
Porter, Roy. Madness: A Brief History. Oxford; New York: Oxford University Press, 2002.
Scull, Andrew T. The Most Solitary of Afflictions: Madness and Society in Britain, 1700-1900. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1993.
Sipe, A. W. Richard. Hope: Psychiatry's Commitment: Papers Presented to Leo H. Bartemeier on the Occasion of his 75th Birthday. New York: Brunner/Mazel, 1970.