Historical encyclopedia of Illinois and history of Hancock County, Volume II, Part 32

Author: Bateman, Newton, 1822-1897. cn; Selby, Paul, 1825-1913. cn; Currey, J. Seymour (Josiah Seymour), 1844-1928. 4n; Scofield, Charles J. (Charles Josiah), 1853- 4n
Publication date: 1921
Publisher: Chicago : Munsell Pub. Co.
Number of Pages: 1174


USA > Illinois > Hancock County > Historical encyclopedia of Illinois and history of Hancock County, Volume II > Part 32


Note: The text from this book was generated using artificial intelligence so there may be some errors. The full pages can be found on Archive.org (link on the Part 1 page).


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1856-William Booz, M. D., a farmer and physician in Hancock county, residing at sec- tion 33, Carthage township, was among the highly honored citizens of Hancock county. He was a native of Kentucky, born in 1831. In 1836 the family removed to Morgan county, Illinois, and the following year to Hancock county. He began the study of medicine at Carthage with Dr. T. A. Barnes and in 1855 he entered the Iowa State University where he completed his course of study. Later he at- tended the Medical College at Keokuk; 1880 found him active and next to the longest in practice of any man in Hancock county. He


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was also a licensed minister of the Christian denomination.


1856-Dr. George Kirkpatrick, born in Alle- gheny county, Pennsylvania, in 1813, was edu- cated for his profession at Cincinnati. He en- gaged in the drug business in West Virginia, in which he was quite successful. In 1854 he moved to Henry county, Iowa, near Mt. Pleas- ant, where for two years he practiced medicine. He then moved to Carthage and commenced practice. He belonged to the Methodist church and was an honored member of the Masonic fraternity.


1857-Dr. Adam Spitler was born in Vir- ginia in 1816. Having chosen the medical pro- fession he entered the University of Kentucky from which he graduated in 1850. He then practiced in Upshur county, Virginia, about a dozen years, and in 1857 came to Carthage in this county, where he practiced his profes- sion for twenty-five years, enjoying a large practice, and having the esteem and confidence of the people. The last years of his life were passed in the enjoyment of deserved rest from professional labors, but in considerable activ- ity in church, educational and civic affairs. He was a faithful member of the Carthage M. E. Church. He died in 1890.


1860-Dr. John S. Gordon, a native of Greene county, Pennsylvania, was born in 1825. His ancestors were Scottish. He began studying medicine under Dr. Alexander Shaw, later of Des Moines, Iowa. He graduated at Jefferson Medical College, Philadelphia, and commenced practice at a point in Pilot Grove township, this county, in 1860. He was a marked suc- cess as a medical practitioner, as well as a good business man. He held considerable real estate in this and other counties and owned a choice residence in the northern part of the village of Burnside.


1861-Dr. Isaac Lockwood of Hickory Ridge, this county, was born in 1805 in western New ' York, removed to Pennsylvania in 1834 and to Cleveland in 1838, to Indiana in 1845, to Ken- tucky in 1857, to Iowa in 1859 and to Hancock county in 1861. He was of the Eclectic school of medicine. During his last years, owing to his advanced age, he did not do a general prac- tice, but paid special attention to the cure of cancers.


1863-Dr. Robert Sutton, born in England in 1842, emigrated with the family to America. His father was a Methodist preacher, locating


at Pittsburg, Pennsylvania, and followed this calling until 1858, when he became blind. Sub- sequently, he returned to Pittsburg, regained his eyesight, and in 1877 retired from the ministry. Robert, the doctor of whom we write, was edu- cated in Fairmont, West Virginia, and at Henry College, Illinois. He attended lectures at Chi- cago and graduated from the Eclectic Medical College, Cincinnati, in 1863. The same year he began the practice of medicine in Carthage.


1864-Dr. John G. Follin, physician and sur- geon, Plymouth, this county, was born in Ohio in 1825. He had but meager chances for an early education. He commenced the study of medi- cine in 1847, and in 1849 graduated from the College in Cleveland, Ohio. He also graduated at the Iowa State University in 1861. He com- menced practice of medicine in Missouri in 1850, and settled in Plymouth, this county, in 1864.


1864-Dr. William H. D. Noyes, a Civil War veteran, located in Carthage in the autumn of 1864. Dr. Noyes was born in 1834 in Bowling Green, Pike county, Missouri. When quite . young he removed, with his parents, to Pitts- field, Ill., where he grew to manhood. He re- ceived his education at Shurtleff College, Illi- mois. He graduated from St. Louis Medical College in 1861, just at the breaking out of the Civil War. He was appointed surgeon on the U. S. Steamer Southfield on the Atlantic coast. Later he served in the 5th St. General Hospital in St. Louis, and on the hospital steamer "City of Memphis," on the Mississippi river. Dr. Noyes was a well-read physician and practiced medicine most successfully in Carthage, and the surrounding country, for thirty years.


1866-Dr. R. M. Parker, a native of Madi- son county, New York, born in 1818, received his medical education in the Homeopathic school at Rochester, New York; moved to Cincinnati, Ohio, in 1845, and there built up a large medi- cal practice; in 1863 he located at St. Louis where he remained until 1866, when he removed to Nauvoo, Illinois. Afterwards he lived at Warsaw and Peoria.


1866-Dr. William D. Wade, physician and surgeon, was born in Schuyler county, Illinois, in 1841. He passed his boyhood days on a farm; commenced the study of medicine at the age of eighteen; graduated in Cincinnati, Ohio, in 1869; in 1864 commenced the practice of medicine at Doddsville, Illinois; permanently located at Plymouth in 1866. He built up an


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excellent practice and was highly esteemed in the community in which he lived and practiced.


1867-Dr. James F. Harper was born in York county, South Carolina, in 1819. With an elder brother he commenced studying medicine, and attended lectures on medicine at Memphis, Ten- nessee, in 1846-47. Later he practiced in Ten- nessee until the breaking out of the Civil War. He had a large practice here and was an honor to the profession.


1867-Dr. Sylvester L. Comer, born in 1830, came to Carthage with his parents when he was only a child. Aside from his schooling here and at Jacksonville, Illinois, he attended Medical College at Chicago and at Keokuk, Iowa. During the Civil War he was Surgeon in the Keokuk hospital. After the war ended he came to this county and continued in prac- tice until his death in 1879.


1870-Dr. James H. Callahan, physician, was born in Adams county, Illinois; attended a course of medical lectures at Rush Medical College, Chicago ; entered Bellevue College, New York, from which he graduated in 1870; moved to Carthage in the autumn of 1870 and opened an oflice there and was accounted among the best doctors in the city for many years.


1871-Dr. William T. Hannan, physician, was born in Wood county, Ohio, in 1839; commenced the battle of life unaided by friends or for- tune, but through his own industry and hard labor he succeeded in taking charge of an academy in Coles county, when only seventeen years of age; read law one year, and com- menced reading medicine. When the Civil War cloud hung heavy over the land, he enlisted in company D, Fourth Illinois volunteer in- fantry and was severely wounded on the Gas- conade river in Missouri, while out on picket duty, by a minnie-ball through his foot and two bayonet thrusts in his body. He studied medi- cine with Dr. Corkins of Liberty, Adams county, and attended lectures at Ann Arbor, Michigan. In 1869 he received a diploma from the Iowa University. He instituted a class in anatomy in that school and remained there four years. He first began practice at Denver, Hancock county, and in 1871 moved to Carthage.


1872-Dr. Henry Disse, physician and sur- geon, was born in Germany in 1828. He was educated in medicine in Berlin University. In 1853 he, with others, started for South America. After one year of travel he returned to Ger- many, and in 1854 came to the United States.


At first he settled at Hamilton, Ohio, where he practiced medicine until 1855, when he went to St. Louis and there continued in the prac- tice. In 1872 le came to Illinois, locating at Nauvoo, this county. He owned a fine grape vineyard at Nauvoo, where very choice varieties of grapes were annually produced.


1872-Dr. R. W. Barr, physician, was born in Wood county, Ohio, in 1847; was a soldier for two years in the Civil War, in company A, Fourteenth Ohio regiment; was taken prisoner of war in the famous Shenandoah Valley and held as such one year; for three months was kept in that famous prison known as "Libby" at Richmond, Virginia. He was a graduate of Keokuk Medical College and first practiced at Ferris, Hancock county.


1875-Dr. T. J. Dodge, who claimed to be a "Magnetic Healer," was born in Fulton county, Illinois, in 1844. He was an infidel in his youth, but in 1860 was converted. He was a retail dealer for a few years, and afterwards en- gaged as an evangelist, traveling for six years as a Baptist minister and claiming to have great success. In 1875 he concluded that he had a "healing gift," and claimed that he fre- quently healed persons instantaneously while in church. In 1878 he entered into company with Dr. Ringland in the Riverside Institute. His first case of alleged cure at this Institute was a case of apoplexy of several years standing, which he claims to have cured in less than five minutes. He was a powerful man-weighing 310 pounds.


1875-Dr. George M. Kellogg, born in Western New York in 1830, received his collegiate edu- cation at Oberlin College, Ohio, then entered the Ohio Medical College, Cincinnati. He be- gan the practice of his profession at Cincinnati. He spent the years 1857-58 in Minnesota and the following year located at Keokuk, Iowa. At the opening of the Civil War he enlisted as a surgeon in the army. At the close of that conflict he returned to Keokuk and again prac- ticed medicine. In the spring of 1875 he re- moved to Carthage and soon had an excellent practice.


1876-Dr. L. C. Ford studied medicine at the College of Physicians and Surgeons, Keokuk, Iowa, his native place, and began his medical practice in that city in 1875, locating at Nau- voo in 1876, where he built up a large prac- tice. The Doctor's father laid out Ford's Addi- tion to Keokuk, and was city treasurer and a


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HISTORY OF HANCOCK COUNTY


prominent banker of the city. The Doctor was among the incorporators of the Keokuk College of Physicians and Surgeons and was a protes- sor in that institution. The Doctor's mother was the first white child born in the city of Keokuk.


1876-Dr. J. W. Burton, a physician of Bent- ley, was born in North Carolina in 1847. In his youth and young manhood he worked on a farm, was a wagonmaker and blacksmith. He took up medicine after the Civil War and attended Washington University, Baltimore, where he graduated in 1872, but had practiced three years before that event. In 1876 he came . to Bentley and soon built up an excellent prac- tice.


1877 -. Dr. William E. H. Lemon, physician and surgeon, was born in Pennsylvania in 1848. He commenced the practice of medicine in this state at Jacksonville in 1868, but the date of his final graduation was 1871. In 1877 he came to Augusta and soon commanded a good prac- tice.


1877-Dr. W. S. Hendricks, physician of St. Mary's village, this county, was born in Kell- tucky, in 1851; was brought to this county in 1852: commenced the study of medicine in 1869; studied and taught school for five years; gradu- ated at the Keokuk Medical College in 1875; settled in Hancock county in 1877. He owned several lots and buildings and conducted a gro- cery store at St. Mary's and was also the post- master of that village for a number of years.


1877-Dr. Virgil Kingsley, physician and sur- geon at Tioga, this county, was born in Han- cock county in 1852 in the old Montebello House near Hamilton. He graduated at the Keokuk Medical College in 1877, and immediately com- menced practice at Tioga. He was also inter- ested in the collection of geological specimens.


1878-Dr. H. H. Black, physician, was born in Kentucky in 1840. He graduated at North- western Christian University (now Butler) with honor. He commenced his practice of medicine in Indianapolis, Indiana, after the close of the Civil War, in which he served as a soldier. Later he came to Hancock county, Illinois, and settled at Denver.


1878-Dr. R. C. Halladay, a native of Mc- Donough county, was born in 1852. He com- menced the study of medicine in McDonough county, attended medical school at St. Louis in 1873-74, and attended the Keokuk Medical College, from which he graduated in 1878. He


commenced the practice of medicine at Elm Tree, Hancock county, where he resided until the spring of 1880, when he removed to Car- thage, associating himself with William T. Han- nan.


1878-Dr. J. R. Kelly, physician and surgeon of Kensington, Adams county, also practiced much over the line in Hancock county. In 1872 he graduated at Ann Arbor, Michigan. In 1878 he settled at Augusta, this county, and there soon enjoyed a lucrative practice.


1878-Dr. Elmer D. Olmstead, physician of Plymouth, this county, was born in 1848 in New York state; commenced the study of medicine in 1872; graduated in 1877; came to Plymouth in 1878 and soon won public favor and had an excellent practice.


Dr. William Booz practiced in the terri- tory from Cedar Creek, near Fountain Green, Hancock county, to Bronson's Creek, near Plymouth, Hancock county, and from Hills Grove, McDonough county, to Bentley, Hancock county. At one time there were only twelve families in that large scope of country in which he did not practice. His daily rides averaged forty-five miles and on one occasion he at- tended the birth of four children on four suc- cessive nights in different locations, making him go ninety-six hours without sleep or rest. Mrs. Booz, the good wife who was his companion in life, for several years before they quit practice, used to drive with her husband daily and also was his medical assistant. They drove together in storm and sunshine, over bad roads and un- bridged streams. No night was too dark and stormy for them to respond to the sick-call though in many instances it might take them a dozen miles away from home. Dr. Booz died at his home in Carthage in February, 1901. He was known as a physician, preacher, philosopher and a friend to mankind.


EARLY DOCTORS AS VIEWED BY DR. BOOZ


At the Old Settlers reunion at Carthage in 1885, Dr. William Booz claimed that Isaac Gal- land was the first doctor who ever practiced in Hancock county, except a surgeon of the army post. He spoke of Dr. S. B. Mead, who located at Oliver's Settlement, near Augusta, who built a log cabin with two rooms in it, and was charged by the people with putting on too much style. He was a graduate of Yale College and died in the eighties, aged eighty-one


-


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HISTORY OF HANCOCK COUNTY


years. In 1834 Dr. John F. Charles settled in Carthage.


Dr. Marshall, he said, located at Carthage and was killed at the courthouse by Minor R. Deming.


Dr. George W. Hall. This able physician practiced medicine at Carthage for more than 20 years. He came to this city in the early fifties, and moved to St. Louis in the early seventies. He was not only eminent as a physi- cian, but he was also a great student of his- tory and general literature. At St. Louis he enjoyed a large practice. He was for many years a lecturer in the great St. Louis medi- cal school. When he died, some years ago, the body was brought to Carthage for burial in beautiful Moss Ridge Cemetery.


Dr. Josiah Joplin Crawford. Dr. Crawford was born in Kentucky in 1832. He came with his parents to Carthage in 1850. Although only 18 years old, he had chosen medicine as his profession, and had studied under Dr. Josiah Joplin before leaving Kentucky. He took the course at the then popular St. Louis medical school. Those who knew this young man have told the writer that he had unusual aptitude for his profession and enjoyed remarkable suc- cess during his brief practice. Of great physi- cal strength, he nevertheless succumbed to typhoid in November, 1856, at the early age of 24. James B. Crawford of Carthage is his brother, and Charles J. Scofield of Carthage and Timothy J. Scofield of Chicago are his nepliews, each wearing as his middle name one of the given names of the beloved uncle. Dr. J. J. Crawford is not to be confused with an- other Dr. Crawford, who came to Carthage from Kentucky during the Civil War, whose irregularities and eccentricities were barely atoned for by his superior genius.


OTHER PHYSICIANS


There are physicians not named in this chap- ter who practiced in this county, but who moved away or died before the law requiring registra- tion was passed, and as to whom available data are not at this time accessible.


PHYSICIANS PRACTICING IN HANCOCK COUNTY IN 1919


Augusta-Drs. Earl Cooper, Jas. P. Ellis, Chal- mer R. Hecox. Basco-Dr. I. F. Stowe. Bent-


ley-R. F. Sheets. Bowen-Drs. H. R. Folcke- mer, D. W. Humphrey. Burnside-Dr. F. A. Hanson. Carthage-C. L. Ferris, W. P. Fra- zier, J. T. Jenkins, L. C. Knight, S. M. Parr, G. E. Pumphrey. Dallas City-Drs. H. V. Pres- cott, W. H. Scott. Denver-Dr. E. H. Wade. Elvaston-Dr. W. C. Runyon. Ferris-Drs. A. L. Casburn, B. Kelly. Fountain Green-A. W. Bouseman. Hamilton-Drs. J. A. Miller, J. C. Taylor. La Harpe-Drs. J. C. Ash, B. F. Bea- com, I. M. Martin, L. J. Rhea, Jr. Nauvoo --- Drs. W. M. Haggett, G. W. Rudolphi. Plymouth -Drs. W. L. Irwin, T. J. McDaniel, W. O. Tuck. Tioga-Drs. Albert Garver, J. A. Heit- man. Warsaw-Drs. P. D. Gaunt, J. E. John- ston, DeWitt Loomis, R. R. Loomis, S. E. Matz- ke, John Miller, C. A. Warner. West Point- Drs. J. R. Bryant, C. W. Gillham.


OSTEOPATHS PRACTISING IN HANCOCK COUNTY IN 1919


Augusta-A. O. Howd. Carthage-Drs. W. A. Blackwell, Katharine Cherrill, H. J. Elsea. La Harpe-Barker & Barker.


REGISTERED PHYSICIANS OF THE COUNTY


On July 1, 1877, an Act of the General As- sembly of the State went into effect, which Act was entitled, "An Act to regulate the practice of medicine in the State of Illinois." That act has been re-enacted with various changes from time to time, but certain provisions have re- mained practically the same from the year 1877, such as the requirement that every person prac- ticing medicine, in any of its departments, shall possess the qualifications required by the act, and that every such person must procure a certificate from the proper authorities, author- izing him to practice medicine in the State, and that this certificate must be recorded in the office of the County Clerk in the county in which he resides.


Hence, it is possible to give a correct list of those who have thus been licensed and who have practiced medicine in this county since this law became effective in 1877. But there is no reliable record of those who practiced medi- cine here prior to 1877, but have not practiced here since that year.


The following is a list of all physicians whose certificates have been recorded in this county, giving, as far as shown by the records, the reg-


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HISTORY OF HANCOCK COUNTY


istry, date, name, location, school of medicine, college attended, age at time of registry, and date of graduation.


1878-James S. Akins, Hickory Ridge, Ill .; eclectic course at Cincinnati; age, 38; gradu- ated 1870.


1879-J. J. M. Augear, Ft. Madison, Iowa; regular course at Rush, Chicago; age, 54; gradu- ated 1860.


1900-John C. Ash, LaHarpe, III .; regular course at Rush, Chicago; age, 31; graduated 1899.


1900-B. W. Allen.


1900-F. S. Alger, Bentley, Ill. ; regular course at Keokuk; age, 22; graduated 1900.


1906-Ira Sankey Abphanalp, course at Mar- ion-Sims; age, 27; graduated 1906.


1913-Samuel Duff Anderson, course at Uni- versity of Medicine of Kansas City; age, 44; graduated 1908.


1877-Jolın K. Boude, Carthage, Ill .; regular course at University of Pennsylvania; age, 45; graduated 1857.


1877-John W. Burton, Bentley, Ill .; regular course at Washington University, Baltimore ; age, 30; graduated 1872.


1877-John A. Barr, Burnside, Ill .; regular course at Keokuk and Jefferson Medical; age, 28; graduated 1875 and 1877.


1877-Wm. Booz, Middle Creek, Ill .; regular course at Keokuk; age, 47; graduated 1877.


1877-Thomas H. Boscow, Warsaw, Ill. ; eclec- tic course ; age, 58; 35 years' practice in Illinois.


1878-Robert W. Barr, Ferris, Ill .; regular course ; age, 31.


1878 Henry H. Black, Denver, Ill .; regular course Indiana Medical College; age, 37; gradu- ated 1878.


1878-Walton Bancroft, Keokuk, Iowa; homeopathic course at Homeopathic Medical, Missouri ; age, 50; graduated 1860.


1878-Benj. F. Black, Dallas City, Ill .; regu- lar course at Long Island; age, 24; graduated 1876.


1878-Charles P. Buckner, Disco, Ill .; regu- lar course ; age, 36.


1878-Thomas G. Benson, Elderville, Ill .; ec- lectic course; age, 61.


1879-D. F. Burton; regular course at Rush, Chicago, 1878.


1880-Alfred J. Baxter, Nauvoo, Ill .; regular course at Keokuk; age, 25; graduated 1880.


1883-Calvin S. Bishop, Ferris, Ill .; regular course at Keokuk ; age, 28; graduated 1881.


1883-W. F. Burg, Carthage, Ill. ; homeopathic course at Hahnemann Medical ; age, 25; gradu- ated 1881.


1883-Chias. C. Browning, Denver, Ill. ; regular course at University of Missouri ; age, 22; grad- uated 1883.


1884-John Blevins, Ferris, Ill .; regular course at American Medical ; age, 47; graduated 1881,


1886-John R. Bryant, West Point, Ill .; regu- lar course at Quincy Medical; age, 23; gradu- ated 1885.


1890-Edward V. Brown, LaCrosse, Ill .; regu- lar course at Keokuk; age, 33; graduated 188S.


1891-L. T. Beemer, Quincy, Ill .; botanic course ; age, 70; 20 years' practice in Illinois.


1892-John Alex. Bortz, Nauvoo, Ill .; regular course at Keokuk ; age, 27; graduated 1892.


1893-Ira 'Alfred Botts, Plymouth, Ill .; regu- lar course at Northwestern University; age, 23; graduated 1893.


1893-A. M. Bartholomew, Tioga, Ill .; regular course at Keokuk; age, 49; graduated 1887.


1895-S. J. Bassett; regular course; age, 50; 12 years' practice in Illinois.


1896-Gerrit Judd Bennett, regular course at Kansas City Medical; graduated 1895.


1898-Dora Mae Bower; course at Keokuk ; graduated 1898.


1898-William A. Brownfield; course at Keo- kuk ; graduated 1895.


1901-James Harvey Bradfield ; regular course at Chicago College of Physicians and Surgeons; age, 25; graduated 1901.


1902-Jesse Smith Barker, LaHarpe, Ill .; regular and osteopathic course; age, 21.


1904-Wm. Blender, Carthage, Ill .; regular course at Keokuk; age, 21; graduated 1904.


1904-James B. Bright; regular course at Marion-Sims; age, 28; graduated 1904.


1904-J. · Will Barker; osteopathic course.


1905-Edward W. Buksmaster ; regular course at St. Louis; age, 26; graduated 1905.


1906-Albert James Boren ; regular course at Washington, University of St. Louis; age, 24; graduated 1906.


1906-Martin P. Browning.


1908-James W. Blan; regular course at Keokuk ; age, 21; graduated 1902.


1909-Fred Blankner; course at Marion-Sims Medical; graduated 1896.


1910-Albert William Bouseman; course at Barnes Medical; age, 29; graduated 1910.


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Isaac W. Cassel.


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HISTORY OF HANCOCK COUNTY


1903-Carl E. Dudley; course at St. Louis Medical; graduated 1898.


1909-Maud L. Dunn; regular course at Uni- versity of Chicago ; age, 35; graduated 1905.


1910-E. Bentley Dennis ; course at Dearborn Medical ; age, 29; graduated 1905.


1910-Frank Henry Dillon; regular course at St. Louis; age, 23; graduated 1909.


1913-Valentine Doering ; course at St. Louis University ; age, 30; graduated 1911.


1878-David Ellis, Augusta, Ill .; regular course at University of Louisville; age, 51; graduated 1852.


1878-James Easton, Lima, Ill .; regular course ; age, 36.


1878-Henry E. Elliott, Pulaski, Ill .; regular course ; age, 56.


1880-L. Erler, Warsaw, Ill .; regular course at American Medical College; age, 43; gradu- ated 1877.


1880-Benj. C. Edwards, Bowensburg, Ill .; eclectic course at Medical School of Columbus, Ohio.


1882-I. F. Edgerton, Keokuk, Iowa; eclectic course ; age, 66.


1887-Percy Vernon Ellis, Augusta, Ill .; regu- lar course at University of Louisville; age, 23; graduated 1886.


1890-James P. Ellis, Augusta, Ill .; regular course at Chicago College of Physicians and Surgeons ; graduated 1890.


1895-Henry Ehrlich; homeopathic course at Hahnemann Medical College; graduated 1887.


189S-Warren Franklin Eckles, La Harpe, Ill. ; regular course at Keokuk; age, 24; graduated 189S.


1902-Lena K. Elsea, La Harpe, Ill .; regular and osteopathic course; age, 27.


1904-Homer J. Elsea, Carthage, Ill .; osteo- pathic course at Kirksville, Missouri; age, 26.


1904-Ralph Tony Edwards ; regular course at John Hopkins; age, 32; graduated 1904.


1877-L. T. Ferris, Fountain Green, Ill .; regu- lar course; age, 59.


1878-John G. Follin, Plymouth, Ill .; regular course at Keokuk; age, 52; graduated 1861.


1878-B. W. Forsee, Lima, Ill. ; regular course ; age, 39.


1878-Chas. L. Ferris, Fountain Green, Ill .; regular course at Rush, Chicago ; age, 24; gradu- ated 1878.


1878 Lewis C. Ford, Nauvoo, Ill .; regular course ; age, 28.


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1880-C. S. Forney, Adrian, Ill .; regular course at Keokuk ; age, 27 ; graduated 1880.


1888-W. B. Forden, Hamilton, Ill .; eclectic course at Medical Institute of Cincinnati ; age, 53; graduated 1881.




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