USA > New Jersey > Middlesex County > History of Union and Middlesex Counties, New Jersey with Biographical Sketches of many of their Pioneers and Prominent Men > Part 30
USA > New Jersey > Union County > History of Union and Middlesex Counties, New Jersey with Biographical Sketches of many of their Pioneers and Prominent Men > Part 30
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HISTORY OF UNION AND MIDDLESEX COUNTIES, NEW JERSEY.
olutionary army, viz. : Maurice, major and aide-de- camp to Gen. Devine, and subsequently to Gen. Wayne; he was killed at Fort Lee. William, major in 1775, and lieutenant-colonel in 1777; resigned in 1780; lawyer, lived at Morristown. Also a young son who was killed at the early age of eighteen while storming a fort." 1
JOHN HOLE .- This physician practiced in Wash- ington Valley, between New Providence and West- field, Union Co. Ile married (1) Hannah Clark, (2) Merey, daughter of Jenny Ludlow. His children were Jeremiah, Mary, Elizabeth, and Jane. The last named married Jacob Mulford. The graves of these children of Dr. Hole are marked by brown headstones, with their inscriptions, in the Presbyte- rian churchyard at New Providence.
MOSES JAQUES was a practicing physician in Rah- way, and a native of that town. He was born Nov. 7, 1770, received his early education at the common schools, studied with Dr. Halsted, of Elizabethtown, and attended medical lectures under Dr. Rush in Philadelphia, where he also practiced for a time. His health failing he abandoned the practice of medi- cine, sold out to Dr. Ralph Marsh, of Rahway, and embarked in mercantile business in New York, in which he was very successful. While a member of the Legislature from Essex County in 1800 he was a : engaged in farm labor.
tice of medicine in Elizabethtown in April, 1789. In March following he became a member of the New Jersey Medical Society, upon presenting testimonials of his attainments from European schools in which he was educated.
In February, 1790, he opened a medical school at Elizabethtown, advertising a complete course of medical lectures to be given at four o'clock P.M., from May 10th to July 25th ; charge, five pounds. In his advertisement he speaks of himself as "Sur- geon and Fellow of the Lyceum Medicum Londi- nense."
FREDERICK A. KINCH, M.D .- Thomas Kinch was of English lineage, and resided in New York City. Ile was united in marriage to a lady of Welsh parent- age, and had children,-William, Mary Ann, Charles, Frederick A., and Eliza, but three of whom survive. Their son, Frederick A., who is the subject of this biography, was born in New York City, March 12, 1822. Both parents having died during his child- hood, his early life was passed under the guardian- ship of a paternal uncle, William Kinch. He was placed at a boarding-school at Bloomingdale, and remained until the age of thirteen, after which he repaired to Orange County. Here, until his ma- jority was attained, he attended school and also
warm supporter of a law for the gradual emancipa- tion of slaves, if not its author, which brought upon him the censure of his constituents, as many of them, including his father, as well as himself, were slave- holders. He was also a member of the Constitutional Convention of 1844 for the county of Middlesex, : his studies, and also, attending lectures at the Medi- having removed from New York to Woodbridge in 1837. He continued to reside there till his death, in August, 1858, in his eighty-eighth year.
EPHRAIM LORING .- Surgeon's mate, Third Battal- ion, Second Establishment, Col. Elias Dayton, Nov. 28, 1776; surgeon's mate, Third Regiment, Continen- tal army, Sept. 26, 1780. After the war Dr. Loring practiced in the vicinity of New Providence. He married Sally, eldest daughter of Dr. Philemon El- mer. His name appears on the original list of mem- bers of the Society of the Cincinnati of New Jersey, and in 1786 is enrolled among the members of the Presbyterian Church of New Brunswick.
Having an ambition to acquire a profession he de- termined upon the study of medicine, and placed him- self under the tutelage of Dr. William C. Terry and Dr. Daniel T. Graham, of Mount Hope, Orange Co., N. Y. He remained here four years, pursuing cal Department of the University of the City of New York. He was licensed to practice by the New York State Medical Society, by the Orange County Medi- cal Society, and by the New Jersey State Medical So- ciety. In September, 1849, he chose Westfield as a promising field of professional labor, and has since that date been a resident of the place and an active practitioner. The doctor was married Feb. 6, 1850, to Miss Harriet, daughter of Col. William S. and Elizabeth Little, of Mount IIope, Orange Co., N. Y. They have two sons, Charles Augustus, a practicing physician in New York City, and Freder- ick A., who is at present attending lectures in the Medical Department of Columbia College. Dr. Kineh is in politics a Republican, and although de- barred by the demands of his profession from leisure for participation in public affairs, has served as a member of the township committee of Westfield, as " township clerk, and superintendent of schools. He is
PAUL MICHEAU .- Several ancestors of Dr. Paul Micheau were of the same name, residing on Staten Island. One was sheriff of Richmond County in 1736, and died while a member of the Colonial As- sembly in 1851. His son Paul was a man of popular- ity and influence, and was a member of the first and third Provincial Congresses. He died in 1790. He , a Presbyterian in his religious convictions, and an was the father of Paul J. and Benjamin Micheau, of elder in the Presbyterian Church at Westfield, of which both Mrs. Kinch and their sons are mem- bers. Staten Island, the latter supposed to have been the father of the doctor. Dr. Micheau removed from Richmond, Staten Island, and commenced the prac-
The doctor is a member of the Union County Med- ical Society, and also of the New Jersey State Medi- cal Society.
1 Hatfield's Elizabeth, Wickes, p. 278.
diary Può is Phíad"
127
THE MEDICAL PROFESSION.
ENOCH MORE was a contemporary of Drs. Stephen Camp, Morse, and Griffith in Rahway in the prac- tice of medicine. He belonged to the Society of Friends.
LEWIS MORGAN commenced practice in Rahway a year or two before the death of Dr. John Griffith. He was admitted to the State Medical Society in 1787, and practiced first in Somerset and Burlington Counties. He is reputed to have been a surgeon in the British service during the Revolution, although that is doubted on good authority. Dr. Wickes gives, upon the authority of Dr. H. H. James, of Rahway, and in his own words, the following anecdote of Dr. Morgan :
"For a short time there was a Dr. Rodgers in the town, who was a competitor in practice, whom Dr. Morgan very much disliked. During a freshet in the river Dr. Rodgers attempted to cross the bridge, which was overflowed with water. Not being aware that the centre of the bridge was gone, horse, sulky, and rider all went in together.
" The horse was need to swimming, and the doctor held hie place in his sulky, heading his horse down the stream. The whole town gathered on the bank to see the doctor drown. Among the spectators was Dr. Morgan, who, seeing the sitnation, ordered his horse and sulky and ful- lowed The river road to see the result. About a mile below Dr. Rodgers brought his horse to the bank and came out sitting in his sulky all right. His horse was very much exhausted, and he was very wet. Dr. Morgan, pitying his condition, invited him to sil on the foot-rest of his sulky that he might take him home quickly, as hi- horse was fresh. Rodgers replied, 'Nu, sir ; I had a - hard ride, but I'll go back the way I came before I eit at your feet,' **
Dr. Morgan died Jan. 12, 1821, in the sixty-fourth year of his age.
ISAAC MORSE, to whom reference has heretofore been made, was a son of Joseph Morse, a surveyor and land conveyancer. His ancestors were among the earliest settlers of Elizabethtown, where he was born in 1758, and died there in 1825, his remains being buried in the cemetery of the First Presby- terian Church. Dr. Clark's "History of Physicians of Essex County" contains many anecdotes of him, to which the reader is referred. "His ruling trait was facetiousness and humor," says Dr. Wilkes. "He was a man of much originality and great professional activity and usefulness, enjoying a very large prac- tice." His fun and humor did more for his patients, it has been remarked, than his learning or his drugs, a statement which will not be discredited by any one who knows the effect of a genial presence in a sick room.
GEORGE PUGH was a physician residing in or near Elizabethtown. Joined the medical society in 1770. His will, probated Dec. 26, 1785, describes him as " Late of the Island of Jamaica, now Physician of Elizabethtown." Little is known of him beyond these few facts.
CHARLES W. RODGERS, the hero of the incident re- lated in the memoir of Dr. Lewis Morgan (which see), resided only a short time in Rahway, and then re- moved to the West. When it was known that he was about to leave town a rich patient whom he had treated successfully called on him to procure the pro-
scription for the remedy which had been so effectual in his case. The doctor said, "Certainly, but it will cost you ten dollars." The applicant objected at first, but remembering his former pains, he reluctantly paid the ten dollars. The doctor took his pencil and wrote "Cataria." Afterwards, of course, he found out that he had paid ten dollars for the word " Cat- nip." 1
GEORGE Ross was an early physician and druggist of Elizabethtown, probably a descendant of the first settler of that name, 1665-66. The New Jersey Jour- nal, Feb. 2, 1796, contains the following advertise- ment :
" Drugs, medicals, chemicals, etc., being a fresh importation from Eu- rope, to be sold hy Doctors Ross and Williamson, opposite the Church in Eliz'town."
Little is known of Dr. Ross. It is thought that he left the town soon after the above advertisement. He had been a trustee of the Academy in 1789 and librarian of the Library Association in 1792, the year it was formed.
MATTHIAS HAMPTON WILLIAMSON, referred to in the foregoing notice, was a son of William, a descend- ant of the first settler of that namne in Elizabethtown, 1725, and of Lydia, daughter of Jonathan Hampton. He married his cousin, Frances H. Joust. Of his early life and education no positive records exist, although it is highly supposed that he studied med- icine in Philadelphia. He was a member of the medical society of that city when he wrote his thesis for a degree in May, 1793. The title, somewhat ab- breviated, was as follows: "Dissertation on the Scar- let Fever, attended with an ulcerated sore throat, sub- mitted to the Rev. John Ewing, S. T. D. Provost, . .. for the degree of Doctor of Medicine, . . . on the tenth of May, A.D. 1793, by Matthias H. Wil- liamson, member of the American Medical Society of Philadelphia." This dissertation was published, and is in the valuable library of Dr. Samuel S. Purple, of the city of New York. Dr. Williamson attained a high reputation as a practitioner. He was practicing in Elizabethtown and also keeping a drug-store in part- nership with Dr. Ross in 1796.
DOCTORS WINANS .- Two physicians of this name practiced in Elizabethtown before the Revolution. They were probably descendants of John Winans. Of the first we have not the Christian name, but simply "Dr. Winans." The other, William Winans, was a surgeon in the First Regiment of Essex, July 15, 1776, and surgeon of Col. Thomas' battalion de- tached militia, July 24, 1776. March 17, 1781, a meeting was advertised in the New Jersey Journal "at the Inn of Doctor William Winans," Elizabeth- town.
SAMUEL SWAIN, born at Scotch Plains, N. J., in 1771, died at Bound Brook in 1844, and was buried in the vault of Jacob DeGroat, whose daughter he
1 Wickes' Hist. N. J. Med., p. 375.
128
HISTORY OF UNION AND MIDDLESEX COUNTIES, NEW JERSEY.
married. He practiced at Seotel Plains and oeea- sionally at Plainfield.
EDWARD AUGUSTUS DARCY first lived in Morris County, whence he came to Plainfield in 1821. He was a brother of Dr. John Darcy of Newark (who died there Oct. 22, 1863), and removed to Illinois in 1834, where he died.
STEPHEN MANNING, born in Westfield, now town- ship of Plainfield, received the degree of Doctor of Medicine at the Medical College of Philadelphia, and practiced a short time in Monmonth County. He re- moved to Plainfield, but soon after died, in 1821 or 1822.
JOHN CRAIG was a well-known physician and drug- gist at Plainfield, where he died Oet. 15, 1872. He was a descendant of Andrew Craige, who came with the Scotch immigration in Governor Laurie's time. It was at his house that George Keith, as missionary of the "Society for the Propagation of the Gospel in Foreign Parts," preached the first Episcopal sermon in the old borough of Elizabeth in November, 1703, on which occasion he baptized Mr. Craig's four chil- dren. Andrew Craige was admitted an Associate in 1699-1700, and drew lot No. 162 of the one-hundred- aere lots on the southwest side of the Rahway River and on the lower side of the " Noramehegan branch" ( Westfield township). His name appears in the Town Book as early as Nov. 28, 1729. He died Oct. 1, 1738.
There have been several physicians in the family, among them Dr. David Craig, born in 1753, died in 1781, and his son, Dr. David S. Craig, born in 1774, and practiced till his death at Rahway.
John Craig settled in Plainfield in 1822, and was associated with his younger brother, Lewis, who came soon after, in the drug-store on the corner of Front and Cherry Streets. For many years Dr. Craig dis- pensed drugs and visited the sick far and near. His name was known all over the land, and for miles he traveled by night and day visiting the sick. He was the friend of the poor, and seldom refused to eall upon patients who were unable to pay for his ser- vices. Towards the latter part of his life he became quite wealthy through the rise of the value of his real estate in the city of Plainfield. His remains lie in the Union Cemetery, where a block of granite close to the main foot-walk tells that here lies the body of John Craig, M.D.
ALLEN WILSON practiced in Plainfield at an early time. Little is known of the history of his life beyond the fact that he died in the year 1837.
CHARLES H. STILLMAN, physician and ex-mayor of Plainfield, was born in Schenectady, N. Y., Jan. 25, 1817. The family is of English descent, the an- eestor having emigrated to Massachusetts in 1680. His father, Joseph Stillman, was widely known as a ship-builder. Dr. Stillman graduated at Union Col- lege in 1835, and in the year 1840 took his medical degree at the College of Physicians and Surgeons in New York.
In 1842 he removed to Plainfield, N. J., where he has since resided, actively engaged in the practice of his profession. His advance to the front rank of medical practitioners was rapid and brilliant. He was for many years surgeon of the Central Railroad of New Jersey, and his great skill as a surgeon has won the cordial recognition not only of the commu- nity at large but of all in the profession. Next to his devotion to his profession is his practical earnest- ness in forwarding the educational interests of the community in which he resides (see schools). He was a member of the State Medical Society, and presi- dent of the Medical Society of Union County. He was also a director of the City National Bank, of the Washington Fire Insurance Company, the City Savings Institute, and various other corporations. In 1872 he was nominated by both political parties for the office of mayor of Plainfield, and elected to the position, and administered the duties of the office for two years. Ile was married in 1842 to Mary E. Starr, of Hamilton, New York. His eldest son, Thomas B. Stillman, was for a time assistant professor of chemistry in Stevens Institute, IIoboken, N. J .; his second son, Charles F. Stillnan, M.D., medical examiner in Mutual Life Insurance Company, now practicing in city of New York ; his third, William M. Stillman, counselor-of-law in city of Plainfield.
Medical Societies .- THE NEW JERSEY MEDICAL SOCIETY was the first institution of the kind organ- ized in the colonies. In view of the low state of medicine in the province in 1766, and the difficulties and discouragements which stood in the way of its advancement, a number of physicians were led to consider the project of forming a voluntary associa- tion of the principal practitioners, for the purpose of elevating the standard of the profession and of pro- moting its general usefulness to the public. In order to eall together those who might be disposed to take an interest in the scheme the following notice was published in the New York Mercury :
" A considerable number of the practitioners of physic and surgery in East New Jersey having agreed to form a society for their mmtual improvement, the advancement of the profession, and promotion of the public goud, and desirous of extending as much as possible the useful- ness of their scheme, and of cultivating the utmost harmony and friendship with their brethren, hereby request and invite every gentle- man of the profession in the province that may approve of their design to attend their first meeting, which will be held at Mr. Duff's, in the city of New Brunswick, on Wednesday, the 23d of July, at which time and place the constitution and regulations of the society are to be set- tled and subscribed.
" EAST NEW JERSEY, June 27, 1766."
Sixteen physicians responded to this call, met at New Brunswick on the appointed day, and adopted a constitution ample in its aim and purpose as that of medical societies of the present day. The constitu- tion was signed by fourteen physicians, whose names were as follows :
Robert MeKean. Chris. Manlove. John Cochran.
Moses Bloomfield. Jumes Gilliland. William Burnett.
John C., Elma
Levis Ovako Om HQ
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THE MEDICAL PROFESSION.
Jona. Dayton. Thomas Wiggins.
William Adaole. Bero. Budd.
Lawrence V. Dewere. John Griffith. Isaac Harris. Joseph Sackett, Jr.
Three of these original members, viz .: Drs. Bur- net, Dayton, and Griffith, were residents and practi- tioners in what is now Union County. Dr. Robert Mckean was the first president. Charles Manlove was the first secretary of the society. Those who have served in the capacity of president and secretary of the society from Union County have been the fol- lowing :
PRESIDENTS.
1766. Robert Mckean.
1783. Thomas Barber.
1767-68. William Buroet.
1784. Lawrence Vao Derveer.
1769. John Coclirau.
1785. Moses Bloomfield.
1770. Nathaniel Scudder.
1786. William Burnet.
1771. Isaac Smith.
1787. Jonathan Elmer.
1772. James Newell.
1788. Jables Stratton.
1773. Absalonı Bainbridge.
1789. Moses Scott.
1774. Thomas Wiggio.
1790. John Griffith.
1775. Hezekiah Stites.
1791. Lewis Dunham.
1781. James Newell.
1792-93. Isaac Harris.
1782. John Beatty. 1794-95. James Newell.
SECRETARIES.
1766. Chris. Manlove.
1767. Moses Bloomfield.
1775. James Newell. 1781-82. Thomas Wiggins. 1783-84. Lewis Dunham.
1768. Isaac Smith.
1769. Nathaniel Sendder.
1785. John Beatty.
1770. Samnel Kennedy.
1786. Thomas G. Haight.
1771. Absalom Bainbridge.
1787. Thomae Henderson.
1772. Thomas Wiggies.
1788. John A. Scudder.
1773. Nathaniel Scudder.
1789-92. Francie Bower Sayre.
1774. Hezekiah Stitee.
1793-95. James Anderson.
The society continued to hold its regular semi-an- nual meetings either at New Brunswick, Princeton, or Burlington till 1775, when they were discontinued on account of the war.
A number of the members of the State Medical Society took an early and decided part in the strug- gle for independence. Dr. Wickes gives us the names of seventy-two physicians of New Jersey who were connected with offices under the govern- ment during and after the Revolution, forty-four of whom were collegiate graduates from the following institutions : Princeton, twenty-seven ; Yale, five; Kings, two; Queens, two; University of Pennsyl- vania, one ; Harvard, one ; Foreign, six.
At the close of the war, in November, 1781, the society resumed its meetings, which were sustained with regularity until 1795. Ninety-one members had been enrolled since its organization. From this latter date there was a suspension of its meetings until 1807, owing to the organization of another society in Eastern New Jersey, through the influence of Dr. Paul Micheau, of Elizabethtown. In 1807 the society resumed its functions under its charter of 1790, and in December, 1807, an act to ratify its pro- ceedings was passed by the Legislature.
The feature of district medical societies, organized in the respective counties and auxiliary to the State society, was adopted upon its reorganization in 1807,
and has tended greatly to the strength and perma- nence of the parent institution.
The physicians who were instrumental in forming the District Medical Society of the County of Union are named in the following :
COMMISSION.
" STATE OF NEW JERSEY, 88.
" By the Medical Society of New Jersey, to S. Abernethy, Wm. M. Whitehead, D. W. C. Hongh, L. W. Oakley, Lonie Brann, Elihn B. Sil- vers, Thos. L. Hough, J. S. Martin, Wm. Gale, J. A. Petrie, Thomas Terrill, Jr., Eugene Wiley, P. U. Selover, J. O. Pinneo, Alonzo Pettit, Physicians and Surgeons, greeting :
" Your application requesting that a District Medical Society might be instituted, consisting of Drs. S. Abernethy, Wm. M. Whitehead, and others, above mentioned, in the County of Union, was duly considered at a meeting of the Medical Society of New Jersey, held at Jersey City, the 26th day of May, Anno Domini 1869, and it was thereupon voted that your request be granted, provided that this grant is not to be ex- tended beyond the period of one year.
"In testimony whereof the President, pursuant to the aforesaid vote of the Society, subscribed his name and affixed the seal of the Corpora- tion at Orange, this 27th day of May, Anno Domini 1869.
[L. S.] " WM. PIERSON, President.
" Attested :
" WM. PIERSON, JR., Rec. Sec."
The objects of the society are briefly stated in the constitution, as follows :
1st. To advance the science and art of medicine and surgery.
2d. To promote harmony among medical men, and maintain high the standard of professional character.
The regular meetings of the society are held quar- terly on the second Wednesday in April, July, Oc- tober, and January. :
The following-named persons have been the officers of the society since its organization :
PRESIDENTS.
1869-71. Samuel Abernethy.
1877-78. Rohert Westcott.
1871-73. Job S. Crane. 1878-79. H. D. Burlingham.
1873-74. F. A. Kioch.
1879-80. E. B. Silvers.
1874-75. L. W. Oakley.
1880-81. Alonzo Pettit.
1875-76. James S. Green.
1881-82. John B. Probasco.
1876-77. Charles H. Stillman.
VICE-PRESIDENTS.
1869-71. J. S Martin. 1877-78. Il. D. Burlingham.
1871-73. D. W. C. Ilough.
1878-79. E. B. Silvere.
1873-74. L. W. Oakley.
1879-80. Alonzo Pettit.
1874-75. E. B. Silvers.
1880-81. John B. Probasco.
1875-76. Charles H. Stillman.
1881-82. Joseph H. Grier.
1876-77. Robert Wescott.
SECRETARIES.
1869-72. Thomas Terrill, Jr.
1879-81. Charles T. Stillman.
1872-74. H. P. Geib. 1881-82. William A. M. Mack.
1874-79. T. N. Mclean.
REPORTERS.
1869-72. William M. Whitehead. 1875-79. 11. 11. Jamiee.
1872-73. C. H. Stillman. 1879-80. M. B. Long.
1873-75. T. N McLean. 1881-82. Victor Mravlag.
TREASURERS.
1869-70. F. A. Kinch.
1870-72. Alonzo Pettit. 1872-73. F. A. Kinch.
1873-74. Alonzo Pettit.
1874-82. J. A. Coles.
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HISTORY OF UNION AND MIDDLESEX COUNTIES, NEW JERSEY.
MEMBERS.
Lewis W. Oakley, M.D., Coll. P. and S., N. Y., 1852. D. W. C. Ilongh, M.D., Jeff. Med. Coll., 1847.
James S. Green, M.D., Univ. Penn., 1851.
F. A. Kinch, M.D., State Med. Soc., 1850. H. H. James, M.D., Univ. Penn., 1863. Joseph H. Grier, M.D., Univ. Penn., 1861. P. U. Selover, M.D., N. Y. Univ., 1864. Louis Braun, M.D., Univ. Friedburg, Baden, 1850. Robert Wescott, M.D., Univ. Penn., 1853. E. B. Silvers, M.D., Coll. P. and S., N. Y., 1852.
C. A. Stillmann, M.D., Coll. P. and S., N. Y., 1840. .
T. L. Hough, M.D., Jeff. Med. Coll., 1856. J. Otis Pinneo, M.D., Coll. P. and S., N. Y., 1865. William Gale, M.D., Long Island Hos. Coll., 1869.
J. S. Brosnan, M.D., Royal Coll. Phys., Dublin, 1867.
Alonzo Pettit, M.D., Univ. Buffalo, 1867.
Thomas Terrill, M.D., Coll. P. and S., N. Y., 1867.
Job S. Crane, M.D., Coll. P. and S., N. Y., 1849. T. N. McLean, M.D., Yale, 1871.
H. D. Burlingham, M.D., Coll. P and S., N. Y., 1857.
J. A. Coles, M.D., Coll. P. and S., N. Y., 1868.
J. R. McConnell, M.D., Starling Med. Coll., 1868.
J. B. Probasco, M.D., Univ. Penn., 1869.
T. H. Tomlinson, M.D., Univ. Penu., 1859. William K. Gray, M.D., N. Y. Univ., 1868. F. B. Gillette, M D., Univ. Penn., 1856. C. A. Kiuch, M.D., Coll. P. and S., N. Y., 1873. David Schleimer, M.D., Georgetown, D. C., 1873.
William C. Boone, M.D., Univ. Maryland, 1872. Lewis Drake, M D., Univ. Penn., 1829.
C. F. Stillman, M.D., Coll. P. and S., N. Y., 1876. Charles A llart, M.D., N. Y. Med. Coll., 1865.
J. S. Payne, M.D., N. Y. Univ., 1863.
M. B. Long, M.D., Coll. P. and S., N. Y., 1875.
J. B. Harrison, M.D., Coll. P. and S., N. Y., 1876. Victor Mravlag, M.D., Vienna Univ., 1872.
Henry G. Fithian, M.D., Univ. Penn., 1877. George W. Endicott, M.D., Jeff. Med. Coll., 1875. H. Page Hlougli, M.D., Jeff. Med. Coll., 1878.
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