The history of Camden county, New Jersey, Part 38

Author: Prowell, George Reeser, 1849-1928
Publication date: 1886
Publisher: Philadelphia : Richards
Number of Pages: 1220


USA > New Jersey > Camden County > The history of Camden county, New Jersey > Part 38


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).


Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6 | Part 7 | Part 8 | Part 9 | Part 10 | Part 11 | Part 12 | Part 13 | Part 14 | Part 15 | Part 16 | Part 17 | Part 18 | Part 19 | Part 20 | Part 21 | Part 22 | Part 23 | Part 24 | Part 25 | Part 26 | Part 27 | Part 28 | Part 29 | Part 30 | Part 31 | Part 32 | Part 33 | Part 34 | Part 35 | Part 36 | Part 37 | Part 38 | Part 39 | Part 40 | Part 41 | Part 42 | Part 43 | Part 44 | Part 45 | Part 46 | Part 47 | Part 48 | Part 49 | Part 50 | Part 51 | Part 52 | Part 53 | Part 54 | Part 55 | Part 56 | Part 57 | Part 58 | Part 59 | Part 60 | Part 61 | Part 62 | Part 63 | Part 64 | Part 65 | Part 66 | Part 67 | Part 68 | Part 69 | Part 70 | Part 71 | Part 72 | Part 73 | Part 74 | Part 75 | Part 76 | Part 77 | Part 78 | Part 79 | Part 80 | Part 81 | Part 82 | Part 83 | Part 84 | Part 85 | Part 86 | Part 87 | Part 88 | Part 89 | Part 90 | Part 91 | Part 92 | Part 93 | Part 94 | Part 95 | Part 96 | Part 97 | Part 98 | Part 99 | Part 100 | Part 101 | Part 102 | Part 103 | Part 104 | Part 105 | Part 106 | Part 107 | Part 108 | Part 109 | Part 110 | Part 111 | Part 112 | Part 113 | Part 114 | Part 115 | Part 116 | Part 117 | Part 118 | Part 119 | Part 120 | Part 121 | Part 122 | Part 123 | Part 124 | Part 125 | Part 126 | Part 127 | Part 128 | Part 129 | Part 130 | Part 131 | Part 132 | Part 133 | Part 134


Dr. Hendry married, June 7, 1798, Eliz- abeth, daughter of Dr. Charles Duffield, of Philadelphia, and had seven daughters and


243


A HISTORY OF MEDICINE AND MEDICAL MEN.


two sons,-Charles H. and Bowman Hendry, both physicians in Camden County.


Cotemporary with the early portion of Dr. Hendry's career, and located at Colestown, three miles distant from him, was Dr. Sanı- uel Bloomfield, who lived in a small hip-roof frame house on the road from Haddonfield to Moorestown, just north of the church. This house was torn down a few years since. Dr. Bloomfield, born in 1756, was the second son of Dr. Moses Bloomfield, of Woodbridge, N. J., and younger brother of Joseph, who hecame Governor of New Jersey. In 1790 the doctor applied for admission to the State Society, but did not press his application, and his name was dropped. It is not known how long he followed his profession here, but his practice must have been limited in consequence of his convivial habits, and the great popularity of his competitor. He died in 1806, and was buried in St. Mary's 1 Churchyard, now Colestown Cemetery. Two of his sons who survived him fell in the War of 1812.


There is no record of any physician hav- ing settled in Camden prior to the nineteenth century. Its proximity to Philadelphia seems to have made the village dependent upon its neighbor for its medical attendance. It is probable that some doctor may have attempted to practice there for a short time, but, not succeeding, moved away, leaving no trace behind him, not even as much as did a Dr. Ellis, who, in 1809, had an office on Market Street, above Second. The only fact preserved of him is that in this year he dressed the wounded forearm of a child, but first bled the patient in the other arm before binding up the wound, yet the child recovered.


Dr. Samuel Harris was the first physician to settle permanently in Camden. As he was the connecting link between the old- fashioned practitioners of the last century and the association known as the Camden County


Medical Society he is worthy of especial consideration. His father was Dr. Isaac Harris, born in 1741, who studied medicine and practiced near Quibbletown, Piscataway township, Middlesex County, N. J. From there he removed to Pittsgrove, Salem County, about 1771. Here he pursued his profession successfully for many years, and died in 1808. He possessed a good medieal library. While a resident in Middlesex he was one of the pioneers in the organization of the New Jersey State Medical Society, being the sixth signer to the "Instruments of Association," and became its president in 1792. In the Revolutionary War he was commissioned surgeon of General New- combe's brigade. His brother, Dr. Jacob Harris, also a surgeon in the same army, dressed the wounds of Count Donop, the Hessian commander, who was defeated and mortally wounded at the battle of Red Bank, and who died in an adjacent farm-house.2 Another brother, Dr. Benjamin Harris, practiced and died in Pittsgrove. Dr. Isaac Harris had two wives. The first was Mar- garet Pierson, of Morris or Essex County ; the second, Anna, daughter of Alexander Moore, of Bridgeton, Cumberland County. By the first he had four children ; one, Isaac Jr., studied medicine and practiced in Sa- lem County. By the second wife he had nine children, one of whom, Samuel, is now under consideration.


Dr. Samuel Harris was born January 6, 1781. He studied medicine with his father. It is said that he attended medical lectures at the University of Pennsylvania, but his name does not appear in the list of graduates of that institution. He began the practice of medicine in Philadelphia, at the northeast corner of Fourth Street and Willing's Alley, but indorsing for a relative, he lost all his property. He then determined to settle in Camden, and grow up with the place. He


1 Hon. John Clement's MSS.


2 Wicke's History of Medicine in New Jersey.


.


241


HISTORY OF .CAMDEN COUNTY, NEW JERSEY.


located in 1811 in the old brick building on Cooper Street, above Front. While he prac- ticed medicine in Camden he still retained some of his patients in Philadelphia, and to visit them was compelled to cross the river in a row-boat, the only means of crossing at that time. In 1825 he purchased the large rough-cast honse at the southeast corner of Secoud and Cooper Streets, which had been built by Edward Sharp. Here he kept his office and a small stock of drugs, it being at that time the only place in Camden where medicine could be purchased. Dr. Harris was a polished gentleman and a man of ability, and had a large practice in the town and in the surrounding country. He held to the religious faith of the Protestant Epis- copal Church, and was one of the founders of St. Paul's Church in 1830, and was a vestryman in it until his death. Dr. Harris married Anna, daughter of John and Keziah Kay, and granddaughter of Captain Joseph Thorne, of the army of the Revolution. He died November 25, 1843, and is buried in Newtown Cemetery. His widow died July 16, 1868. He had no children. He bequeathed his estate, which was large, to his adopted daughter and wife's niece, Miriam Kay Clement (now wife of Dr. Charles D. Maxwell, United States Navy), to niece Harriet (wife of Colonel Robert M. Arm- strong), to niece Anna M. (wife of Richard Wells) and to niece Eliza T. (wife of Rev. Thomas Ammerman).


In 1812 Dr. Francis Hover settled in Camden, but remained only a short time. He was a native of Salem County and received his license to practice medicine June 4, 1794. He began his professional career in his native town ; from thence he removed to near Swedesboro', and then to Camden. From the latter place he returned to Swedes- boro'. In 1821 he changed his residence to Smyrna, Kent County, Del., where he died May 29, 1832.1


1 S. Wickes' History of Medicine in New Jersey.


For a few years Dr. John A. Elkinton was a co-laborer with Dr. Bowman Hendry in Haddonfield. He was a native of Port Elizabeth, Cumberland County, N. J., born October 19, 1801, and was the son of John and Rhoda Elkinton. Selecting the pro- fession of medicine, he attended lectures at the University of Pennsylvania, from which he graduated in 1822. He commenced the practice of medicine in Haddonfield, where he remained until 1828. Being an energetic and active man, this country place did not offer a wide enough field for him, so he removed to Manayunk, a suburb of Philadel- phia, where he resided for a short time. In the same year he moved into the city, where he continued in his profession. In the year 1832 he took an active part in combating the epidemic of cholera. He like- wise became interested in public affairs. For many years he was a member of the Phila- delphia Board of Health. In 1838 he was the projector of the Monument Cemetery in that city, and owned the ground npon which it was laid out. Afterward he was elected an alderman, when he gradually relinquished the practice of medicine. On October 5, 1830, he married Ann De Lamater. He died, December 15, 1853.


Dr. Edward Edwards Gongh practiced medicine in Tansboro' between 1826 and 1835. He was a native of Shropshire, Eng- land, in which country he acquired some knowledge of medicine. In 1824 he lived in Philadelphia, and there he married his wife, Elizabeth Dick. In 1826 he settled in Tansboro', and commenced the practice of medicine, his visits extending throughout the surrounding country. While living there he attended medical lectures at the Jefferson Medical College, but he never gradnated. He died in Tansboro' in 1835. His widow is still living, in Indiana.


CAMDEN COUNTY MEDICAL SOCIETY .- Between the years 1844 and 1846 the phy- sicians of Camden County began to feel the


245


A HISTORY OF MEDICINE AND MEDICAL MEN.


need of a closer union. Scattered as they were, they but occasionally met ; sometimes they would pass each other on the road ; sometimes, where their practices overlapped, they would meet each other at a patient's house in mutual consultation.' To accom- plish this desired object, a petition was drawn up and signed by the legal practitioners in the county for presentation to the New Jer- sey State Medical Society, asking for author- ity to organize a society. As the law then stood, no one was legally qualified to practice medicine, or capable of joining a medical so- ciety in New Jersey, unless he had passed an examination before a board of censors of the State Society, and received a license signed by the board.


. In the year 1846 the State Society met at New Brunswick. The petition of the phy- sicians in Camden County being laid before it, they issued a commission, dated May 12, 1846, authorizing the following legally qual- ified persons to form a society, namely : Drs. Jacob P. Thornton and Charles D. Hendry, of Haddonfield ; Dr. James C. Risley, of Berlin ; and Drs. Richard M. Cooper, Oth- niel H. Taylor and Isaac S. Mulford, of Caniden. In accordance with this authority, the above-named gentlemen, with the excep- tion of Dr. Mulford, who was detained by sickness, met at the hotel of Joseph C. Shivers, in Haddonfield, on August 14, 1846, and organized a society under the title of " The District Medical Society of the County of Camden, in the State of New Jersey." Dr. James C. Risley was elected president ; Dr. Othniel H. Taylor, vice-pres- ident ; Dr. Richard M. Cooper, secretary, and Dr. Jacob P. Thornton, treasurer. A con- stitution and by-laws were adopted similar to those of the State Society. At this meeting Drs. Thornton, Hendry, Taylor and Cooper were elected delegates to the State Society. A notice of the formation of the society was


1 Dr. R. M. Cooper's MSS., History of Camden County Society.


ordered to be published in the county news- papers.


Haddonfield was thus honored by having the first medical society in the county organ- ized within its limits. The rules of the State Society directed that county societies should hold their meetings at the county-seat, yet Haddonfield was not the seat of justice. The county of Camden had, in 1844, been set off from Gloucester County, and the courts of law were held in Camden, and the public records kept there, but the county- town had not been selected. The Legisla- ture had authorized an election to decide upon a permanent place for the public build- ings. The people were divided upon the subject. A most violent opposition had sprung up in the townships against their location in Camden, the majority of the people of the former desiring them to be built at Long-a-coming (now Berlin). It was during this contest that the society or- ganized, and Drs. Hendry and Risley, who had charge of the petition, had inserted in the commission the name of Haddonfield. The second meeting, which had been left subject to the call of the president, was also held in Haddonfield on March 30, 1847. At this meeting Dr. Mulford raised the question of the legality of the place of meeting, and a committee was thereupon appointed to lay the matter before the State Society, who de- cided that these meetings, although irregular, were not illegal, as the county-seat had not yet been definitely fixed) but directed that hereafter the meetings should be held in Cam- den.


The third meeting of the society was a special one, called by the president, and was held on June 15, 1847, at English's Hotel, which was situated at the northeast corner of Cooper and Point Streets, a building which has since been torn down and dwellings erected upon the site. At this time it was decided to hold semi-annual meeting's: the annual one on the third Tuesday in June,


31


246


HISTORY OF CAMDEN COUNTY, NEW JERSEY.


and the semi-annual on the third Tuesday in December. These were always punctually held until 1852, when, upon the motion of Dr. A. D. Woodruff, of Haddonfield, the semi-annual meeting in December was dis- continued. On June 18, 1867, Dr. R. M. Cooper, chairman of the committee on by- laws, reported that the State Society having changed their day of assembling from Jan- nary to the third Tuesday in May, it would necessitate the election of delegates to that society eleven months before it met. The Camden County Society then changed the time of the annual meeting from June to the second Tuesday in May, and this rule still continues. For twenty years the semi-annual meetings had been discontinued, when, in May, 1873, Dr. N. B. Jennings, of Had- donfield, moved that they should be resumed. This was approved, and the second Tuesday in November named as the time for holding them. As the society increased in numbers and its proceedings became more interesting, the propriety of holding more frequent meet- ings began to be disenssed, until, in 1884, Dr. E. L. B. Godfrey, of Camden, proposed a third meeting, on the second Tuesday in February of each year. This was adopted in the sueeeeding year.


At this, the third stated meeting of the society, in 1847, a resolution was passed that caused great excitement in the city and coun- ty of Camden. It read as follows:


" Resolved, That the names of all the regularly licensed practitioners in Camden County be pub- lished in one of the papers of the county, to- gether with the twelfth section of the law incor- porating the Medical Society of New Jersey."


This law imposed a fine and imprison- ment upon any one praetieing medicine in the State without a lieense from the State Society. The insertion of this in a county paper caused the gravest anxiety among the few irregular practitioners and their patrons, and provoked from Dr. Lorenzo F. Fisler a long communication in the Camden Demo-


ocrat. Dr. Fisler, who had been practicing medieine in Camden since 1837, had not joined in organizing the County Medical Society, nor had he taken any part in it. He was a man of more than ordinary ability, active in publie affairs and was at one time mayor of the city. He was a writer of considerable force. He took umbrage at be- ing inferentially placed in the illegal class, claiming that he had passed his examination before the board of censors of Salem County in 1825, and had received their certifieate therefor, but had never presented it to the State Society for a license, and that the doe- ument had been mislaid or lost. Upon this the Camden County Society made inquiry of Dr. Charles Haunah, of the board of censors of Salem County. He replied that he had been a member of every board that had ever met in the county, and that Dr. Fisler had never received a license from it. The latter immediately went down to Port Elizabeth, Cumberland County, his native place, and among some old papers of his father's found the missing certificate, with Dr. Hannah's name among the signatures. After the dis- covery of this document the society held a special meeting on September 2, 1847, and prepared an address to the public, explaining their reasons for falling into the error, and diselaiming any unfriendly feeling towards Dr. Fisler.1 Although the doctor obtained the required license from the State Society, he ever after held aloof from it, and never joined the Camden County Medical Society.


In the year 1816 the New Jersey State Medieal Society had obtained from the State a new charter, which gave them exclusive jurisdiction over the medical profession in it, with a power of license which alone qualified a person to legally practice medicine. In ac- eordanee with this enactment, the State So- eiety appointed boards of censors for differ-


1 Dr. R. M. Cooper's MSS , History Camden County Medical Society.


247


A HISTORY OF MEDICINE AND MEDICAL MEN.


ent districts. It was the duty of these boards to examine all applications for mem- bership in the society, and also to examine any one desiring a license to practice, as to his professional qualifications, and if he passed successfully to issue to him a certificate. No one, not even graduates of medical col- leges, was exempt from this examination, un- til the year 1851, when the Legislature passed an amendment to the act of 1816, authorizing the graduates of certain colleges, which were named, to practice medicine in New Jersey by merely exhibiting their diplomas to the president of the State Society, who thereupon was directed to give them a license, which was complete upon its being recorded in the clerk's office of the county wherein the recipient intended to practice, and upon the payment of a fee of five dollars. Du- ring the period between the organization of the Camden County Medical Society and the passage of this law its board of censors ex- amined thirteen physicians, some of whom were to practice elsewhere in New Jersey. Their names were,-


Examined. Name. Location.


1848. Dr. Bowman Hendry,


Camden County.


1848. Dr. A. Dickinson Woodruff, Camden County.


1848. Dr. Daniel M. Stout, Camden County.


1848. Dr. William Elmer,


Cumberland County.


1848. Dr. T. Barron Potter, Cumberland County.


1848. Dr. Theophilus Patterson, Salem County. 1848. Dr. Edward J. Record, Camden County. Hudson County. 1849. Dr. Theodore Varrick, 1849. Dr. John J. Jessup, Atlantic County. 1849. Dr. John W. Snowden, Camden County. 1850. Dr. Thomas F. Cullen, Camden County. 1850. Dr. Sylvester Birdsell, Camden County. Camden County.


1850. Dr. Jacob Grigg,


Another amendment was enacted hy the Legislature in 1854, which permitted a grad- uate of any medical college to practice medi- cine in the State by merely filing his diplo- ma in the clerk's office of the county in which he located. Upon the passage of this law the Camden County Society required, asan eligibility to membership, that the applicant should procure a diploma from the State So-


ciety. This rule continued in force until 1866, the centennial aniversary of the latter society, which had the year previous surren- dered its old charter aud obtained a new one which relinquished all powers of licensure. Since then and up to the present time any physician, a resident in the county one year, may apply for membership in the Camden County Medical Society. His application is referred to the board of censors, who report at the next meeting. If he is found to be of good moral character and possesses the professional qualifications required by the American Medical Association, he is recom- mended for election.


The constitution of the society provided that the officers should be elected annually. It was intended to re-elect yearly those who were first placed in office. Dr. Risley was continued as president until a special meet- ing in 1849, when his office was declared va- cant in consequence of a tardiness in settling his financial accounts with the society. Al- though these were afterwards satisfactorily adjusted, he withdrew from it, and Dr. Isaac S. Mulford was elected to fill the vacancy. Dr. O. H. Taylor, who was the first vice- president, and Dr. R. M. Cooper, the first secretary, were continued until 1850. Dr. Jacob P. Thornton was the first treasurer but he does not appear to have attended the meetings regularly, and in 1848 Dr. Cooper was elected to fill his place. At the meeting held in June, 1850, Dr. Bowman Hendry moved that the president and vice-president be eligible for election for only two years in succession and the by-laws were so amended. In June, 1854, the words "two (2) years in succession " were erased and "one year " substituted. This was done to open the of- ficos to new and younger members ; conse- quently, since that date these two officials have held their position for one year, a plan that has proved to be satisfactory and still continues. Dr. Cooper, the first secretary and treasurer, held these offices until 1852,


248


HISTORY OF CAMDEN COUNTY, NEW JERSEY.


when he was succeeded by Dr. Thomas F. Cullen, who occupied them for two years ; then Dr. Richard C. Dean filled them from 1855 to 1857; Dr. John V. Schenck, in 1858; and Dr. Henry Ackley from the latter date nntil 1861. At this time the society had be- come a permanent institution. It had never failed to hold a meeting at the appointed time. Valuable medical and historical pa- pers were accumulating and the want of a suitable person who would permanently take care of them was keenly felt. It was there- fore determined that while under the consti- tution the secretary must be elected annually, it would be well to re-elect him so long as he should satisfactorily perform his duties and would accept the office. Dr. H. Genet Taylor, a young graduate in medicine, who had joined the society the year previous, was elected, and has been continuously re-elected, faithfully performing the duties of his office for twenty-five years up to the present time. During the Civil War he was absent serving his country as surgeon in the Army of the Potomac in the years 1862 and 1863, and in 1865 he was president of the society, when his duties were performed by a secretary pro tempore. Dr. Taylor was treasurer as well as secretary until 1874, when the two offices were separated and Dr. Isaac B. Mulford was made treasurer. This he held until his death, in 1882, when Dr. Alexander Mecray, the present incumbent, was elected to fill the vacancy.


In a few years after the formation of the society there arose a need of collecting each year the medical history of the people and the hygienic condition of the county. At a meeting held June 18, 1852, Dr. Edward J. Record made a motion that a committee of three be appointed " to report of the diseases incident in the connty and also interesting cases that may come under their notice." The committee were Drs. O. H. Taylor, A. D. Woodruff and E. J. Record. At the next meeting, in 1853, the name of " Stand-


ing Committee" was given to it and each member was requested to transmit to the chairman of it any interesting cases occurring in his practice. Dr. O. H. Taylor was its first chairman. The members of this com- mittee were frequently changed, its number remaining the same until 1875, when it was increased to five members. In 1878. Dr. John W. Snowden was elected chair- man and has been continued until now.


The Camden County Medical Society is entitled to representation in the State Society by delegates to the number of three at large, and one additional for every ten members. It also sends delegates to the American Med- ical Association and to the neighboring dis- trict societies in this State.


One of the most interesting proceedings of the early days of the society was the ordering, in 1851, of an enumeration of all the physi- cians practicing in the county. The com- mittee appointed for that purpose reported at the meeting held June 15, 1852, that the total number was twenty-seven. Of these, one was a botanical, or herb doctor, who was not entitled to, nor did he claim, the privi- leges of an educated physician. Two were homœopaths, one of whom was a graduate of a regular college, and was a licentiate under the law of 1851. The remaining twenty- four were graduates of accepted medical col- leges, twenty-two of them holding licenses from the State Society, although five had ne- glected to register their names in the clerk's office, in accordance with the provisions of the new law. The names of all these doctors have not been preserved. In the year 1872 another census of the county was taken by direction of the society. A report made to it at the annual meeting held on the 14th of May, in that year, stated that the total num- ber of practicing physicians was fifty-three. Of this number, thirty-three were " regular graduates, practicing as such, one regular, but practicing homoeopathy at times." There were thirteen professed homœopaths and five


249


A HISTORY OF MEDICINE AND MEDICAL MEN.


eclectics. The regular physicians were lo- cated as follows: Twenty-one in Camden City, four in Haddonfield, three in Black- wood, three in Gloucester City, one near Waterford and one in Berlin.


The Camden County Medical Society has always taken an active interest in such pub- lic affairs as legitimately came within its province, and were calculated to be of bene- fit to the county or State, and has never failed to throw its influence in behalf of whatever might conduce to the public wel- fare. As early as 1854 Dr. John W. Snow- den introduced into the society a resolution "that the delegates of this society are hereby instructed to suggest at the next meeting of the State Society the propriety of an appli- cation to the next Legislature for such mod- ification of the present law as shall enforce the registration of all the marriages, births and deaths occurring in the State." This measure has since that time been acted upon by the Legislature of New Jersey, and an efficient system of recording these data is now in operation.


The next public event that aroused the society was the breaking out of the great Rebellion in 1861, and the calling for troops by the government. To this call the response was prompt. Of the eighteen physicians whose names were registered on the roll of its members at the close of the Civil War, five had enlisted in the service of their conntry : Doctors Richard C. Dean and Henry Ackley had entered the navy, Doctors H. Genet Taylor and Bowman Hendry in the army, and Dr. John R. Stevenson, in the Provost Marshal General's Department, all as sur- geons. The two in the navy were still on its rolls, having engaged for a life-service. The three who had been in the volunteer service all had honorable discharges.




Need help finding more records? Try our genealogical records directory which has more than 1 million sources to help you more easily locate the available records.