Venango County, Pennsylvania: Her Pioneers and People (Volume 1), Part 25

Author: Babcock, Charles A.
Publication date: 1879
Publisher:
Number of Pages:


USA > Pennsylvania > Venango County > Venango County, Pennsylvania: Her Pioneers and People (Volume 1) > Part 25


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


Dr. Peter Faulkner came to Franklin in 1820, a sturdy foe to disease and untiring in an ex- tended scope of labor ; he eventually made his home in Erie, living to an advanced age.


Dr. George R. Espey brought with him to Franklin, in 1820, the enviable distinction of an academic education and professional ad- vancement. Through personal and political popularity he was elected to the State legis- lature and later was made auditor general under Governor Porter. He later removed to Iowa, and engaged in merchandising.


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Hon. D. B. Goodwin, Oil City 1898


H. C. Dorworth, Oil City .. 1898


Jules A. C. Dubar, Titusville 1898


George Frank Brown, Titusville 1898


George B. Munn, Warren. . 19II


Neil W. McGill, Oil City. . 1910


G. G. Martin, Franklin


Harold T. Parker, Oil City 1911


John H. Mckinney, Franklin. 1912


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Dr. Nathaniel D. Snowden, of Harrisburg, located in Emlenton in 1828 and two years later removed to Franklin. Educated, compe- tent, courteous, he endeared himself to his friends and patients.


Dr. J. Bascom located in Franklin in 1831. He was highly recommended through former New York affiliations and left a reputable name as a man and physician.


Dr. William C. Evans, son of Col. John and Rachel (Connelly) Evans, was born at Frank- lin in 1829. He was a graduate of the Western Reserve Medical College, practiced for a time in Franklin, and afterward made his home at Erie. He married Kate, daughter of Luke Turner. His framed picture now hangs on the walls of the Franklin Masonic temple-he having had the distinction of being the first master of Myrtle Lodge.


In 1834 Dr. B. Gillett removed from Titus- ville to Franklin, where he continued a success- ful practice for nearly a half century.


Dr. George W. Connely read medicine with Dr. Gillett and practiced at Franklin several years, when he retired from the profession to engage in the work of commissioners' clerk and prothonotary.


Dr. Walter L. Whann practiced many years at Franklin. In the years 1866-67 he repre- sented the county in the State legislature. At an advanced age he removed to California, where his widow and daughter still reside.


Dr. S. G. Snowden, son of Dr. N. D. Snow- den, spent his life at Franklin; he was well versed in medicine and commanded a deserved- ly large practice.


Dr. Walter S. Welsh was born in Butler county. Pa. He was appointed a surgeon of West Virginia Infantry during the Civil war. His wife, née Martha Marshall, and daughter Sarah survive him.


Dr. D. C. Galbraith was born in Lawrence county in 1841. He served as a surgeon in General Butler's command during the Rebel- lion and located in Franklin in 1871. Two daughters, Mrs. F. L. Kahle and Mrs. L. J. Mackey, survive him.


Dr. John B. McMillan, son of William and Margaret (Robb) McMillan, was born in Mer- cer county. He began practice in 1850, being associated with his brother Dr. Andrew J. Mc- Millan at Clintonville. In 1851 he married Mary. daughter of Judge David Phipps. Sev- eral daughters survive him, some of whom are residents of the county. "A man he was to all the country dear."


Dr. Isaac St. Clair was for many years a practitioner at Franklin. the firm name of Drs.


Borland and St. Clair being widely and favor- ably known. Of his surviving family three sons, Samuel, Robert and Jesse, reside in Franklin.


During the elapsed years between 1820 and 1850 several physicians resided within the county, doubtless deserving of the encomiums attaching to the vocation of the Samaritan, but of whom we have scarcely other knowledge than that they had a being, Drs. Gilfillan, Downing, Follett, Powell, Davies, Wynne. The dust of lapsed years effaces the imprints of the past, and the compelling concernments of the present make us unmindful of our obli- gations to the future, hence the difficulty of securing adequate and reliable data from which to construct biographies. We make here brief personal mention of some well known Venan- go county practitioners.


PERSONAL MENTION OF WELL KNOWN PRACTITIONERS


DR. JOHN R. BORLAND, for sixty-five years a practicing physician, died at his home in Frank- lin, Pa., Dec. 26, 1916, in his eighty-ninth year. His health and activity up to almost the last day of his life had been remarkable. A farmer's son, at the age of sixteen he began reading textbooks on medicine. Following the procedure of those times, he entered the office of a distinguished practitioner, his mentor be- ing Dr. J. R. Andrews, of New Vernon, Pa. In 1851 he opened an office of his own in Har- lansburg, Pa., later taking a course at the Philadelphia University of Medicine and Sur- gery. The year of his graduation (1865) he entered business in Franklin with the late Dr. Isaac St. Clair as his partner. For one year, 1879. Dr. Borland occupied the chair of theory and practice in the Reform Medical College at Macon. Ga., and was chosen dean of the faculty. Finding the pay insufficient for the support of himself and family, at the end of the year he declined reelection and returned to Franklin. He continued his office practice up till almost the day of his death. Dr. Borland was noted for his interest in the activities of his day outside his profession, and often ad- dressed meetings on political or economic sub- jects. He was repeatedly the nominee of the Prohibition party for public office.


DR. JOHN B. GLENN was born Dec. 2. 1838, in French Creek township. Venango county. Pa. He was educated in the common schools of that time and in the Utica Academy. He taught district school a number of years : studied law a short time, at Franklin, Pa., in the office of


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Hon. S. C. T. Dodd in 1861 ; enlisted in the army June 1, 1861, Company C, 10th P. R. V. C., and served as a soldier until June 2, 1864, participating in most of the battles in which the regiment engaged during his three years' service. He studied medicine with Drs. Coch- ran and Johnston, of Cochranton, Pa .; at- tended medical lectures at the "Cleveland Medical College" at Cleveland, Ohio, in the winter of 1866-67; began the practice of medi- cine in March, 1867, with Dr. D. C. Galbraith at Waterloo, Pa. (now Polk) ; removed to Rockland, Pa., in the fall of 1867, and, after practicing there twenty years, removed to Franklin. He became a member of the Ve- nango County Medical Society in 1867 and has been a member since. He graduated from Jef- ferson Medical College, Philadelphia, in March, 1872, and is a life member of the Alumni Association of that college. He was appointed a member of the Board of Medical Examiners for Pensions by President Arthur and has served on that board since, being now an active member. He served twelve years as physician to the County poorhouse and eight years as jail physician at Franklin.


DR. ROBERT CRAWFORD, born May 16, 1815, at Omagh, County Tyrone, Ireland, came with his parents to America in 1821, and during his boyhood lived at Pittsburgh and Clinton. Allegheny Co., Pa. He acquired his early education in Pittsburgh and began to read medicine there with Dr. John Wilson, but being obliged to leave that city because he had stolen a body for purposes of dissection made his way on foot to Cincinnati, Ohio, where he continued his medical studies, attending lectures at the Ohio Medical College and study- ing with Dr. Gross. In May, 1837, he came to Cooperstown, Venango county, where he made his permanent home, and forty years later it was said of him that he had ridden more miles and visited more patients than any other physician in western Pennsylvania. He graduated from the Ohio Medical College in 1845, and received the degree of M. D. from the University of Pennsylvania in 1857; was a charter member of Venango County Medi- cal Society and served as president; was a prominent member and vice president of the Pennsylvania State Medical Society; and a life member of the American Medical Asso- ciation. For over twenty years he was censor of the medical department of Wooster Uni- versity, Ohio, and he served a considerable period as United States pension examining surgeon. He died in 1892.


DR. JOHN KELLY CRAWFORD, son of Dr. Robert Crawford, attended Allegheny College


and then studied medicine with his father, later entering the University of Pennsylvania. He commenced practice in Cooperstown, was associated with Dr. Jennings at Titusville, Pa., and eventually returned to the University of Pennsylvania, graduating therefrom in 1869. He has since practiced in Cooperstown, and is particularly well known as a surgeon. He has taken several post-graduate courses.


Dr. JOHN A. RITCHEY, son of Thomas and Mary (Calhoun) Ritchey, was born Nov. 28, 1840, in Armstrong county, Pa., and died May 4, 1906, at his home in Oil City, Pa. In 1861 he enlisted in Company K, 155th Regi- ment, Pennsylvania Volunteers. At the close of the war he studied medicine and was grad- uated from Jefferson Medical College, Phila- delphia, in 1871. He located in Oil City, where he practiced continuously, being for many years associated with Drs. C. W. Coul- ter and G. W. Magee under the firm name of Ritchey, Coulter & Magee. In late mid-life he married Hannah Etta (deceased), daugh- ter of Dr. Robert Crawford. One daughter, Miriam, now resides in the old home at Oil City. Dr. Ritchey's professional life was con- temporary with that of Drs. T. R. Egbert. F. W. Davis, T. C. Mccullough and A. F. Coope, all resident at Oil City, and all of marked medical ability and social standing.


DR. WILLIAM A. NICHOLSON, son of Thomas and Mary Jane (Carver) Nicholson, was born March 17. 1850, at Pleasant Grove, Belmont county, Ohio, and was reared in the adjoining county of Harrison, where he acquired his earlier education in the public schools of Harrisville. He completed his medical studies in the University of Michigan, from which he received the degree of M. D. March 29, 1871, on June 4, 1873, moving to Venango county, Pa. Resuming his studies in October, 1875, at New York, he graduated from Bellevue Hospi- tal Medical College March 1,, 1876, and interned in Mount Sinai Hospital as senior assistant on the house staff for one year. On May 6, 1886, he located permanently at Franklin. During the spring sessions of the Philadelphia Poly- clinic and College for Graduates, in 1886, 1890 and 1895, he reviewed his studies in general medicine at that institution. He is a member of the Venango County, Pennsylvania State and American Medical societies. He con- tributed this chapter to the history of Venango county, regretting his failure to supply the life- story of not a few others, dead and living. famed and inglorious, whose services "made drudgery divine."


GEORGE W. DILLE, M. D., was born Jan. I, 1849, at Mentor, Lake county, Ohio, but from


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childhood had lived at Cooperstown, Venango county, Pa., where he is an old-time medical practitioner. He went to the local schools and had a year's course in pharmacy at Ann Arbor, Mich., during the next five years being asso- ciated with his father, Dr. James Madison Dille. He then attended the University of Pennsylvania, at Philadelphia, until called home by his father's illness to take care of the practice. Later he entered Western Reserve University, at Cleveland, Ohio, graduating in 1872. He has been president ( 1881) and cen- sor ( 1882) of the County Medical Society, is a member of the Pennsylvania State Society and American Medical Association; was surgeon of the National Guard nine years; and for over twenty years has been a member of the school board.


DR. JOSEPH WILLIAM LEADENHAM, of Franklin, Pa., was born Jan. 16, 1855, at Weatherly, Pa., a son of Joseph W. and Eliza- beth (Roberts) Leadenham. He had for pre- ceptors Dr. J. B. Tweedle and Bellevue Hos- pital College. He graduated at Long Island College Hospital in June, 1876. His post- graduate studies were pursued at New York City; Brooklyn, N. Y .; Philadelphia, Pa., and London, England. On April 22, 1878, he mar- ried L. May Smith, at Knox, Pa. In 1910 he retired from active practice.


F. M. MCCLELLAND, M. D., of Utica, was born Dec. 1, 1859, in Mill Creek township, Mercer county, Pa., where he remained on his father's farm until twenty-five years old, study- ing in the local public schools, high school at Utica, McElwain Institute at New Lebanon, Mercer county, and Edinboro. He taught pub- lic school for seven years, beginning in 1878, read medicine with Dr. D. S. Brown of Utica. and in 1885 entered the medical department of Western Reserve University, in Ohio, graduat- ing M. D. in 1887, with class prize in materia medica and therapeutics. He has since prac- ticed at Utica. He has been a member of the board of health, is present secretary of the Venango County Medical Society, has been school director for over fifteen years, and is interested in farming and oil production.


THOMAS ARMSTRONG IRWIN, A. M., M. D., was born in Wolf Creek township, Mercer county, Pa., Oct. 13, 1862, son of Thomas S. and Dorothy Ellen ( Hosack ) Irwin. Attended the common schools in his native township, high school at Mercer, Pa., and Grove City College ; he received the honorary degree A. M. from Grove City College; entered Jefferson Medical College, 1885; graduated in medicine, Chicago Homeopathic Medical College, Feb. 21, 1888; located in Franklin, Pa., March 8,


1888. In general practice seven years ; special work in New York Post Graduate Hospital, 1895 ; married to Helen Isabell Patterson, Dec. 19, 1895; took passage for London Jan. I, 1896; King's College Hospital and St. Bar- tholomew's Hospital; graduated from London Homeopathic Hospital and London Throat Hospital ; from London went to Vienna, Aus- tria, taking up special instruction, Government Hospital, which contains five thousand beds. Returned to Philadelphia October, 1896, and entered Philadelphia Polyclinic Hospital and later the New York Polyclinic, graduating from both hospitals. Returning to Franklin, Pa., resumed active practice of medicine, making chronic diseases a specialty. He is a member of Venango County and Pennsylvania State Medical Societies and of the American Institute of Homeopathy.


GEORGE W. MAGEE, M. D., late of Oil City, was born July 27, 1864, in Plaingrove, Law- rence county. Pa. He attended public and private schools in that locality, graduated M. A. from Grove City College in 1886, and received his degree of M. D. from Western Pennsyl- vania Medical College March 28, 1889. He practiced three years at Seneca, Venango county, removing to Oil City in 1892 and form- ing a partnership with Drs. J. A. Ritchey and C. W. Coulter. Dr. Coulter retired in 1897, and the other two members practiced together until 1903, after which Dr. Magee had his own office at Oil City until his death, July 3, 1914. In 1911 studied abroad, including a special vacation course at the Edinburgh Post Grad- uate School, in connection with the University and Royal College. He was a member of the Oil City Medical Society; Venango County Medical Society; Pennsylvania State Society. and American Medical Association ; member of the board of examiners of the Oil City Train- ing School for Nurses; surgeon of the Erie railroad for over ten years; and a trustee of the Polk Institute for the Feeble Minded, hav- ing been appointed by more than one governor. He was president of the Oil City school board, and represented the district two terms in the State legislature.


S. G. FOSTER, M. D., was born at Belmont, Allegheny county, N. Y., son of Dr. D. H. Foster. He obtained an excellent literary edu- cation, graduated from medical college in 1891. and for a year practiced with his father in New York State, coming to Franklin, Pa., in 1892. He has taken several post-graduate courses in Philadelphia and New York City ; has been surgeon for the Erie Railroad Com- pany; belongs to the Erie and Pennsylvania Railroad Associations; is a member of the


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County and State Medical Societies, and of the American Medical Association. He has served in the city council and as mayor of Franklin, and has represented the district in the State legislature several years. In 1899 he was appointed commissary of the Second Brigade, N. G. P., and in 1902 was appointed aide de camp to the major general of the Penn- sylvania National Guard.


DR. LEWIS E. McBRIDE, son of Robert K. and Jane (Perry) McBride, was born in a house of sturdy log structure and pioneer architecture on his father's farm in Scrub- grass township, Venango Co., Pa. His literary education was obtained in local country schools and Grove City College. He taught school for a time and began his medical education in Western Pennsylvania Medical College, at Pittsburgh, in 1892, taking a final degree of M. D. from the Chicago Homeopathic College in 1895. He qualified to practice before the Pennsylvania State Board of Examiners, at Philadelphia, in the same year. He immedi- ately began the practice of general medicine at Franklin, Pa., specializing in surgery after two courses of surgical instruction in the New York Post Graduate School of Medicine. He is a member of the Clinical Congress of Sur- geons of North America, and of the Venango County, Pennsylvania State, and American Medical Societies. In 1895 he married Emma Lamberton, of Franklin, Pa. Two children, Lewis, Jr., and Margaret, grace the home at Elk and West Park streets.


JAMES MOORHEAD MURDOCH, M. D., born at Oswego, N. Y., March 31, 1869, son of James B. Murdoch, M. D., and Jennie (Moor- head) Murdoch. He was graduated from Yale with the degree of Ph. B., and from the West- ern Pennsylvania Medical College, where he received the degree of M. D. in 1892. He was graduated in medicine in 1892; appointed in- terne in Western Pennsylvania Hospital, Pitts- burgh, 1892-1893 ; assistant superintendent in Western Pennsylvania Hospital for the In- sane, Dixmont, Pa., 1893-1896; superintendent of State Institution for Feeble-Minded of Western Pennsylvania, Polk, Pa., since 1896. He was president of the National Association for the Study of the Feeble-Minded; and is a member of the County, State and National Medical Societies. He married at Harrisville, Pa., Oct. 27, 1900, Minnie McCoy Barnes, and they have one child, James Moorhead Mur- doch, Jr., born in 1901.


DR. JAMES B. SIGGINS, son of William and Jane (Hunter) Siggins, was born at West Hickory, Pa. He received his education in the common schools, the Edinboro State Normal


School, and Allegheny College, from which lat- ter institution he received the degree of bach- elor of arts in 1915. In 1883 he graduated from the medical department of the University of Michigan, being president of his class. In 1896 he located at Oil City, Pa., where he now resides. While a general practitioner, his services are largely given to the surgical branch of medicine. He is a member of the County, State and American Medical Societies.


DR. ROSE M. DUNN, a daughter of Edward S. and Sarah (Carmichael) Dunn, a native of Sandy Lake, Mercer Co., Pa., received the degrees of B. S. and M. A. from Grove City College in the year 1892. In 1895 she grad- uated from the Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania, at Philadelphia. She was an in- terne in West Philadelphia Hospital for Women eighteen months. In 1897 she located at Evansville, Ind., where she practiced about two years. In 1898 she located in Franklin, Pa., where she has since been in continuous practice. She is a member of the Venango County, Pennsylvania State, and American Medical Societies.


DR. ALEXANDER MCLEOD BROWN was born at Pleasantville, Pa., May 8, 1868, his parents being Alexander W. Brown and Minerva (Mitchell) Brown. He graduated from Am- herst College in 1892 with the degree of B. S. He was instructor in Lakewood School for Boys in 1892-93 ; also in Shadyside Academy, Pittsburgh, in 1893-94. He graduated as M. D. from the University of Pennsylvania in 1898: was an interne in Atlantic City Hospital and Altoona Hospital in 1898-99; began prac- tice at Franklin, Pa., in 1899. In 1905 he mar- ried Helen, daughter of Judge Christopher Heydrick. He has one son, Alexander, born in 1908. He is a member of the County, State and American Medical Associations.


DR. C. M. WILSON, son of John and Sarah A. Wilson, was born at Millbrook, Pa., Oct. 10, 1855. His earlier education was obtained at Millbrook high school. In 1876 he grad- uated at the Cincinnati College of Medicine and Surgery. In 1877 he located at Mechanics- ville, Pa., where he practiced twenty-three years, in 1900 removing to Franklin, his pres- ent residence. On June 7, 1883, he married Anna B. Shelley. In November, 1894, he be- gan a general review course at the New York Post Graduate School of Medicine. He is now an officially appointed surgeon for the Lake Shore & Michigan Southern and the Clarion & Lake Erie Railroad Companies. He is a member of the State, County and American Medical Societies.


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DR. HARRY S. STONE, son of Stephen and Mary E. Stone, was born at Franklin, Pa., April 2, 1875. His literary education was ob- tained in the public schools of Franklin and at Allegheny College, Meadville, Pa. In 1898 he received the degree of doctor of medicine from the University of the Northwest. He was licensed by the Pennsylvania State Board of Examiners in 1900 and began practice at Franklin in the same year. In 1906 he was married to Josephine Packard Leech. He is a member of the Venango County Medical Society and Pennsylvania State Medical So- ciety.


DR. FREDERICK W. BROWN, son of William and Mary Brown, was born at Troy, N. Y., his parents removing to Franklin when he was six years of age. Subsequent to an attendance in the public schools of Franklin, Pa., he entered Bucknell College,. graduating in 1896 with the degree of bachelor of science. In 1899 he received the degree of doctor of medi- cine from the University of Michigan. Return- ing to Bucknell as a teacher of mental philos- ophy, for one year, he was accorded the degree of master of science in 1900. Immediately thereafter he resumed his residence at Frank- lin, where he has since been in the continuous practice of his profession. In 1899 he married Emma Lee Allen. of Franklin. He has been twice elected to the mayoralty of the city, and is the present incumbent of that office. He served two years as president of the local board of education. He is now the medical member of the District Draft Board at Erie, Pa. He is a member of the County, State and American Medical Associations.


DR. HARRY F. McDOWELL, son of William D. and Anna (Flemming) McDowell, was born March 11, 1867, at Tarentum, Pa. In 1893 he received the degree of bachelor of arts from Princeton University, and in 1895 the degree of doctor of medicine from the Uni- versity of Pittsburgh. In 1895-96 he was a resident on the house staff of Western Penn- sylvania Hospital at Pittsburgh. In 1896 and 1897 he was a resident physician at Dixmont Hospital. During the years 1897 and 1901, in- clusive. he was a resident physician at the State Institution for the Feeble-Minded at Polk, Pa. He located at Franklin, Pa., in 1901, where he has since been in the practice of general medicine. In 1902 he married Edith Jones, of Franklin, Pa. He is a member of the County, State and American Medical Societies.


HENRY POWERS HAMMOND, M. D .. is of New England ancestry, being of the ninth gen- eration of Hammonds in this country. He was born at Carson City, Nevada, June 4, 1871.


In 1885 he was sent to preparatory school in California for a year, and in 1889 he graduated from the San Francisco high school. He entered the University of California, devot- ing special attention to chemistry, and spent a summer at the University of California Marine Laboratory. After three years he went to Stanford University to take advantage of their special facilities in physiology and histology, and graduated there with the degree of A. B. in 1893. After a year of post-graduate work there, during which he was also assistant in physiology and histology, he received the de- gree of A. M. and was awarded a graduate scholarship in physiology by the University of Chicago. The two summers while at Stan- ford University were spent at work at the Hop- kins Seaside Laboratory, Pacific Grove, Cal. He then filled the position of vice principal and teacher of science in the San Luis Obispo (Cal.) high school, leaving there to enter the Albany (N. Y.) Medical College in 1896, from which he received his M. D. degree in 1899, with the honor of alternate valedictorian. After graduation he went to New York, where he spent two years in special work and courses of about three months each with different men in several hospitals in the dif- ferent branches of medicine, and included a general course at the New York Polyclinic and New York Lying-in Hospital. In 1901 he located in Franklin, Pa., where he has prac- ticed since. He has been engaged in general practice, although his special training and study in surgery has led him to do considerable in that branch. He was married in 1902 to Florence Lyons Sprong, of Slingerlands, N. Y. He has been active in outside business and in the past has had considerable interest in musi- cal and athletic activity. He is a member of the County, State and American Medical Societies, the Psi Upsilon College and the Nu Sigma Nu Medical fraternities, and of the Wanango Country Club.




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