The Oslerian legacy in the Southern states.

Proc (Bayl Univ Med Cent)

Department of Medicine, Emory University School of MedicineAtlantaGeorgia.

Published: October 2019

In the pages of , in 1919, William Osler's colleague Lewellys Barker published a piece entitled "Osler and the South." Using glowing terms but with startling inaccuracy, Barker described Osler's relationship with the South and Southerners. Essentially, the brief communication was a happy birthday letter. If Osler had any thoughts on the Civil War, Reconstruction, or the Southern agrarian mindset, he never wrote them down, and a paucity of published information is available to support Barker's comments. Even though William Osler lived in Baltimore when he worked at Johns Hopkins, he was never particularly fond of that city. He rarely traveled further south. When Osler departed Baltimore for the Regius Professorship in England in 1905, H. L. Mencken eventually published an exquisitely written and fond remembrance of Osler. On several occasions when Osler did venture south, he left a momentous literary or academic footprint. He gave his famous address, "The Fevers of the South," at the American Medical Association meeting in Atlanta in 1896. From this oratory comes the iconic and oft-quoted line: "Humanity has but three great enemies: fever, famine, and war; of these by far the greatest, by far the most terrible, is fever." On another excursion, he and two colleagues traveled to the Dismal Swamp, in Old Comfort Point, Virginia. Osler's fascination with Thomas Moore's poem "The Lake of the Dismal Swamp" inspired the outing. During their lunch break, Osler composed a whimsical tale, intended for his son Revere, about the swamp. Osler wrote the story on blank pages in the back of a copy of . That particular volume came to rest in a library in Christ Church and, when discovered, the "added contents" were quite a philological mystery until a letter, written by T. B. Futcher, describing the visit to the swamp, illuminated the activities of that outing. Despite Osler's limited travels in the South, he left an Oslerian legacy there.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6794078PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/08998280.2019.1635631DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

oslerian legacy
8
south left
8
osler
7
legacy southern
4
southern states
4
states 1919
4
1919 william
4
osler's
4
william osler's
4
osler's colleague
4

Similar Publications

In the pages of , in 1919, William Osler's colleague Lewellys Barker published a piece entitled "Osler and the South." Using glowing terms but with startling inaccuracy, Barker described Osler's relationship with the South and Southerners. Essentially, the brief communication was a happy birthday letter.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

After graduating in medicine from the Edinburgh Extramural School of Medicine, William Keiller trained in obstetrics and became anatomy lecturer at the Edinburgh College of Medicine for Women, where he successfully devised and developed an anatomical curriculum. In 1891, Keiller was appointed as the Professor of anatomy at the state medical department of the University of Texas, at the age of 30. He built up a nationally recognised anatomy department, museum and teaching curriculum informed by his experience in Edinburgh.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A return to humane medicine: Osler's legacy.

Infez Med

September 2017

Institute of Bioethics and Medical Humanities, "A. Gemelli" School of Medicine, Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, Rome, Italy.

Sir William Osler is celebrated today not only for his contributions to the advancement of medical education, but also for the humanism he brought to the practice of medicine. He was a doctor whose bedside skills and manners were emulated, and can legitimately be called an infectious diseases specialist. Nonetheless, he was also a humanist in the broader sense of the term, a student of human affairs and human nature, who emphasised compassion for the individual.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Paul Bruce Beeson is a child of the American frontier, the younger son of a dedicated general practitioner. Dr. Beeson's adventure was academic medicine; he studied at McGill University, the University of Pennsylvania, the Rockefeller Hospital in New York, and the Peter Bent Brigham Hospital in Boston.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The Osler Club of London, 1928-38: young medical gentlemen, their heroes, liberal education, books, and other matters.

Can Bull Med Hist

March 1996

Department of Sociology, King's College, and Department of History of Medicine, University of Western Ontario, London, Ontario.

This study focuses on the interpretation of the Oslerian legacy reflected in the activities and intellectual emphases of the Osler Club of London during its first 10 years. It argues that the founders and early members of the Club were neophytes in a medical elite, pursuing ideals which were congenial to a subgroup of that elite and in which the Club members had been raised and educated. These ideals may be summed up in the expression "the nineteenth-century, British medical gentleman.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!