Monday, August 30, 2021

A Little MedChi Sketch

I have a friend whose hobby is to do quick ink and watercolor sketches of buildings around Baltimore, among other cities. Recently, this little sketch popped up on his Instagram account, so I thought I'd share it with you. 
Here are some of Jerome's other Baltimore sketches.


To follow Jerome on Instagram, please click here



Monday, August 23, 2021

The Many Faces of Thomas H. Buckler

Thomas Hepburn Buckler was a renaissance man in the mid-1860's. Although he was a physician, his biography in the Medical Annals of Maryland (1799-1899) doesn't have the requisite date of achieving membership at the Faculty. 

Possibly, this is because he was living abroad for a significant amount of time, especially the years of the Civil War. Dr. Buckler was the second husband of Eliza "Didy" Ridgely White (1828-1894), a member of the Ridgely family who owned more than 10,000 acres of land just north of Baltimore, as well as the spectacular Hampton Mansion. 

Dr. Buckler was said to be a man of "striking personal appearance and much sought after on account of his brilliant conversational powers and wit." He and Didy had one son, William Hepburn Buckler, who is remembered as a scholar, lawyer and diplomat. He was born while the Bucklers lived in Paris. 

Over the weekend, I was visiting old churches in Baltimore County with a friend who is researching them and literally stumbled across this tomb-stone. Both father and son are buried at the cemetery at the historic St. Thomas Church in Garrison, Maryland.

Anyway... for all of the time he spent away from Baltimore, and for the fact that he probably wasn't actually a member of the Faculty, we have at least three depictions of him - two oil portraits and one marble bust. 

The most well-known portrait is Julius LeBlanc Stewart's portrait of Buckler. You can read all about the subject and the artist here. This portrait was painted when Buckler lived in Paris between 1866-1890. 

The second portrait is by Louis Dieterich, a Baltimore-based painter. This was probably painted upon Buckler's return to Baltimore, after 1890.
The marble bust is by William Henry Rinehart, a noted sculptor from Baltimore who lived in Rome during the 1870's. The bust is signed and dated 1868, which is handy. 

Additionally, there is a notation in the 1958 catalogue of Rinehart's works of the provenance of this bust, which traces it from TH Buckler to his son, to the Faculty. 
So, I guess my next bit of sleuthing is to search the old medical journals and see when and why we acquired these pieces.

Tuesday, July 27, 2021

MedChi's Founding Fathers

In his Medical Annals of Maryland (1799-1899), Eugene Cordell  paints a descriptive picture of the first official meeting of the Medical & Chirurgical Faculty, which took place on June 3, 1799: 

Of the meeting for organization held at Annapolis in accordance with the provisions of the charter June 3, 1799, we have but a bare recital of results - the names of officers elected, and members of the Boards of Examiners of the two Shores, constitution and by-laws, and resolutions. These meagre details but whet our appetites for further knowledge, but there is no means of obtaining it, unless some at-present unknown letter or manuscript can be found to supply it.

Considering the circumstances, it is altogether likely that the meeting was held in one or other of the legislative halls at the Capitol. It may be in the historic Senate Chamber where Congress had sat so recently, and Washington resigned his commission and read his ever-memorable farewell address. 

There, we may fancy the 101 founders preparing to sit in council, grave and reverend seigniors, deliberate in act and speech, still clad in the antique-style wig, queue, frilled shirt, high-necked coat with large brass buttons, knee breeches, stockings, shoe buckles, and not least, the gold-headed cane.

The first to enter, we will suppose, is the Baltimore delegation who arrived by the morning coach. The Eastern Shore doubtless furnished its full quota coming by sailboat across the Bay. Having alighted from coach and stage, having disembarked from vessels which lay moored in the Severn, and having dismounted from their horses, we can imagine them assembling for the business before them. 

These appear to have been the leaders in this remarkable assemblage of eminent and representative physicians and surgeons of Maryland.

A short time is doubtless spent in greetings and congratulation upon the success of their long efforts to obtain legislation and the prospect of usefulness which now unfolds before them. A temporary chairman is chosen and the convention then proceeds to the election of permanent officers... 

The Founders were a diverse bunch, and over the last few months, I've taken time to research them all. For some of them, there are volumes of information, but for others, just a sentence. 

I began my search by looking at their biographies in the Medical Annals of Maryland, and for subsequent biographical information the Annals or the Maryland Medical Journals provided. From there, I went to Google and searched on the name and the county which they represented. That led me to places as varied as Find-A-Grave, family histories, the Maryland Historical Society, the Maryland State Archives, and my personal favorite, MEDUSA, Maryland's Cultural Resource Information System. 

Each site helped me glean tidbits of information which, when added together, gave me a fuller picture of the Founders than the Annals could provide. I read about who they married, their families, and where they lived. I laughed at humorous incidents, was saddened by hard lives, and befuddled by the two founders whose familial relationship was so confusing I had to graph it out. 

As I worked, I decided to organize the Founders by the county they represented in 1799. At that time, there were fewer counties than there are now, and two cities, Annapolis and Baltimore City, each had their own delegations. The delegations comprised three to five members. 

Now that the research has been completed, it has been added to this blog. Just below the header image, you will find a section entitled "The Founders" and when you click on that, it will take you to a page with each of the counties listed. When you click on the county's name, you will see the biographies of that its delegates.

I hope that you will take a few minutes now and then to read about our Founding Members and think of the time in which they lived and what they accomplished in establishing an organization that lives more than 200 years later.

MedChi has a long history, and we need to look at our earliest members in the context of their time, and not ours. We believe that these biographies should be read as historical summaries of lives in the early years of both our country and our organization. 

Wednesday, July 14, 2021

In Memory of Julian (Jack) Lapides

The History of Medicine in Maryland Committee, and the city of Baltimore, have lost a great friend, Julian (Jack) Lapides. He died of cancer early on the morning of July 14, 2021. 

Jack, whom I have personally known for the bulk of my life, was invited onto the History of Medicine in Maryland (HMM) Committee by his old friends, Dr. Thomas E. Hunt, Jr. and Dr. Allan Jensen They both had offices in Baltimore's historic Mt. Vernon neighborhood and were both deeply interested in the history of Baltimore. 

Jack always brought a lot to our meetings, with great ideas for lectures, and obscure pieces of Baltimore history that none of us had previously known. 

Jack was a renaissance man, and a true gentleman. He served in the military, including a year in Iceland, was an attorney, and also a member of the Maryland State Senate. 

Our thoughts are with his wife, Linda, at this time. May his memory be a blessing.

For an obituary by our friend, Jacques Kelly, please click here

Monday, July 12, 2021

Happy Birthday, Sir William Osler

Former Faculty President and medical luminary, Sir William Osler, MD, was born on this day, 172 years ago in rural Bond Head, Ontario, Canada. 

In 1916, at a lecture on his birthday in Oxford, England, given to that year's contingent of Rhodes Scholars, Sir William reflected on a toss of the coin which changed the course of his life in several ways.

In Philadelphia, he met the woman who would eventually become his wife, Grace Linzac Revere Gross, who was the widow of Dr. Samuel Gross, a professor of surgery at Jefferson Medical College, his alma mater. Lady Grace was a descendant of Paul Revere, American silversmith and patriot. 



Saturday, July 3, 2021

Celebrating the Fourth!

 Marcia and Everyone at 
MedChi and the Center for a Healthy Maryland 

Hope That Your Independence Day
Is Fun and Safe!

Tuesday, June 29, 2021

A Small Change

As of July 1, 2021, the service we use to send posts to you from this blog is being discontinued by Google. This means that when I post something, it will not automatically arrive in your email. 

If you would like to continue receiving emails from the MedChi Archives blog, please send me an email here. I will add you to the mailing list and email you a link to the posts when I publish them. 

Thank you for understanding, and for supporting the History of Medicine in Maryland.