Ohio History Journal

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DANIEL DRAKE AND THE ORIGIN OF MEDICINE IN

DANIEL DRAKE AND THE ORIGIN OF MEDICINE IN

THE OHIO VALLEY1

 

By DAVID A. TUCKER, JR.

 

Biographical Sketch.

This is the story of a man, of whom few of you have heard.

Such is fame. For Daniel Drake was in his day the greatest

physician of the West, the founder of sound medical education

in the Ohio Valley and one of the most unique and picturesque

figures in the history of American medicine.

He was born on a farm in New Jersey, October 20, 1785. His

parents were poor; his father, Isaac Drake, being a small farmer

and proprietor of a grist-mill. When Daniel was two and one-

half years old the family joined a party migrating to the western

country, setting out to cross the Alleghanies with all their posses-

sions in an old one-horse wagon. Reaching the Ohio River they

descended by flatboat, finally settling in Kentucky at Mayslick,

twelve miles southwest of the present town of Maysville and about

seventy-five miles from Lexington. When Isaac Drake reached

Kentucky his monetary wealth consisted of a single dollar, the

price of a bushel of corn. His first land holding was thirty-eight

acres, shortly increased to fifty. In 1794 a tract of two hundred

acres of unbroken forest was acquired and although Daniel was

but nine years of age at this time, he took part in the clearing

and cultivation of the farm.

His schooling was meager, received chiefly at the hands of

itinerant schoolmasters, who usually remained in one place only

long enough to have their real characters made public and who

often left hastily, and just in time to escape the irate pioneers.

The Drake library consisted of the Bible, Rippon's collection

of hymns, Thomas Dilworth's Spelling Book, an almanac, and

 

1 An address delivered before the Ohio chapter of the Alpha Omega Alpha, honor-

ary medical fraternity, Ohio State University, January 19, 1934.

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