Ohio History Journal

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PIONEER PHYSICIANS AND THEIR PARTICIPATION

PIONEER PHYSICIANS AND THEIR PARTICIPATION

IN THE ESTABLISHMENT OF SOCIAL

INSTITUTIONS IN OHIO

 

 

By ROBERT G. PATERSON, Ph.D.

 

Participation of the pioneer physicians in the establishment

of social institutions in Ohio during the period 1788-1835 was

sporadic, without long term vision and was born of the immediate

necessities of the times. Almost without exception, such partici-

pation was confined to a few outstanding medical men. They were,

as a rule, men of strong individual personalities and born leaders.

In the period under discussion the names of four medical

men stand out from the rank and file of the profession--Daniel

Drake, M.D. (1785-1852) of Cincinnati, who has so many "firsts"

attached to his activities that he has been called with entire justice

the "Colossus of the Medical Profession of the West," and

William Maclay Awl, M.D. (1799-1876), Samuel Parsons, M.D.

(1786-1857), and Robert Thompson, M.D. (1797-1865), all of

Columbus.

Ohio Penitentiary

The first state institution in Ohio was the penitentiary. An act

of the General Assembly passed January 27, 1815, and effective

the following August 1, provided that the punishment for larceny

should be imprisonment in the penitentiary. It provided that the

offender, upon conviction of the larceny of the value of ten dol-

lars and upward, should be imprisoned in the penitentiary at hard

labor not more than seven years nor less than one year. This

institution was a part of the basic agreement between the state

of Ohio and a private company which agreed to erect the neces-

sary buildings as a part of other considerations for the establish-

ment of the seat of the state government at Columbus. So far as

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