Ohio History Journal

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DENTAL EDUCATION IN OHIO

DENTAL EDUCATION IN OHIO

1838-1858

 

By EDWARD C. MILLS, D.D.S.

 

With the unprecedented tide of immigration to Ohio during

the early decades of the nineteenth century came the physician as

a necessary adjunct to the widely scattered communities for the

preservation of health and the consequent prosperity of those

sturdy pioneers. His praises have been largely unsung because,

in addition to his administrations to the medical needs of the

community, his attention was necessarily also given to dental ail-

ments, and in the absence of a representative of the ministry, he

offered moral and spiritual consolation in times of distress.

Later came the dentist, whose practice was of an itinerate

nature, due to a scattered population, and continued as such until

the growth of towns justified a permanent location. Many of

these dentists had been medically trained, and--fortunately for

dentistry--had adopted dentistry as a calling in preference to

medicine.

There was no school for dental instruction throughout the

whole world and anyone desirous of becoming a dentist was

usually superficially taught by some practitioner whose own abil-

ity, as a general rule, was of questionable quality. Nor was this

knowledge to be gratuitous; such secrets as the practitioners pos-

sessed were safeguarded, and to those who sought advice, these

were only imparted for a consideration. This preceptor-student

relationship was popular, previous to the establishment of the

dental school, and, even after such an institution was legally

chartered, it was recognized to the extent that one or two years

under a preceptor of established ability was accepted as an equiv-

alent to one year of college instruction. It is a matter of record

that some dentists of recognized ability did not take so kindly to

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