Ohio History Journal

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DR

DR. ALVA CURTIS IN COLUMBUS

THE THOMSONIAN RECORDER AND COLUMBUS'

FIRST MEDICAL SCHOOL

 

By JONATHAN FORMAN, M.D.

 

In 1769, in the town of Astead, New Hampshire, was born

one Samuel Thomson. He lived and grew up as a farmer's son.

He became a keen observer of men and things. He was particu-

larly interested in all that he could learn about the healing art.

He was entirely self-taught and he learned from the Indians

about him, from the old women who "were handy with the sick"

and from the medical books sanctioned by law. He watched

closely, both the men who had studied at the colleges and admin-

istered drugs according to the prescriptions of the professors and

the less pretending, but more numerous doctors, who practiced

what was called "Domestic Medicine."

As a youngster it was his job to tend the family geese and

this gave him time to study and observe the plants. One of them

came to intrigue him very much and he finally ate of its leaves

and became very ill and vomited a great deal. This impressed

him profoundly. During the rest of his boyhood his favorite

sport was inducing other youths to try eating the leaves of lobelia

inflata. After he became a man and had a family he had abundant

opportunities for witnessing disease. Disappointed in what he

came to regard as barbarous treatment by "the legally constituted

guardians of the public health," he formed his own concept of

disease and his own system of treatment. The fundamental con-

cept of what later became Thomsonianism was that inflammation

and fever were not a disease or an enemy, that inflammation

healed and fever was a friend. He arrived at this general prin-

ciple and reduced it to practice in his own family. Five times

his own kin had been given over by the doctors to die. His own

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