Gambar halaman
PDF
ePub
[blocks in formation]

Eclectic Medical College,

OF THE CITY OF NEW YORK,

1 LIVINGSTON PLACE AND EAST 15TH STREET.

Chartered April 22, 1865.

Organized December 19, 1865.

WHOLE NUMBER OF GRADUATES, 432.

WHOLE NUMBER OF MATRICULANTS, 1,520.

[blocks in formation]

Faculty.

ROBERT S. NEWTON, M. D., LL. D.,

Professor of Theory and Practice of Medicine, Clinical Medicine and Surgery.

HERMAN BOSKOWITZ, M. D.,

Professor of Special Medicines.

CHARLES LAREW, A. M., M. D.,

Professor of Obstetrics and Diseases of Women and Children.

SAMUEL E. MORTIMORE, M. D.,
Professor of Descriptive and Surgical Anatomy.

JOSEPH RODES BUCHANAN, M. D.,
Professor of Physiology and Institutes of Medicine.

CHARLES S. GAUNTT, Ph. D., M. D.,
Professor of Chemistry, Toxicology and Pharmacy.

SAMUEL E. MORTIMORE, M. D.,
Professor Adjunct of Surgery.

GEORGE W. WINTERBURN, M. D.,

Professor of Materia Medica and Therapeutics.

ROBERT S. NEWTON, Jr., M. D., L. R. C. S., Professor of Clinical Ophthalmology and Diseases of the Throat and Skin.

W. P. STRICKLAND, D. D., M. D., LL. D.,
Professor of Medical Literature and Forensic Medicine.

GEORGE W. BOSKOWITZ, M. D.,

Demonstrator of Anatomy.

ROBERT S. NEWTON, Jr., M. D.,

Lecturer on Histology and Pathological Anatomy.

Board of Trustees.

HON. G. A. BRANDRETH,

SAMUEL SINCLAIR,

THOMAS N. ROOKER,

JOHN B. DUTCHER,

MYRON PERRY,

WILLIAM MOLLER,

HON. W. F. TEMPLETON,

CAMDEN P. DIKE,

WILLIAM P. CLYDE,

HERMAN BOSKOWITZ,

O. S. GREGORY,

W. D. CHEESBROUGH,

G. W. BOSKOWITZ,

ROBERT S. NEWTON,

ROBERT S. NEWTON, JR.

RALPH BRANDRETH,

EDWIN A. MCALPIN,

C. F. STERLING,

HIRAM CALKINS.

ECLECTIC MEDICAL COLLEGE OF THE CITY OF NEW YORK.

The Board of Trustees in issuing this, the twentieth announcement, congratulate the alumni and patrons of Eclecticism upon the great success which this college has met with. The session just closed was the most prosperous ever held by an Eastern college, and conclusively demonstrates that the Eclectic Medical College, of the City of New York, occupies an important and useful position. When this college was organized in 1865, the followers of Eclecticism in the East were so few that they could only be found upon diligent inquiry; but when the Eclectic Medical College, of the City of New York, became a success, it gave strength and union to the men who were struggling so bravely, and by it Eclecticism has become a popular school, and has hundreds of practitioners now enrolled in the East. This is the work done by the only Eclectic College east of the mountains. The curriculum is most thorough, and by means of cliniques, demonstrations and didactic lectures, the art of medicine and surgery is comprehensively taught. The alumni of this college are all engaged in successful and lucrative practice, which is conclusive evidence of the high standing of the college.

The Twentieth term of the Eclectic Medical College, of the City of New York, will commence at the college edifice, No. 1 Livingston Place (East Fifteenth Street), Friday, October 1, 1880, and continue five months.

In this college medical science is taught in its complete development, not contracted by partisan dogmatism, which would reject useful knowledge on account of its sources, nor limited by the professional authority of London and Paris, which have not, during the present century, been either infallible in opinion or foremost in medical progress.

The American Eclectic system is widely different from the European systems of medicine, commonly called Allopathy and Homoeopathy, which are not Eclectic, but partisan in principle, their followers being unfriendly to all medical knowledge not

« SebelumnyaLanjutkan »