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D C Jarvis

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Name
  
D. Jarvis

Education
  
University of Vermont

Role
  
Physician

D. C. Jarvis wwwjcrowscomjarvisportraitaframejpg
Died
  
August 18, 1966, South Barre, Vermont, Barre City, Vermont, United States

Books
  
Folk medicine, Arthritis and Folk Medicine

DeForest Clinton Jarvis (March 15, 1881 – August 18, 1966) was an American physician from Vermont. He is best known for his writings on the subject of folk medicine. He recommended a mixture of whole, raw apple cider vinegar and honey that have variously been called switchel or honegar, as a health tonic. He promoted the use of vinegar to keep the acidity of the body more acidic than alkaline, which he believed treated medical problems like burns and varicose veins.

Contents

Biography

Jarvis was born in Plattsburg, New York into a fifth-generation Vermont family and grew up in Burlington, Vermont. His parents were George Jarvis and Abbie Vincent. He graduated from the University of Vermont Medical College in 1904, and began practicing medicine in Barre, Vermont in 1909.

Jarvis's wife was named Pearl Macomber, and they had a daughter, Sylvia Jarvis Smith (b. June 29, 1914, d. December 27, 2009), who graduated from the University of Vermont in 1936. His hobbies included making jewelry and playing the cello, and he managed a children's orchestra for 22 years.

Jarvis's 1958 book Folk Medicine: A Vermont Doctor's Guide to Good Health. The book was on the New York Times Best Seller list for two years, ultimately selling over one million copies, more than 245,000 copies in a single year, and was still in print as of 2002. Wrote one reviewer, "Pliny, the ancient Roman originator of the doctrine of signatures, used honey and vinegar to cleanse the system and promote good health. D. C. Jarvis, M.D. in Folk Medicine has re-popularized the use of honey and apple cider vinegar in modern times." More recently, modern science has begun to revisit some of his claims about vinegar, particularly with respect to diabetes, weight loss and insulin resistance.

He died at the Girouard Nursing Home in South Barre, Vermont, at the age of 85. The cause of death was a chronic kidney infection, coupled with cerebral thrombosis and arteriosclerosis.

Legacy

After his death in 1966, Jarvis's office was dismantled and shipped to the Shelburne Museum, where it was reconstructed and is still displayed, as an example of a small-town Vermont doctor's office.

Books

  • Folk Medicine: A Vermont Doctor's Guide to Good Health (1958). New York: Holt.
  • Arthritis and Folk Medicine (1960). New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston.
  • References

    D. C. Jarvis Wikipedia