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Daniel Drake

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Name
  
Daniel Drake

Role
  
Physician


Daniel Drake wwwohiohistorycentralorgimages116DrakeDani

Born
  
October 20, 1785 (
1785-10-20
)
Plainfield, New Jersey, US

Alma mater
  
University of Pennsylvania

Died
  
November 5, 1852, Cincinnati, Ohio, United States

Education
  
University of Pennsylvania

Books
  
Pioneer education and life, Letters on Slavery to John C W, Natural and Statistical, A Systematic Treatise, A Systematic Treatise

Resting place
  
Spring Grove Cemetery

Dr. Daniel Drake Ohio Historical Marker Dedication Ceremony


Daniel Drake (October 20, 1785 – November 5, 1852) was a pioneering American physician and prolific writer.

Contents

Early life

Drake was born in Plainfield, New Jersey to Isaac Drake and Elizabeth Shotwell. He was the elder brother of Benjamin Drake, author of Life of Tecumseh. Daniel Drake "was predestined for the medical profession by his father. The latter, we are told by those who knew him, was a gentleman by nature and a Christian from convictions produced by a simple and unaffected study of the Word of God. His poverty he regretted, his ignorance he deplored."

Career

Drake studied under William Goforth in Cincinnati from 1800 to 1805, and received the first medical diploma west of the Allegheny Mountains. Daniel graduated from the medical school of the University of Pennsylvania and established a medical practice in Cincinnati, Ohio, in 1807.

He mainly worked on the field of medicine but also advocated social reforms and contributed to geology, botany, and meteorology, and medical geology. He is considered a relevant figure in the history of medicine in the United States. Scholar Gert H. Brieger has called him "a heroic figure in American medicine" whose fame is due to his writings, where he also tried to improve medical education and scientific research.

In 1818 Drake was elected a member of the American Antiquarian Society. The library of the AAS holds original copies of around thirty texts written by Drake. He was elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1819.

In 1819 he helped organize the Medical College of Ohio in Cincinnati which later became the University of Cincinnati Academic Health Center, where he served as a President. He secured a state appropriation for its support and that of a hospital.

In 1827 he founded the Western Journal of the Medical and Physical Sciences, which he continued to edit until 1848. In 1846 he, William Maclay Awl and other members of the Ohio medical profession established the Ohio State Medical Society. He was a founding member of the Commercial Hospital and Lunatic Asylum in Ohio, and a fellow of the College of Physicians of Philadelphia. He was connected, either as a lecturer or professor, at different times, at the University of Louisville (Louisville, Kentucky) and Jefferson Medical College (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania). He was Professor of Theory and Practice of Medicine at Transylvania University. In 1852, he rejoined the faculty at the Medical College of Ohio but died a few days after receiving his appointment. He is buried at Spring Grove Cemetery.

Personal life

He was the father of Charles Daniel Drake. Drake's home was located at 429 East Third Street in Cincinnati.

A religious man, he was a founding Member of Christ Church in Cincinnati, and he advocated the combination of Christian feelings and literature.

He is the namesake of Cincinnati's Daniel Drake Park.

Works

  • Notices Concerning Cincinnati (1810; 1908)
  • Natural and statistical view; or picture of Cincinnati and the Miami country (1815)
  • An account of the epidemic cholera : as it appeared in Cincinnati (1832)
  • Practical treatise on the history, prevention, and treatment of epidemic cholera (1832)
  • Practical Essays on Medical Education (1832)
  • An introductory lecture on the means of promoting the intellectual improvement of the students and physicians of the valley of the Mississippi (1844)
  • Systematic Treatise on the Principal Diseases of the Interior Valley of North America, (1850-54)
  • Pioneer Life in Kentucky: A series of reminiscential letters from Daniel Drake ... to his children (1870); edited by his son Charles D. Drake
  • References

    Daniel Drake Wikipedia