Page:A cyclopedia of American medical biography vol. 2.djvu/501

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THOMPSON


443


THOMPSON


Thompson to re-establish it, the Society offering to pro\'ide means; during this period of tremendous emergency, first a house and later a barracks was utilized and the sick, maimed and burned were brought to the building before beds could be put in. In 1873 when the erection of permanent quarters was contemplated, the Relief and Aid Society gave $25,000 on condition that twenty-five patients should be cared for constantly. Dr. Thompson also visited Boston; her appeal there meeting with generous response, and the institution which bears her name, the Mary Thompson Hospital of Chicago for Women and Children, was soon an accomplished fact. Thirty years Dr. Thompson labored there, doing all the surgical work, with wonderful precision and dexterity of manipulation.

But professional eminence was not her only claim to remembrance; her philan- thropy was catholic, and she was also a firm suffragist and agitated the question among her pupils.

The Chicago Medical College Depart- ment of North West University conferred a degree on Dr. Thompson in recognition of her work, the only one it had ever granted to a woman. She also became a member of the Internation Medical Asso- ciation in 1887, and of the Chicago Medical Society.

Dr. Thompson passed away in the midst of her activities after an illness of only twenty-four hours on May 21, 1895. Several years after her death a memorial bust of Dr. Thompson, the work of the well-known sculptor, Daniel C. French, was presented by her friends to the Art Institute of Chicago.

A. B. W.

Woman's Journal, Boston, vol. xxvi, p. 229. Chicago Medical Rec, Feb., 1905. Personal communication.

Thompson, Robert (1797-1865).

Robert Thompson, a physician of Co- lumbus, Ohio, was born in Washington County, Pennsylvania, September, 1797. His hterary education was slight, his med- ical instruction acquired with Dr. George


McCook, of New Lisbon, Ohio. He was licensed to practise medicine and surgery in 1824 by the Fourteenth District Med- ical Society of Ohio, and in 1834 received from the Medical College of Ohio the honorary M. D. He married, in 1824, Ann M. Seeber, of New York State, and settled first at Pleasant Hill, Muskingum, County, Ohio, but removed thence to Washington, Guernsey County, and fi- nally, in 1834, settled in Columbus.

In 1831 he was elected to the State Senate, and was for many years physician to the State Asylum for the Deaf and Dumb.

Dr. Thompson was one of the founders of the Ohio State Medical Society, and its president in 1847.

He is said to have been a very compe- tent surgeon and extremely ingenious in the invention of new surgical instruments and apparatus. Among the latter were a bone forceps, a tonsillotome, uvula scissors, a cornea knife, a cataract needle, a tourniquet, a trephine and a popular and useful abdominal supporter.

He was a fluent and ready writer, and numerous contributions from his pen will be found in the "Transactions of the State Medical Society." Among these, the more important are:

"On Mesmerism." ("Western Lan- cet," 1843, vol. ii.)

" Resection of the Left Superior Max- illary Bone." ("Transactions of Ohio State Medical Society," 1849.)

" Cholorof orm, Gutta Percha and Col- lodion." (Ibid., 1849.)

"Report on Medical Literature." (Ibid., 1851.)

"Nitrate of Silver in Diseases of the Lungs." (Ibid., 1855.)

"Chloroform." (Ibid., 1857.)

"Cataract." (Ibid., 1859.)

" Report on Fractures. " (Ibid., 1859.)

He died in Columbus, Ohio, August 18, 18G5. H. E. H.

Cincinnati Lancet and Observer, vol. ix, 1866.

Transactions of the Ohio State .Medical Society, 1867.

Transactions of the American Medical Assoc- iation, 1867.