390
VIRGINIA BIOGRAPHY
l^erior qualifications, to unfaltering appli-
cation, to earnest purpose and to methods
above reproach. Dr. Bittle Cornelius
Keister. of Roanoke, \'irginia, has achieved
a position of eminence in his profession
which is due to the possession of qualifi-
cations far aljove the ordinary. He repre-
sents the fourth generation of his family in
this country, his great-grandfather having
been a native of Hamburg, Germany, from
whence he emigrated to America in 1750,
and settled in Pennsylvania.
William Keister, father of Dr. Keister, was a farmer and leather dealer of Newport, Giles county, \irginia, and was one of the most influential men of the community. He entertained broad and liberal views, and, when the town was first incorporated, was honored by election as mayor, and w^as also a member of the town council. He married Nancy Epling. whose grandfather was an Englishman who came to this country about the year 1770.
Dr. Bittle Cornelius Keister was born at Newport, Giles county, Virginia, January 29, 1857. He was endow^ed with a vigorous constitution, and in addition to assisting his father in the laborious work of the farm he spent much of his time in reading and pri- vate study. From earliest boyhood he de- veloped the taste in reading which led to his subsequent choice of a profession in opposi- tion to the wishes of his father, whose de- sire it was that his son should enter the ministry. His elementary education was ac- quired in the public schools of Giles county, and after a course at the White Gate Acad- emy he became a student at Roanoke Col- lege, Salem, Virginia, and was graduated from this institution in the class of 1878 with the degree of Master of Arts. Owing to the opposition of his father. Dr. Keister was obliged to work his way through col- lege and university, and this additional efifort appears to have strengthened his love for his profession. He matriculated at the College of Physicians and Surgeons, at Bal- timore, Maryland, and was graduated in 1882 with the degree of Doctor of Medicine. Two years later he took a post-graduate course at the New York Polyclinic, and \v 1894 a similar course at the Chicago Poh- clinic. He is one of those physicians who firmly believe in the virtue and necessity of continued study, and in 1900 he took a year's course in the Phvsiological and Bac-
teriological Institute of Berlin, Germany,
while at the same time he was a student in
the Berlin University. As a means of pay-
ing his expenses when he entered the Col-
lege of Physicians and Surgeons, he ob-
tained a position as principal in the graded
school in the village of Newport, and was
thus engaged for a considerable period of
time. After his graduation as a physician,
he made his home in South Boston, Halifax
county, Virginia, where he established him-
self in the active practice of his profession.
This he interrupted in 1900 in order to con-
tinue his studies in Germany, and upon his
return to his native land he established the
Keister Home Sanitarium, at Roanoke, Vir-
ginia, for the treatment of various chronic
diseases and nervous afifections. This in-
stitution has met with the success it so
richly merits, and the patients who are
treated there have come from all parts of
the country. While Dr. Keister was study-
ing in Europe, he attended clinics at hos-
pitals in Paris, Berlin and London, and acted
as foreign correspondent for a number of
medical journals published in this country.
He is a member of the American Medical
Association. Virginia .State Aledical Society,
Southern Medical Association, American
Academy of Political and Social Science,
American Society for the Study of Alcohol
and other Narcotics, etc. In 1900 he v/as
appointed by Commissioner-General Peck,
delegate to the first Congress on Profes-
sional Medicine, which w^as held in Paris,
and on this occasion read a paper before this
assembly on "The Attitude of the Medical
Profession of the United States on the Sub-
ject of Proprietary Medicines." Extracts
from this address were published in the
"London Lancet" and other foreign medical
journals. The American Medical Associa-
tion elected him a delegate to the Thirteenth
International Medical Congress, which met
in Paris in 1900. He has read a number
of other papers before medical bodies in
this country and abroad, and published a
number of others. Among those read are:
"A Plea for a Modern Code of Ethics ;"
"Cancer and Reports of Cases;" "Preven-
tive Medicine and its Relation to Society ;"
Spasmodic .Vsthma ;" "Malaria;" "Puer-
peral Dropsy;" "Alcohol as Food and as
a Poison ;" "Alcohol a greater menace to
Civilization than Contagious Diseases ;"
"The Medical Man of Todav, Yesterdav and