Reardon, James T.
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person
Reardon, James T.
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Name :
Reardon, James T.
Reardon, James N.
Name Components
Name :
Reardon, James N.
Reardon, J. T. (James T.)
Name Components
Name :
Reardon, J. T. (James T.)
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Biographical History
John Romulus (later changed to Richard) Brinkley was born July 8, 1885, in Beta, North Carolina, the only son of country physician John Richard Brinkley and his wife, Candace. An orphan by the age of 10, he was reared by an aunt and had a rather haphazard elementary school education. After a nomadic life as a railroad telegrapher he attended Eclectic Medical College in Kansas City, Kansas, but never graduated. He was, however, able to practice in Arkansas with an undergraduate license and managed to acquire several fraudulent (or questionable) diplomas. Making use of the reciprocal agreements between states for licensing medical practitioners, Brinkley settled in Milford, Kansas in 1916. There he began to transplant the gonads of goats into his aging customers with the promise of masculine virility. He was soon attracting national attention with his "goat gland" transplant surgery. For several years, the practice was very successful financially, and Brinkley built a clinic, as well as a powerful radio transmitter. He operated one of the first radio stations in Kansas, KFKB (Kansas' First, Kansas' Best). Interspersed with the entertainment programs were ads for Brinkley's secret remedies. When opposition from the organized medical community resulted in revocation of his radio and medical license, he turned to politics. Conducting a vigorous write-in campaign for Kansas governor in 1930, Brinkley garnered nearly 30 percent of the vote. After two subsequent unsuccessful campaigns for the office, he shifted his headquarters of operation to Del Rio, Texas, and built what would become radio station XERA in Villa Acuna, Coahaila. During his last years Brinkley was sued for malpractice, indicted for mail fraud by the federal government, and forced to declare bankruptcy in 1941. After three heart attacks and the amputation of a leg, Brinkley died May 26, 1942 in San Antonio, Texas. [Kansas Historical Society, "John R. Brinkley," http://www.kshs.org/kansapedia/john-r-brinkley/11988 (accessed 22 November 2010).]
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External Related CPF
https://viaf.org/viaf/71093888
https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-no2004004603
https://id.loc.gov/authorities/no2004004603
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Political campaigns
Physicians
Quacks and quackery
Radio broadcasters
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Places
Kansas--Milford
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Kansas
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Convention Declarations
<conventionDeclaration><citation>VIAF</citation></conventionDeclaration>