Hicks, Henry, b. 1834 or 1835.

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Henry Hicks was a physician in Wrightsville, Georgia (Johnson County). He was the son of James Hicks (1799-1888) and Mary Pullen Hicks. His first wife was Mary Frances Wright (1837-1864) and his second wife was her sister Nancy Wright. He graduated from the Medical College of Georgia in 1853. Hicks enlisted in Company F, 14th Regiment ("Johnson Grays") on July 11, 1861, but refused to take the oath of service, possibly because it was contrary to his physician's oath to save lives.

Louis Alexander Dugas, was born in Washington, Georgia in 1806, settled in Augusta in 1831, and helped founded the Medical College of Georgia. He also received an LLB degree from the University of Georgia in 1869.

Dr. Paul Fitzsimmons Eve was a leading southern medical figure. He was president of the American Medical Association from 1857-1858, co-editor of the Southern Medical and Surgical Journal, and author of nearly 600 articles during his medical career. Eve performed several important operations including one for vesical calculus. Also, he is thought to have been the first American Surgeon to perform a hysterectomy. Paul Fitzsimmons Eve was born near Augusta, Georgia, in 1806. He attended Franklin College (the University of Georgia), receiving a BA degree in 1826. Eve then went to Philadelphia to study medicine at the University of Pennsylvania. Receiving an M.D. degree in 1828, Eve returned to Georgia to practice medicine in Augusta. After one year, Eve decided to travel to Europe, practicing medicine in both London and Paris clinics and serving as a field doctor in the Polish Army during the Russian march on Poland. Deciding to return to America, Eve resumed his medical practice in Augusta. In 1832 he helped found the Medical College of Georgia where he was a Professor of Surgery until 1850. He went on to become the Professor of Surgery at both the University of Louisville and the University of Nashville. During the Civil War he was the Surgeon General of Tennessee. After the War, Eve taught surgery at Missouri Medical College in St. Louis, the University of Nashville, and Nashville Medical College. He also performed surgery at Gate City Hospital in Atlanta. Eve died in Nashville, Tennessee, in 1877.

From the description of Henry Hicks ledgers, 1843, 1852-1873. (University of Georgia). WorldCat record id: 460585209

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Role Title Holding Repository
Relation Name
associatedWith Dugas, Louis Alexander, 1806-1898. person
associatedWith Eve, Paul F. (Paul Fitzsimmons), 1806-1877. person
associatedWith Medical College of Georgia corporateBody
Place Name Admin Code Country
Georgia
Georgia--Augusta
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Accounts
Freedmen
Medical records
Medicine
Promissory notes
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Person

Birth 1834

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