Osborne, Oliver T. (Oliver Thomas), 1862-1940

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Oliver Thomas Osborne: taught at Yale University Medical School, 1891-1925; emeritus professor, 1925-; chief of Medical Clinic, New Haven Dispensary, 1890-1911.

From the description of Oliver Thomas Osborne papers, 1884-1939 (inclusive). (Unknown). WorldCat record id: 702169321

Oliver Thomas Osborne: taught at Yale University Medical School, 1891-1925; emeritus professor, 1925-; chief of Medical Clinic, New Haven Dispensary, 1890-1911.

Oliver Thomas Osborne, M.D. 1884.

Born November 14, 1862, in New Haven, Conn.

Died November 11, 1940, in New Haven, Conn.

Father, Oliver Stuart Osborne, superintendent of a carriage firm in New Haven; first sergeant 1st Connecticut Heavy Artillery 1861-64; son of James Stuart and Elizabeth Brown (Guilford) Osborne of Fairfield, Conn. Mother, Ellen Lewis (Sturges) Osborne; daughter of Peter and Harriet Caroline (Van Vredenburgh) Sturges of Fairfield.

Hillhouse High School; attended Yale School of Medicine 1881-84 (M.D. 1884) and University of Leipzig 1884-85; physician in New Haven 1885-1940; member faculty Yale School of Medicine 1888-1940 (assistant in medical clinic 1888-91; instructor in materia medica and therapeutics 1891-92, assistant professor 1892-95, and professor 1895-1911; clinical professor of medicine 1906-11; professor of therapeutics 1911-22, clinical professor 1922-24, and clinical professor emeritus 1924-40); chief of medical clinic New Haven Dispensary 1891-1911; consulting physician Children's Community Center of New Haven Orphan Asylum, and Griffin Hospital (Derby); author: Introduction to Materia Medica and Prescription Writing (1900), The Treatment of Typhoid Fever (1902), Introduction to Materia Medica and Pharmacology (1906), Disturbances of the Heart (1913), The Prevention and Treatment of Infections (1915), Disturbances of the Kidney (1917), The Principles of Therapeutics (1921), Health; What Everyone Ought to Know (1929), Mouth Infection; Clinical Histories (1934), The Evaluation of Symptoms (1935), and over a hundred articles in medical journals; editor, Handbook of Therapy (1910) and section on therapeutics Journal of the American Medical Association (1908-20); contributed to A System of Physiologic Therapeutics edited by Solomon S. Cohen; Vol. XI, 1906) and to various editions of A Reference Handbook of the Medical Sciences (edited by Albert H. Buck); on advisory board Yale Medical Journal 1896-1904; M.A. Yale 1899; president Association of Yale Alumni in Medicine 1896-97, New Haven County Medical Association 1899, American Therapeutic Society 1905, and New Haven Medical Association 1910; vice-president United States Pharmacopoeial Convention and member revision committee 1910-20; an incorporator Gaylord Farm Sanatorium 1902, a director and chairman medical board 1903-1940; a founder National Tuberculosis Association 1904; was instrumental in securing passage of State pure food and drug act (1907) and establishment of State commission on tuberculosis (1909); delegate to International Medical Congress (Budapest) 1909; fellow American College of Physicians (governor for Connecticut 1924-31); honorary fellow American Stomatological Association (vice-president 1925-30 and honorary vice-president 1930-40; winner Chompret Prize 1933); honorary member Association for the Study of Internal Secretions; member Connecticut State Medical Society, Connecticut Society for Mental Hygiene, American Medical Association (member council on pharmacy and chemistry 1910-16, chairman section on therapeutics and materia medica), American Medical Editors and Authors Association, International Society of Stomatologists, National Academy of Sciences, New Haven Colony Historical Society, Connecticut Academy of Arts and Sciences, Masonic order, and Trinity Church (Episcopal), New Haven.

Married April 18, 1888, in New Haven, Mary Woodward, daughter of Ami and Harriet Olive (Nichols) Tyler. Children: Gertrude (died in infancy) and Marguerite Nichols.

Death due to chronic asthma. Buried in Evergreen Cemetery, New Haven. Survived by wife and one daughter.

Dr. Osborne bequeathed his books to the University.

(Taken from Yale University Obituary Record, 1940-43, pp. 231-232).

From the guide to the Oliver Thomas Osborne papers, 1884-1939, (Manuscripts and Archives)

Role Title Holding Repository
Relation Name
associatedWith Fitz, Reginald Heber, 1843-1913. person
associatedWith Karl-Marx-Universität Leipzig. corporateBody
associatedWith Orcutt, Wallace Lyman, 1883- person
associatedWith United States. District Court (Connecticut) corporateBody
associatedWith Yale University corporateBody
associatedWith Yale University. President's Office. corporateBody
associatedWith Yale University. School of Medicine. corporateBody
Place Name Admin Code Country
Germany
Subject
American
Freemasons
Medicine
Occupation
Educators
Physicians
Activity

Person

Birth 1862

Death 1940

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