Charles Caldwell (physician)
Charles Caldwell (May 14, 1772 – July 9, 1853, Nashville, Tennessee) was a noted 19th-century U.S. physician who is best known for starting what would become the University of Louisville School of Medicine. Born to Irish immigrants in Caswell County, North Carolina, he earned an M.D. from the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine in 1796 while studying under Benjamin Rush. After graduating, he practiced medicine in Philadelphia and was a lecturer at Penn. He also edited the "Port Folio" (one of the day's primary medical magazines) and published over 200 medical publications.
In 1819, he left Philadelphia to join the fledgling medical school at Lexington, Kentucky's Transylvania University, where he quickly turned the school into the region's strongest. In 1821, he convinced the Kentucky General Assembly to purchase $10,000 worth of science and medical books from France, many of which are still held at the university.
Despite his success, his "abrasive" and "arrogant" temperament created enemies at Transylvania. The university's medical program would fold soon afterwards. The school dismissed him in 1837, and he then traveled with several colleagues to Louisville, where they created the Louisville Medical Institute. As at Transylvania, he made the new school an instant success, with its rapid growth into one of the region's best medical schools. However, he was forced out in 1849 due to a personal rivalry with Lunsford Yandell.
Caldwell was one of the earliest supporters of polygenism in America. Caldwell attacked the position that environment was the cause of racial differences and argued instead that four races, Caucasian, Mongolian, American Indian, and African, were four different species, created separately by God.[1]
Selected Works
- An attempt to establish the original sameness of three phenomena of fever (1796)
- A semi-annual oration, on the origin of pestilential diseases (1799)
- An eulogium to the memory of Dr. Samuel Cooper (1799)
- Medical & physical memoirs: containing, among other subjects, a particular enquiry into the origin and nature of the late pestilential epidemics of the United States (1801)
- An oration on the causes of the difference, in point of frequency and force, between the endemic diseases of the United States of America, and those of the countries of Europe (1802)
- An eulogium to the memory of Mr. George Lee (1802)
- An essay on the pestilential or yellow fever: as it prevailed in Philadelphia in the year eighteen hundred and five (1807)
- An anniversary oration on the subject of quarantines (1807)
- An eulogium on Caspar Wistar, M.D., professor of anatomy (1818)
- Outlines of a course of lectures on the institutes of medicine (1823)
- Elements of phrenology (1824)
- Introductory address on independence of intellect (1825)
- Thoughts on febrile miasms (1830)
- An address on the vice of gambling (1834)
- Thoughts on the spirit of improvement, the selection of its objects, and its proper direction (1835)
- Autobiography of Charles Caldwell, M.D (1855)
References
- ↑ John P. Jackson, Nadine M. Weidman Race, Racism, and science: social impact and interaction, Rutgers University Press, 2005, p. 45
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