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Thomas Joshua Bennett, MD
Facts and Events
Name |
Thomas Joshua Bennett, MD |
Gender |
Male |
Birth[1][2][3][4][5][6] |
21 Jan 1854 |
Williamson County, Texas_PROOF: proven |
Occupation[9][6] |
1883 |
Webberville, Travis, TexasMedical Doctor- in practice with Dr L D Hill _PROOF: proven Secondary date: APR 1883 |
Graduation[8][9][6][10] |
29 Mar 1883 |
New Orleans, Orleans, Louisiana_PROOF: proven Tulane University School of Medicine |
Occupation[11][9][6][17] |
From 1884 to 1927 |
Austin, Travis, TexasMedical Doctor _PROOF: proven |
Marriage |
30 Dec 1885 |
Austin, Travis, Texas_PROOF: proven to Eupha Amanda HUME |
Census[12] |
4 Jun 1900 |
Austin, Travis, Texas_PROOF: proven Precinct No. 3, Part of 2nd Ward |
Marriage |
31 Jan 1901 |
St Louis, St Louis, Missouri_PROOF: proven to Emily J Hostetler |
Other[13] |
From 1904 to 1927 |
Austin, Travis, TexasAutomobile enthusiast, President Austin Autombile Club _PROOF: proven Hobby |
Census[14] |
21 Apr 1910 |
Austin, Travis, Texas_PROOF: proven _SHAR: ROLE: spouse Precinct No. 3, Part of 3rd Ward |
Other[15] |
Est 1921 |
Austin, Travis, TexasTexas, Index Card Collections, 1800-1900 _PROOF: proven Misc |
Death[7][3][4][1][8][6] |
15 Mar 1927 |
Austin, Travis, Texas_PROOF: proven |
Burial[4][3][16] |
16 Mar 1927 |
Austin, Travis, Texas_PROOF: proven Oakwood Cemetery |
<IMG src =" http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~bluebonnetcountry/Images/BENNETT,%20Thomas%20Joshua/thomasjoshuabennett_small.jpg ">
Thomas Joshua Bennett medical practice:
Handbook of Texas Online, s.v. "," http://www.tsha.utexas.edu/handbook/online/articles/SS/fsc31.html (accessed May 28, 2007).
SCOTT, ZACHARY THOMSON (1880-1964). Zachary Thomson Scott, physician, son of Lewis and Abby (Boyle) Scott, was born on December 25, 1880, at Fort Worth, Texas. He graduated from the University of Texas Medical School at Galveston in 1903. While a medical student residing in St. Mary's Hospitalqv he was responsible for rescuing scores of patients trapped by the rising waters produced by the Galveston hurricane of 1900.qv After graduation he began his practice in Clifton, Bosque County. In 1909 he moved to Austin, where with Thomas J. Bennett he established the Austin Sanitarium and developed a lifelong interest in the Texas Tuberculosis Association. He instituted the sale of tuberculosis seals in Texas. During World War Iqv Scott served as a lieutenant commander in the navy and was in charge of a unit at the naval hospital in Gulfport, Mississippi. After the war Scott and Frank C. Gregg established the Scott-Gregg Clinic in Austin in 1923. Scott retired from his practice in 1947 and began breeding cattle on a farm near Buda; he crossed Santa Gertrude with Herefords for a new breed he called San Gerfords. Scott married Sallie Lee Masterson on June 2, 1909; they were the parents of two daughters and a son, Zachary Thomson Scott, Jr.,qv who became a well-known actor. Scott died in Austin on January 19, 1964, and was buried in Austin Memorial Park.
BIBLIOGRAPHY: Cattleman, February 1964. Vertical Files, Barker Texas History Center, University of Texas at Austin.
UT Southwestern Medical Center, Texas Physicians Historical Biographical Database, (http://www4.utsouthwestern.edu/library/doctors/doctors.cfm?alpha=B)
Found 39 reference(s) for Thomas Joshua Bennett
Reference: "A case of multiple fibroid complicating pregnancy," Tex. Med. News 5:538-541, Oct. 1896 Reference: "A case of plantar neuritis with reaction of the plantar cutaneous nerve: recovery," Tex.Med. J. 6:341-342, Feb. 1891 Reference: "A case of traumatic tetanus treated by hot water baths," Tex. Med. J. 3:75-77, Sept. 1887 Reference: "Differentiation between chancre and chancroid, with table," Daniel's Tex. Med. J. 1:310-315, Jan. 1886 Reference: "How to prevent after-pains," Tex. Med. J. 7:213-217, Dec. 1891 Reference: "Hydrocephalus, with report of a case," Tex. Med. News 6:56-59, Dec. 1896. Illus. Reference: "Hyperchlohydria," Tex. Med. News 10:1-7, Nov. 1900 Reference: "Intussusception, with report of a case," Tex. Med. News 5:58-61, Dec. 1895. Illus. Reference: "A more liberal diet in typhoid fever," Tex. Med. News 7:407-413, August 1898 Reference: "The first pan-American medical congress," Tex. Sanitarian 2:457-466, Sept. 1893 Reference: "Experiments to test the antagonismbetween strychnia and urethan, and between strychnia and chloral," Trans. Tex. St. Med. Assoc. 19:177-182, 1887 Reference: "Hemorroids, fissures and fistula in ano, and their treatment," Tex. Med. J.4:109-117, Sept. 1888 Reference: "How to prevent after-pains," Trans. Tex. St. Med. Assoc. 23:167-169, 1891 Reference: "The national sin of ommision," Trans. Tex. Med. Assoc. 26:287-297, 1894 Reference: "The national sin of omission," Tex. Sanitarian 3:267-276, May 1894 Reference: "A new forceps for intestinal anastomosis," Tex. Med. News 8:270-272, April 1899 Reference: "Our New York letter," Tex. Med. News 8:8-11, Nov. 1898 Reference: "Our New York notes," Tex. Med. News 8:115-118, Jan. 1899 Reference: "Our new York letter," Tex. Med. News 8:165-168, Feb. 1899 Reference: "Our New York letter," Tex. Med. News 8:229-230, March 1899 Reference: "Rectal feeding," Tex. Med. News 15:383-388, June 1906 Reference: "A remarkable case of elephantiasis," Daniel's Tex. Med. J. 5:52-53, August 1889 Reference: "Some interesting cases in surgery," Tex. Med. News 11:183-186, Feb. 1902 Reference: "Some remarks on the operation for hernia," Tex. Med. J. 20:259-262, Jan. 1905 Reference: "Splenectomy: axial rotation and death of spleen - recovery," Tex. Med. News 10:703-706, Oct. 1901 Reference: Tex. Med. J. 6:401-403, March 1891 Reference: Tex. Med. J. 19:486, May 1904 Reference: "The treatment of anal fistulae without cutting operation," Trans. Tex. St. Med. Assoc. 21:112-114, 1889 Reference: "A treatment for fistula in ano without cutting operation," Daniel's Tex. Med. J. 8:390-393, April 1893 Criticism by Will B. Davis: 8:511-512, June 1893 Reference: "Treatment of pneumonia," Tex. Med. J. 4:325-330, Feb. 1889 Reference: Tex. Med. J. 19:399, April 1904 Reference: "Typhoid fever," Daniel's Tex. Med. J. 1:12-15, July 1885 Reference: "Intussusception, with report of a case," Tex. Med. News 5:58-61, 1895-96 Reference: "A modern treatment of hemorrhoids," Tex. Med. J. 11:64-69, 1895-96 Reference: "Report of a case of outward dislocation of the knee," Tex. Med. J. 9:505, 1893-94 Reference: Red, George Plunkett (Mrs.). The medicine man in Texas. Houston: Standard Printing and Lithographing Co., 1930, pp.321-322. OCLC 17340684 Reference: Tex. Sanitarian 4:185-187, March 1895 Reference: TSJM, 17:47-48, June, 1921. Port. Reference: 1930. Red, George Plunkett. The Medicine Man in Texas.Houston, TX:Standard Printing and Lithographing Co., pg. 321-22. http://mcgovern.library.tmc.edu/MedManTX/P321.htm
TSJM = Texas State Journal of Medicine
(OCLC #:1779320)
_UPD = 10 JUN 2008 13:55:10 GMT-6
http://files.usgwarchives.net/tx/milam/newspapers/her1904.txt
Cameron Herald B Thur., 26 May 1904 Marriage Licenses: Alex Brown to Alberta Granison; Charlie Brown to Lula Cobb Sickness - Dr. T. J. Bennett of Austin, while assisting in the operation on Mrs. Chas. Williams last week, stuck a small piece of bone in one of his fingers and contracted blood poison. He has grown worse and is in very critical condition.
THE TEXAS SANITARIAN, edited by Dr. T J Bennett, of Austin, Texas
President Austin Automobile Club 1904
SOURCES
Doctors Sustain Injuries
Date: 1910-11-29; page 3
Paper: Dallas Morning News
Doctors' Election Closes Convention
Date: 1921-05-13; page 4
Paper: Fort Worth Star-Telegram
Hurt in Auto Accident
Date: 1905-01-30; page 5
Paper: Dallas Morning News
Medical Graduates
Date: 1883-03-30; page 2
Paper: Times-Picayune
Thomas J Bennett
Morrison & Fourmy's General Directory of the City of Austin, 1900-1901.
http://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth61100/
partnership page 16
Title Zachary Scott: Hollywood's sophisticated cad
Hollywood legends series
Author Ronald L. Davis
Edition illustrated
Publisher Univ. Press of Mississippi, 2006
Practicing Physician Certifies Automobile Promotes Public Health
Date: 1917-12-02; Part 5, Page 7
Paper: Dallas Morning News
automobile club
Motor age, Volume 5
Published 1904
Original from the University of Michigan
Digitized Oct 26, 2009
Convicted of Abortion
The Alabama Medical Journal, Volume 14
Medical Association of the State of Alabama
Publisher s.n., 1901
Original from Harvard University
Digitized Jun 26, 2008
Dr and Mrs Bennett Are Here From Austin
The Lubbock Avalanche (NA)
11 Apr 1922, page 1
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 UT Southwestern Medical Center, Texas Physicians Historical Biographical Database (www4.utsouthwestern.edu/lib.
Name: Thomas Joshua Bennett Year of Birth: 1854 Year of Death: 1921 _TMPLT: FIELD: Name: Page _QUAL: _SOUR: D _INFO: S _EVID: D
- ↑ American Medical Association, 1993, Directory of Deceased American Physicians, 1804-1929.
Directory of Deceased American Physicians, 1804-1929 Name: Thomas Joshua Bennett Birth Date: 21 Jan 1854 Birth Place: Austin, TX Death Date: 16 Mar 1927 Death Place: Austin, TX Type Practice: Allopath Practice Specialities: Austin, TX, 1883 Licenses: TX Practice Dates Places: Austin, TX, 1883 Medical School: Tulane University School of Medicine, New Orleans: Univ. of LA Med. Dept., 1883, (G) Education: Greenwood Masonic Inst., Trinity Univ. JAMA Citation: 88:1920 Cause of Death: angina pectoris; (M) _TMPLT: FIELD: Name: Page _QUAL: _SOUR: D _INFO: S _EVID: D
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 Www.rootsweb.com/~usgenweb, Travis County, Texas - Oakwood Cemetery in Austin part A-C (ftp.rootsweb.com/pub/u.
Bennett, Thomas J. Jan 21, 1854 Mar 16, 1927 1 _TMPLT: FIELD: Name: Page _QUAL: _SOUR: D _INFO: S _EVID: D
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 4.2 "Texas, Deaths, 1890-1976," database, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, FamilySearch (https:/fa
Dr T J Bennett; State of Texas, Travis County; 10724; 15 March 1927.
_TMPLT: FIELD: Name: Name VALUE: Dr T J Bennett FIELD: Name: Jurisdiction VALUE: State of Texas, Travis County FIELD: Name: Form FIELD: Name: CertificateNo VALUE: 10724 FIELD: Name: Date VALUE: 15 March 1927 _QUAL: _SOUR: O _INFO: P _EVID: D
- ↑ , "," (I)Texas State Journal of Medicine, Vol. XVII No. 2 (June 1921), online archives, Google Books (books.go
accessed, downloaded; 30 November 2011; page 47.
Dr. Thomas Joshua Bennett, our Fifty-fourth President, was born near Austin, Travis County, Texas, January 21,1854. He is a son of James and Margaret (Hamilton) Bennett. He spent his early life in the neighborhood in which he was born, attending the country schools of Williamson County, then spending two years in Greenwood Masonic Institute, Round Rock, and two years in Trinity University, Tehuacana. Considering his preliminary education complete, Dr. Bennett taught school for three years and then entered the Medical Department of the University of Louisiana (Tulane), from which institution he graduated as Doctor of Medicine, in March, 1883. Immediately upon his graduation, he entered practice at Webberville, near Austin, in connection with Dr. L. D. Hill, a well known physician of that place. In March, 1884, Dr. Bennett moved to Austin, where he has practiced for the past 37 years. During the first eight years of his practice in Austin he was a member of the firm of Morris and Bennett. For the next fifteen years he was a member of the firm of Bennett and Hudson, and now is the senior partner in the firm of Bennett, Weller and Weller. For nine years he was connected with Seton Infirmary, doing both general practice and surgery, and for eight years he practiced surgery exclusively in the Austin Presbyterian Sanitarium. For sixteen years he lectured on surgical subjects to nursing classes of these hospitals. In 1885 Dr. Bennett was married to Miss Amanda Hume of Austin, who died in 1892. He subsequently married Mrs. Emily (Hostetter) Daniel. Dr. Bennett during his entire professional life has been an active worker for organized medicine. In fact, he has been looked upon by many of his confreres as one of the chief corner stones of that structure. He was a member of the first Board of Councilors, following the reorganization under the then new American Medical Association plan, and shared all of the trials, tribulations and glories of that immortal group. He has, with a brief interval here and there, served continuously since that time—18 years, not counting the intervals just referred to. He has served as both secretary and president of his county and district societies, and has also been a vice-president of the State Medical Association. He has for many years been a Fellow of the American Medical Association and is a member of the American Public Health Association. He is U. S. Pension Examiner at Austin, and served as chairman of the District Board of Medical Examiners throughout the World War. He is a member of the Presbyterian Church and is a Mason of high degree. Dr. Bennett has been a conservative but consistent contributor to medical literature. He was the founder of the Texas Sanitarium, subsequently the Texas Medical News and now Medical Insurance and Health Conservation, to which he contributed much in the way of editorial matter and otherwise. The following are the titles of some of his papers, which were published in various medical journals: "Typhoid Fever, a Case With Unusual Complications;" "Differentiation Between Chancre and Chancroid, with Table;" "A Case of Traumatic Tetanus Successfully Treated by Hot Water Baths;" "Hemorrhoids, Fissures and Fistula in Ano, and Their Treatment;" "Treatment of Pneumonia;" "A Remarkable Case of Elephantiasis;" "A Case of Plantar Neuritis with Resection of the Plantar Cutaneous Nerve, Recovery;" "How to Prevent After Pains;" "Perineal Prostatectomy;" "Splenectomy, Axial Rotation and Death of Spleen, Recovery;" "A Treatment for Fistula in Ano Without a Cutting Operation;" "The First Pan-American Medical Congress;" "The Nation's Sin of Omission;" "Drains and Drainage." The Journal is pleased to present herewith a very good likeness of our honored President. We congratulate the profession on the election .of "this grim-visaged veteran, fresh from the battlefields of misery and sorrow, this gray-haired victor of 10,000 contests with disease and death," to quote from the nominating speech which made him President-elect. He will make us a good President and we are looking to him for results. _TMPLT: FIELD: Name: AccessType VALUE: accessed, downloaded FIELD: Name: AccessDate VALUE: 30 November 2011 FIELD: Name: SpecificContent VALUE: page 47 _QUAL: _SOUR: O _INFO: P _EVID: D
- ↑ 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 6.4 Mrs. George Plunkett Red, The Medicine Man in Texas (Houston, TX: Standard Printing Lithographing Co, 1930), ;
accessed, downloaded; 3 December 2011; pages 321-322.
_TMPLT: FIELD: Name: AccessType VALUE: accessed, downloaded FIELD: Name: AccessDate VALUE: 3 December 2011 FIELD: Name: Page VALUE: pages 321-322 FIELD: Name: Annotation _QUAL: _SOUR: O _INFO: P _EVID: D
- ↑ American Medical Association, 1993, Directory of Deceased American Physicians, 1804-1929.
place of death: Austin, TX date of death: 16 Mar 1927 _TMPLT: FIELD: Name: Page _QUAL: _SOUR: D _INFO: S _EVID: D
- ↑ 8.0 8.1 , "Deaths," Journal of the American Medical Association, Vol. 88 (11 Jun 1927), online archives, Journal of th
accessed, downloaded; 30 November 2011; page 1920.
_TMPLT: FIELD: Name: AccessType VALUE: accessed, downloaded FIELD: Name: AccessDate VALUE: 30 November 2011 FIELD: Name: SpecificContent VALUE: page 1920 _QUAL: _SOUR: O _INFO: P _EVID: D
- ↑ 9.0 9.1 9.2 , "," (I)Texas State Journal of Medicine, Vol. XVII No. 2 (June 1921), online archives, Google Books (books.go
accessed, downloaded; 30 November 2011; page 47.
_TMPLT: FIELD: Name: AccessType VALUE: accessed, downloaded FIELD: Name: AccessDate VALUE: 30 November 2011 FIELD: Name: SpecificContent VALUE: page 47 _QUAL: _SOUR: O _INFO: P _EVID: D
- ↑ "," (I)The (New Orleans) Daily Picayune, ; online archives (www.GenealogyBank.com : accessed ).
Medical Graduates; announcement; 30 March 1883; Medical Department University of Louisiana graduation ceremonies; accessed, downloaded; 27 November 2011; page 2.
_TMPLT: FIELD: Name: Author FIELD: Name: Article VALUE: Medical Graduates FIELD: Name: ItemType VALUE: announcement FIELD: Name: IssueDate VALUE: 30 March 1883 FIELD: Name: SpecificContent VALUE: Medical Department University of Louisiana graduation ceremonies FIELD: Name: AccessType VALUE: accessed, downloaded FIELD: Name: AccessDate VALUE: 27 November 2011 FIELD: Name: CreditLine FIELD: Name: Annotation VALUE: page 2 _QUAL: _SOUR: O _INFO: P _EVID: D
- ↑ R L Polk Co 1886-1906, Detroit, MI, Polk's Medical Register and Directory of North America (mcgovern.library.t
1886, 1896, 1902, 1906.
_TMPLT: FIELD: Name: Page VALUE: 1886, 1896, 1902, 1906 _QUAL: _SOUR: O _INFO: P _EVID: D
- ↑ "1900 United States Federal Census," database, Ancestry.com, Ancestry.com (www.ancestry.com/: accessed ), ; ci
Source Citation: Year: 1900; Census Place: Austin Ward 2, Travis, Texas; Roll: T623_1673; Page: 3B; Enumeration District: 86.
_TMPLT: FIELD: Name: Page VALUE: Source Citation: Year: 1900; Census Place: Austin Ward 2, Travis, Texas; Roll: T623_1673; Page: 3B; Enumeration District: 86. _QUAL: _SOUR: O _INFO: P _EVID: D
- ↑ E P Ingersoll editor, "Experience of a Texas Practitioner," The Horseless Age, 5 Jul 1905; online archives, Go
accessed, downloaded; 27 July 2010; page 554.
_TMPLT: FIELD: Name: AccessType VALUE: accessed, downloaded FIELD: Name: AccessDate VALUE: 27 July 2010 FIELD: Name: SpecificContent VALUE: page 554 _QUAL: _SOUR: O _INFO: P _EVID: D
- ↑ "1910 United States Federal Census," database, Ancestry.com, Ancestry.com (www.ancestry.com/: accessed ), ; ci
Source Citation: Year: 1910; Census Place: Austin Ward 3, Travis, Texas; Roll: T624_1595; Page: 10B; Enumeration District: 0071; Image: 145; FHL Number: 1375608.
_TMPLT: FIELD: Name: Page VALUE: Source Citation: Year: 1910; Census Place: Austin Ward 3, Travis, Texas; Roll: T624_1595; Page: 10B; Enumeration District: 0071; Image: 145; FHL Number: 1375608. _QUAL: _SOUR: O _INFO: P _EVID: D
- ↑ "Texas, Index Card Collections, 1800-1900," digital images, Ancestry.com Operations Inc., Ancestry.com (www.an
accessed, downloaded; 31 October 2012; Thomas Joshua Bennett, Sketches of his life.
_TMPLT: FIELD: Name: AccessType VALUE: accessed, downloaded FIELD: Name: AccessDate VALUE: 31 October 2012 FIELD: Name: ItemofInterest VALUE: Thomas Joshua Bennett, Sketches of his life _QUAL: _SOUR: O _INFO: P _EVID: D
- ↑ Sect 1, Lot 382
- ↑ Thomas Joshua Bennett medical practice:
Handbook of Texas Online, s.v. "," http://www.tsha.utexas.edu/handbook/online/articles/SS/fsc31.html (accessed May 28, 2007).
SCOTT, ZACHARY THOMSON (1880-1964). Zachary Thomson Scott, physician, son of Lewis and Abby (Boyle) Scott, was born on December 25, 1880, at Fort Worth, Texas. He graduated from the University of Texas Medical School at Galveston in 1903. While a medical student residing in St. Mary's Hospitalqv he was responsible for rescuing scores of patients trapped by the rising waters produced by the Galveston hurricane of 1900.qv After graduation he began his practice in Clifton, Bosque County. In 1909 he moved to Austin, where with Thomas J. Bennett he established the Austin Sanitarium and developed a lifelong interest in the Texas Tuberculosis Association. He instituted the sale of tuberculosis seals in Texas. During World War I Scott served as a lieutenant commander in the navy and was in charge of a unit at the naval hospital in Gulfport, Mississippi. After the war Scott and Frank C. Gregg established the Scott-Gregg Clinic in Austin in 1923. Scott retired from his practice in 1947 and began breeding cattle on a farm near Buda; he crossed Santa Gertrude with Herefords for a new breed he called San Gerfords. Scott married Sallie Lee Masterson on June 2, 1909; they were the parents of two daughters and a son, Zachary Thomson Scott, Jr.,qv who became a well-known actor. Scott died in Austin on January 19, 1964, and was buried in Austin Memorial Park.
BIBLIOGRAPHY: Cattleman, February 1964. Vertical Files, Barker Texas History Center, University of Texas at Austin.
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