James Lawrence Cabell
James Lawrence Cabell | |
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File:James Lawrence Cabell.jpg | |
Born | Nelson County, Virginia |
August 26, 1813
Died | Script error: The function "death_date_and_age" does not exist. |
Occupation | Doctor, author |
Dr. James Lawrence Cabell (26 August 1813 – 13 August 1889) was an American sanitarian and author.
Contents
Life
He was born in Nelson County, Virginia, the son of Dr. George Cabell, Jr., and graduated from the University of Virginia in 1833. He then studied medicine in Baltimore, Philadelphia and Paris, and became Professor of Anatomy and Surgery at the University of Virginia, where he was chairman of the faculty in 1846 and 1847. Cabell was a full professor at the School of Medicine for 52 years (1842-1889) and was an early pioneer of the sanitary preparation of the surgical patient following Lister's principles.
He was in charge of the Confederate military hospitals during the Civil War. When yellow fever broke out in Memphis, Tennessee he was appointed chairman of the National Sanitary Conference and devised a plan that checked the spread of the epidemic.
In 1858, he published The Testimony of Modern Science to the Unity of Mankind. This work advanced the idea of evolution one year before publication of Darwin's On the Origin of Species. Cabell founded the National Board of Health which in 1880 became the U.S. Public Health Service. From 1879 until his death in Overton, Virginia, he was president of the National Board of Health.
Works
Notes
- ↑ "The Unity of Mankind," The Princeton review, Vol. XXI, No. 1 (January 1859), pp. 103–49.
- ↑ "Unity of Mankind," Debow's Review, Vol. XXX, No. 4 (April 1861), pp. 407–10.
References
- Edwin Anderson Alderman, Library of Southern Literature, Part 15 (1907, reprinted 2005), p. 66; Google Books.
- Cabell Family Papers, University of Virginia Library
External links
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