Alden March

Alden March (1795–1869) was a leading nineteenth century American physician, surgeon and medical inventor.

March grew up in Sutton, Massachusetts. His brother was army surgeon, David March. March married Joanna P. Armsby in 1824.

He received his MD from Brown University on 1820.

Career

In 1821, March taught the first anatomy course in the history of New York State. He later founded the Practical School for Anatomy and Surgery in Albany, NY, and held the first chair in surgery at Albany Medical College. Among the devices invented by March were novel methods for removing dead bone and renal calculi.

He served as President of the American Medical Association and the New York State Medical Society.

Legacy

The Alden March Bioethics Institute at Albany Medical College is named after March.

gollark: The osmarks.tk primary server, hostnamed `loki` (this is before my new star-name hostnaming scheme was launched), only has ONE drive.
gollark: Yes, on a RPi's underpowered CPU, what could go wrong.
gollark: But when I do do computationally intensive stuff it would be annoying, plus I could only use stuff compiled for ARM.
gollark: I could, honestly, *mostly* run my services off a raspberry pi.
gollark: It's easy to reboot it if it implodes, too, except when I go on holiday to destroy the environment.

References

  • Kelly, Howard Atwood. A cyclopedia of American Medical Biography. Philadelphia. WB Saunders and Co. 1912.
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