James Joseph Walsh
Biography
Walsh was born in New York City. He graduated from Fordham College in 1884 (PhD, 1892) and from the University of Pennsylvania (MD) in 1895. After postgraduate work in Paris, Vienna and Berlin he settled in New York. Walsh was for many years Dean and Professor of nervous diseases and of the history of medicine at Fordham University school of medicine.
In addition to contributing to the New International Encyclopedia and to medical and other journals, he also published a variety of popular works.[2]
Works
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Articles
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Miscellany
- "The Treatment of Catarrhal Icterus," International Clinic, Vol. II, Tenth Series, 1900.
- "Winged Insects and their Larvae as Parasites of Man," International Clinics, Vol. IV, Eleventh Series, 1902.
- "The Struggle for Life and Peace," Proceedings of the National Arbitration and Peace Congress, New York, April 14 to 17, 1907.
- "The Church and Copernicus," Letter to The New York Times, June 27, 1908.
- "Occupations and So-called Rheumatic Pains," International Clinic, Vol. I, 1909.
- "Physicians' Fees Down the Ages," International Clinics, Vol. IV, Twentieth-Series, 1910.
- "Professional Life and Community Interest," The Creighton Chronicle, Vol. II, No. 8, 1911.
- "The Mask of Diabetes," International Clinics, Vol. I, Twenty-Second Series, 1912.
- "Simulants of Nervous Exhaustion," International Clinics, Vol. IV, Twenty-Second Series, 1912.
- "Psychoneuroses in the Male," International Clinics, Vol. II, Twenty-Third Series, 1913.
- "Neurotic Discomfort and the Law of Avalanche," International Clinics, Vol. IV, Twenty-Third Series, 1913.
- "Insomnia: Foot Troubles, Rheumatism and Gout," International Clinics, Vol. II, Twenty-Fourth Series, 1914.
- "Some Dangers of Obesity Cures," International Clinics, Vol. IV, Twenty-Fourth Series, 1914.
- "Nervous Exhaustion," International Clinics, Vol. II, Thirtieth Series, 1920.
- "Neuroses and Psychoneuroses and the Therapeutic Value of Food," International Clinics, Vol. III, Thirty-First Series, 1921.
- "The Therapeutics of the Psychoneuroses," International Clinics, Vol. IV, Thirty-Second Series, 1922.
- "Anesthesia." In: The Catholic Encyclopedia, Vol. 1. New York: The Gilmary Society, Inc., 1936, pp. 507–508.
Notes
- "Dr. James J. Walsh is Honored at Rites; Archbishop Spellman Presides at Mass for Physician, Author," The New York Times, March 5, 1942.
- Mcnamara, Pat. "James J. Walsh, Neurologist and Medievalist," Patheos, February 28, 2009.
- MacCallum, W. G. "Makers of Modern Medicine," Science, New Series, Vol. 26, No. 660, 1907.
- Roosevelt, Theodore. "Education: How Old the New," The Outlook, April 8, 1911.
- Colby, Elbridge. "Shakespeare and Catholicism," The Ecclesiastical Review, Vol. LV, 1916.
- "Safeguarding Children's Nerves: A Handbook of Mental Hygiene," The Saturday Review, June 20, 1925.
- Shryock, Richard H. "Mother Alphonsa, Rose Hawthorne Lathrop by James Joseph Walsh," The Mississippi Valley Historical Review 17 (4), March 1931.
Further reading
- Gronberger, Sven Magnus (1917). St. Bridget of Sweden; a Chapter of Mediaeval Church History, Publications of the Writers Club of Washington 1 (2).
- Kirwin, Harry W. (1960). "James J. Walsh: Medical Historian and Pathfinder", The Catholic Historical Review 45 (4), pp. 409–435.
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External links
Wikisource has original works written by or about: James Joseph Walsh |
- Works by James Joseph Walsh at Project Gutenberg
- Works by or about James Joseph Walsh at Internet Archive
- Works by James Joseph Walsh at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)
- Old-Time Makers of Medicine by James J. Walsh - free ebook by eBookBees.com
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