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| You are in: Museum of History >> Hall of North and South Americans >> William Aspinwall | |
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ASPINWALL, William, physician, born in Brook-line, Massachusetts, 23 May 1743; died 16 April 1823. He was graduated at Harvard University in 1764, studied medicine in Philadelphia, and practiced in Brookline. He fought as a volunteer at Lexington, and afterward became a surgeon in the revolutionary army, and had partial charge of a military hospital at Jamaica Plain. After the war he interested himself in vaccination, built a smallpox hospital at Brookline, and succeeded in establishing that remedy into American practice. He was a prominent Jeffersonian republican, and a member of the Massachusetts legislature, and also of the executive council
Samuel
Huntington
First President of the
United States of America
in Congress Assembled
March 1, 1781 to July 6, 1781
President Who? Forgotten
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