Gordon Maurer

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Gordon Bostwick Maurer, M.D.
Eab-gordonP.jpg
Born
30 May 1899
Rochester, NY
Died
12 Nov. 1938
Margaretville, NY 

Family

Father
William Maurer
Mother
Katherine Maurer
Siblings
Carol Hess
Spouse
Florence Maurer
Children
Priscilla Burrage 

Known for

Alma mater
Sheffield Scientific School
Yale School of Medicine
UB School of Medicine

Gordon Bostwick Maurer, M.D. (30 May 1899 – 12 Nov. 1938) Son of William and Katherine.

Gordon attended the New Haven High School (class of 1917), Sheffield Scientific School (class of 1920), and the Yale School of Medicine (class of 1923).

In 1925, after the death of his father, Gordon moved to Margaretville, New York, and began General Practice on the 14th of October.[1]

In 1927, Gordon spent some time at the Post-Graduate School, College of Med., U. of B.[2]

Yale

For undergraduate studies, Gordon attended Yale’s Sheffield Scientific School, residing first at 1325 Boulevard,[3] and later at 185 Howard Ave.[4] The Sheffield Scientific School allowed advanced students to complete their undergraduate degree in three years (effectively skipping sophomore year). As a Freshman (1917–18), he earned Honors for Excellence in all Studies of the Freshman Year, Second Grade, and was awarded an academic prize For Excellence in Biology.[5] As a Junior (1918–19), he earned General Two-Year Honors for Excellence in all Studies.[4]

Gordon’s academic performance allowed him to combine his Senior year as an undergraduate with his first year of medical school; graduating Magna Cum Laude with a Combined Medical Bachelor of Philosophy (Ph.B.) in 1920. In the same year, Gordon was awarded the Yale School of Medicine’s Perkins Scholorship, and made a member of ΑΛΦΑ ΚΑΠΠΑ ΚΑΠΠΑ.[6] In 1921, Gordon was awarded the academic prize of being named a Ramsay Scholar.[7]

Upon completing his M.D. in May 1923, Dr. Maurer gave the baccalaureate service address, and joined Yale New Haven Hospital as an Assistant Resident,[8] and Surgical Service Intern, in the Department of Pathology and Bacteriology.[9]

Margaretville

See also this wiki's Catskill Mountain News article archive.

Gordon began his General Practice in Margaretville in 1925.

Eulogies

Epitaph

Gordon Bostwick Maurer M. D.
1899 — 1938

Thirteen years ago there came here a city chap, trained in one of the great universities.

The other members of his class went to big towns.

He, with the best records of them all, wanted to begin the practice of medicine in a country village.

He had compiled a list of prospective communities. He looked over several and chose us.

An untried city college boy—with magic hands, a keen vision, and uncanny knowledge of both the human body and the soul which activates it.

Soon after arrival he was called upon to care for a life given up as lost. He saved it.

He began to save others. He worked day and night. When he did not have proper apparatus or appliances he built some. When the snows kept him from patients he constructed a snowmobile.

Neither storm nor night nor mud nor snow kept him from the sick.

He took people into his home. It became a veritable hospital.

The fame of the boy spread throughout the section. Men and women from all walks of life asked for his attention.

The community built a hospital that he and others might the better care for those who needed care, medication and operation.

He continued. When a tired body all but gave up, he took a year out and returned to Yale for special work that he might come home and serve better.

He had tired of city pastimes. The lure of the country had been breathed into his soul. Camp, rod and gun, open fires, life in great outdoors gave zest, relief, happiness.

He loved our hills, our mode of life; he knew our ambitions, he smiled at our shortcomings.

He gave freely. Much of the work he did was without charge. Few knew the extent of his help to those who needed help. He served as few had ever served here before.

He was physician, parson, priest, confessor—we told him both our physical and mental troubles and he put us back on the road to reason and living.

Thirteen years he served. It was a life work worth while.

Today our hearts are numb at his loss, our senses befogged to know how to live without him. May we turn from the tragedy of the golden Indian summer morning that knew his death

And in the bleak days of the approaching Thanksgiving season thank god for those thirteen years.

— Catskill Mountain News

Yale Journal of Biology and Medicine

Gordon Bostwick Maurer, M.D. 1899–1938 — Yale, 1923

It is of common report in this time of the rapid development of the science of medicine that teacher and student alike are no longer infused with that skill in the application of knowledge which is spoken of as the art of medicine nor are they sensitive to the traditional relationship of physician and patient. It is presumed that the scientific method, while it enlarges knowledge, limits the skill of its application and dulls the sensibilities of the practitioner. No longer, so the complaint goes, and every generation repeats it—no longer do the schools turn out those skilled and devoted physicians with whom we were familiar in our youth. There is always that longing for the physician of the past,—a nostalgia for the Doctor of the Old School.

The truth is, of course, that such are present in every generation but only recognized when time and the adversities of life have turned youth into age and made it venerable. Now and then this process is fortuitously interrupted, and we suddenly become aware that we have been unwitting witnesses of a tradition in the making, that we have been entertaining a prophet unawares.

Such was the case with Gordon Maurer of the class of 1923 of the Yale University School of Medicine, who at the age of 39 suddenly and accidently met his death last November. Those who knew him well and were familiar with his work during his preparation for the practice of medicine were early aware that here was a rare mind, seriously searching a scientific understanding of this field. He laid out a program of several years of post-graduate study, at the end of which he anticipated a life-time of work in surgery, preferably in a teaching institution. Toward this end he had completed a year in pathology and an interneship in surgery, when, much to the distress of himself and of his friends, he was forced by circumstances arising at the moment to abandon further study and start in the practice of medicine. At this stage, this meant for him general practice and, inasmuch as it was essential that he be financially independent from the first, in a relatively small community where there was an obvious need for a physician. After canvassing the possibilities in a characteristically thorough manner he entered upon practice in 1925 in Margaretville, New York. From the beginning he was extraordinarily successful,—so much so that his friends in New Haven saw little of him, save when occasionally exhausted by his work he would seek a few days’ respite in a visit to his school and hospital. Once, a few years ago, realizing that he was of necessity assuming responsibilities for which he had not adequate training, he spent the greater part of a year in New Haven seeking by study and observation to further perfect himself in surgery. It was characteristic of him that during this time he perfected an instrument for doing intestinal anastomoses which obviated the necessity of an assistant, not always at hand in his practice.

As he endeared himself to his patients by his skill and devotion, he also came to occupy a position of respect and influence in the community. Most tangible evidence of this was the raising of adequate funds by a “drive” for the building of a small hospital, of which he became superintendent and for which he for the most part assumed the responsibility of maintenance.

In this brief 13 years, Gordon Maurer became so valued and beloved a physician that his untimely death. fell with the weight of a major catastrophe upon the town and countryside which he had so faithfully served. This doctor’s last journey, like that of “Weelum MacLure of Drumtochty” was the occasion for such a spontaneous expression of appreciation and loss as comes only with the passing of “A Doctor of the Old School.”

The spirit of this is well and feelingly expressed in the following elegiac lines by the local columnist, who calls himself “The Mountaineer”:

[Catskill Mountain News epitaph]

― 

New York State Medical Journal

A Physician Appreciated

Gordon Bostwick Maurer, M.D., a physician in Margaretville, N.Y., was instantly killed on November 12, 1938, by the accidental discharge of his shotgun while hunting partridges. Dr. Maurer was graduated from Yale in 1923, interned at the New Haven Hospital, and located in the little New York village in 1925. His death caused great distress to the people in his community.

The Catskill Mountain News, the town’s weekly paper, not only devoted more than half of its first page to Dr. Maurer, but there were seven different items in the issue in connection with the lamentable death of this brilliant young physician.

The finest testimonial of a medical man in years was published in a column “Mountain Dew” and signed “The Mountaineer”. In this day of proposed state medicine, its proponents should read this encomium and ponder well.

The following is quoted verbatim from the News:

[Catskill Mountain News epitaph]

― 

Obituary Record of Graduates of Yale

Gordon Bostwick Maurer, Ph.B. 1920.

Born May 30, 1899, in Rochester, N.Y.
Died November 12, 1938, in Margaretvtlle, N.Y.

Father, William Rochester Maurer, a civil engineer; instructor Mechanics Institute of Rochester for eighteen years; assistant engineer of tests New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad Company, New Haven, son of Jacob G. and Helen (Montgomery) Maurer of Rochester. Mother, Katherine (Bostwick) Maurer, daughter of Charles Elisha and Jane (Banford) Bostwick of Rochester.

New Haven High School. Combined premedical course, honors for excellence in all studies and honorable mention for excellence in biology Freshman year, general two-year honors Junior year; private Company F, Premedical Corps, Yale S.A.T.C., October 3 – December 14, 1918.

M.D. cum laude Yale University 1923 (honorable mention Campbell Gold Medal, member Alpha Kappa Kappa and Alpha Omega Alpha), assistant in pathology and bacteriology Yale School of Medicine 1923–24, interne in surgery New Haven Hospital 1924–25, engaged in practice of medicine Margaretville since 1925 with the exception of several months in 1934–35 which he devoted to study and observation in department of surgery at Yale, during this time perfected an instrument for doing intestinal anastomoses which obviated the necessity of an assistant, was superintendent of Margaretville Hospital which was built by a community drive for funds after his care for patients in his own house demonstrated the need for such an institution, had contributed two papers to American Journal of Surgery; member Delaware County Medical Society (president 1928–30), American Medical Association, American Legion, and Margaretville Rod and Gun Club.

Married January 17, 1929, at Lake Delaware, N.Y., Florence Gale, daughter of Thomas Russell and Jessie Brown (Dykes) Knight. Daughter, Priscilla.

Death due to a gunshot wound received in a hunting accident. Buried in Margaretville Cemetery. Survived by wife, daughter, mother, and a sister, Carol Woodruff Maurer Hess (Smith College ex-’27, Yale School of the Fine Arts ex-’29), the wife of Orvan Walter Hess (B.S. Lafayette College 1927, M.D. University of Buffalo 1931) of New Haven. ― 

Encyclopedia of American Biography

Physician, Surgeon—In these modern times it is often deplored that no longer do we have the beloved physician of the old school, the versatile and devoted family doctor familiar to our youth. The truth probably is in a nostalgic reverence for tradition one fails to recognize the prophet within our gates, especially when he is a man of science, of unusual breadth of schooling, no longer handicapped by limitations of transportation, communication, of the instruments of his profession or lack of knowledge of his art.

Those who love Margaretville, New York, and its environs, mourn the passing of Gordon Bostwick Maurer, M. D., general practitioner. A high honor graduate from the Yale University School of Medicine, highly trained in medicine and surgery, a student of whom a great deal was expected by his instructors and colleagues, he came to the town because it was in obvious need of a physician. Motivated by a true scientific thirst for a wider knowledge of the advances being made in medicine and surgery, he had laid out a program covering years of postgraduate work, wherein research and its applications to human needs would be combined. There is evidence that he hoped to make a career of surgery, preferably in a teaching institution. He was already well on this road when circumstances made it necessary to abandon his course and engage in a general practice. Once having made the decision he wasted no time or regrets on the might have been but from the beginning made an extraordinary success of his work as a medical man and surgeon. He also was more than a member of a great profession—he was a constructive, progressive citizen who gave himself freely to causes and organizations undertaken for the best interests of his adopted community. He was more than an exemplary citizen, for he was the friend of all who needed his skill, or his aid in any dilemma or crisis.

The Maurers are of German origin. In 18??, Jacob G. Maurer came to America from Alsace-Lorraine, bringing his son William with him and settling in Rochester, New York. This William Maurer married Katherine Bostwick, a descendant of Arthur Bostwick, who was born in December 1603, in Taporley, Chester County, England, and who located at Stratford, Connecticut, in 1635.

Dr. Gordon Bostwick Maurer was born May 30, 1899, at Rochester, New York, son of William Katherine (Bostwick) Maurer. When the boy was five years of age the Maurers moved to New Haven, Connecticut, where he acquired his elementary and college preparatory education in the city grammar and high schools. Entering Yale University with the intention of becoming a physician, he proved himself an exceptional student, completing seven years required work in six, and winning high honors while so doing. During this same period he was a member of Company F, Pre-Medical Corps, Yale Student Auxiliary Training Corps, from October 3 to December 14, 1918. In the three summers from 1921 to 1923 he interned in the Rochester State Hospital: June 29 to October, 1921; June 20 to October, 1922; July l to September, 1923. Later, he also did postgraduate work at the University of Buffalo. In 1923 he was graduated from the Yale University School of Medicine, a Doctor of Medicine, and remained with his alma mater for a year as assistant pathologist. There followed an internship in surgery, at the New Haven Hospital, when much to the of the distress of the faculty of the school and his many friends, circumstances rendered it necessary that he become immediately financially independent.

In 1925, Dr. Maurer established himself in a general practice at Margaretville, New York. Unlike most medical men he succeeded from the start, his worth being quickly recognized. He never, however, thought too highly of himself or his equipment for his career, remaining the student always. A number of years later he returned to New Haven for the greater part of a year to improve himself in surgery. It was characteristic of him, wrote a contemporary, that during this time he perfected an instrument for doing intestinal anastomoses which obviated the necessity of an assistant, not always at hand in his practice.

Whatever one may think of the form, the clearest picture of his career in Margaretville was drawn by a fellow-townsman who identified himself only as The Mountaineer, who wrote:

[Catskill Mountain News epitaph, first half]

For further clarity it should be pointed out that Dr. Maurer was not only the leader in raising funds for a hospital, of which he became superintendent, but for the most part assumed the responsibility for its maintenance. In the non-professional activities of Margaretville, he was a popular figure in most of its clubs and in movements making for community betterment. His religious affiliations were with the Presbyterian Church, but his humanitarian work and outlook was not limited by any bounds of condition, of any race or creed. Dr. Maurer was a member of the American Legion, and of the Rod and Gun Club. He shot moose in Canada; he knew intimately every hunting area near Margaretville, and maintained a summer camp on the mountain overlooking the village.

At Lake Delaware, New York, on January 17, 1929, Dr. Gordon Bostwick Maurer married Florence Gale Knight, daughter of Thomas Russell and Jessie Brown (Dykes) Knight. John Knight, Mrs. Maurer’s paternal immigrant ancestor, came from England in 1725 and settled in Portland, Maine. Her mother, born in Strathaven, County of Lanark, Scotland, the daughter of John Brown Dykes, came to America in 1889. Dr. and Mrs. Maurer became the parents of a daughter, Priscilla, born December 10, 1929.

It was while in pursuit of his favorite recreation, hunting, that Dr. Maurer lost his life on November 12, 1938. In the brief thirteen years of his career in Margaretville, he had become so valued and beloved a physician that his untimely passing fell with the weight of a major catastrophe upon the town and countryside which he had served so faithfully. The doctor’s last journey, like that of Weelum MacLure of Drumtochty, was the occasion of such a spontaneous expression of appreciation and loss as comes only from the passing of one of the great leaders of a community, a doctor of the old school although he was but thirty-nine years of age. The spirit of this was feelingly expressed in the lines of the already quoted, The Mountaineer, whose concluding words were:

[Catskill Mountain News epitaph, second half]

― 

Stories on Stone

This noteworthy tribute on the monument in Margaretville, New York, to Dr. Gordon Bostwick Maurer, accidentally shot while hunting in 1938, aged 39, was originally an editorial in the Catskill Mountain News:

[Catskill Mountain News epitaph]

― 

References

  1. Physician’s Certificate, State of New York, Gordon Bostwick Maurer, 14th Oct. 1925
  2. Post-Graduate School, College of Medicine, UB, 1927
  3. Yale University (December 1917) Catalogue of Yale University, 1917–1918, p. 820.
  4. 4.0 4.1 Yale University (Dec. 1919) Catalogue of the Sheffield Scientific School, 1919–1920, pp. 172–198.
  5. Yale University (1919) The Yale Banner and Pot Pourri for 1918–1919, Vol. XI, pp. 72–75.
  6. Yale University (1921) The Yale Banner and Pot Pourri for 1920–1921, Vol. XIII, p. 35–41 & 119.
  7. Yale University (1922) The Yale Banner and Pot Pourri for 1921–1922, Vol. XIV, p. 40.
  8. New Haven Hospital (July 1923) Report of the Directors (Oct. 1922 – June 1923), pp. 11 & 104.
  9. New Haven Hospital (July 1924) Report of the Directors (July 1923 – June 1924), pp. 12–15.
  10. Harvey, Samuel Clark, MD, Surgical Department Chair (January 1939) “Gordon Bostwick Maurer, M.D. 1899–1938 — Yale, 1923” Yale Journal of Biology and Medicine, Vol. 11, No. 3. Yale University School of Medicine.
  11. Bulletin of Yale University (1 January 1940) “Obituary Record of Graduates of Yale University Deceased During the Year Ending July 1, 1939” Bulletin of Yale University, No. 1.
  12. Downs, Winfield Scott (1941) Encyclopedia of American Biography, New Series.
  13. Wallis, Charles L. (1954) Stories on Stone: A Book of American Epitaphs. Oxford University Press.