Page:A cyclopedia of American medical biography vol. 2.djvu/142

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MACLEAN
122
MACLEAN

came one of the editors of the "Virginia Clinical Record," of which three volumes were issued. At the outbreak of the war, in 1861, he was made surgeon-in-charge and commandant of the Chimborazo Hospital at Richmond. This hospital he organized from its very beginning, and made it one of the largest the world has ever known, in which, during the four years of the war, 76,000 soldiers were treated with a remarkable number of recoveries, considering the poor facilities and scant supplies. He was successively professor of chemistry and practice of medicine in the Medical College of Virginia for many years; served as dean of the faculty for twelve years, and at the time of his death was president of the board of visitors.

"He was," says Dr. J. N. Upshur, "a man of most distinguished presence, magnetic and successful.

He married in 1845 Delia Patteson, of Richmond, and had nine children, of whom six survived him; three sons entered the medical profession. He died in Richmond on August 13, 1906, at the age of eighty-three.

His writings included: "Remarks on the Uses and Effects of Sulphate of Quinine." (."Stethoscope," December, 1857.)

"Present Condition of the Medical Profession in Virginia." ("Virginia Medical and Surgical Journal," vol. i.)

"Sick Headache." ("Virginia Medical Journal," vol. i.)

"Uterine Hydatids." Ibid., vol. v.

"Belladonna as an Antigalactic." ("Maryland and Virginia Medical Journal," vol. i.)

"The Action of Bismuth." Ibid., vol. ii.)

" Theory of the Heart." (" Richmond Medical Journal," vol. v.)

Transactions of the Med. Soc. of Va., 1906. "Medical Reminiscences of Richmond during the past forty years." (J. N. Upshur.)

R. M. S.

Maclean, Alexander Campbell (1854-1907).

Alexander Campbell Maclean was born in Belleville, Ontario, Canada, June 22, 1854, a descendant of the clan Maclean of Lochbine. His father, Charles Maclean, was a prominent figure in Scotch politics and for a time Chancellor of the Exchequer of Scotland. His mother, Jane Campbell, was a daughter of Capt. Campbell of Kintia and a niece of the Duke of Argyle, in whose family she spent her girlhood. Maclean was a graduate of the University of Michigan and there took his A. B. He then entered the medical department and graduated in 1877.

Maclean was a member of the Salt Lake County Medical Society and the Utah State Medical Association. After serving as interne in the University Hospital at Ann Arbor he was appointed surgeon to the Iron-Silver mine at Leadville, Colorado, and later surgeon to the Denver and Rio Grande Railroad at the same place. In 1889 he came to Salt Lake City and at once took a prominent position in the profession. He was closely associated with Dr. Hamilton in the organization of St. Mark's Hospital, Salt Lake City, and for years one of the staff. He married May 15, 1883, Susan Mariner of Memphis, Tennessee, and had four children, three sons and one daughter.

He died in Pueblo, Colorado, August 3, 1907, from a mental breakdown following tabes dorsalis.

W. B. E.

Maclean, Donald (1839-1903).

Donald Maclean, surgeon, was born at Seymour, Canada, December 4, 1839. His father, of Edinburgh, Scotland, became totally blind at the age of fifteen, but by the aid of tutors prepared himself for the ministry, only to be rejected because of his blindness. He then moved to the wilderness of Canada, where Donald was born. The boy's education was obtained partly at Ohphant's School, Edinburgh, and partly at Cobourg, Bellville, and Queen's College, Canada. In 1858 he returned to Edinburgh and entered the medical side at the University,