Page:American Medical Biographies - Kelly, Burrage.djvu/413

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FLEET
391
FLEMING

himself with Dr. N. C. Keep in the manufacture of mineral teeth, inventing and perfecting the best made up to that time. In 1844– 45 he conceived the idea of drilling into the nerve chamber, in order to prevent the ill consequences arising front filling over the exposed or diseased nerve. His results were published in the Boston Medical and Surgical Journal, January 27, 1847.

In 1846 he was involved in the famous ether controversy opposing the patenting of the discovery, and was also much interested in homeopathy in his later years. Dr. Flagg was founder of the Boston School of Design for Women, organized on a plan similar to that of the school in Philadelphia. He assisted in the management of the school and in its financing, and a scholarship was afterwards established in his honor. He died December 20, 1853.

Boston Med. and Surg. Jour., 1847. vol. li. 178.
Hist. of Dental Surg., C. R. E. Koch, Chicago, 1909, vol. ii, 123–128.

Fleet, John (1766–1813).

John Fleet was born in Boston, Massachusetts, April 29, 1766, and died there unmarried, Jan. 4, 1813, in his 47th year. His grandfather, Thomas Fleet, who came from England and settled in Boston, was a book-seller, printer and newspaper publisher, his paper, the Evening Post, being the best in New England and his "Fleet's Almanacks" a standard authority for many years. Another claim to notoriety was the fact that he was considered hy many as the original compiler of the "Mother Goose Melodies," but this claim is disputed. He died in Boston in 1758, leaving as his successors in business his two sons, Thomas and John, the latter, who died in 1806, being the father of John Fleet, junior, the subject of this sketch, a graduate of Harvard College in 1785 at the age of 19. After graduation he studied medicine in the Medical Institution of Harvard College and dissected under the guidance of Dr. John Warren (q. v.). No medical degree had been granted by the College before 1788 owing to jealousies and friction between the medical professors and the Massachusetts Medical Society, but in that year John Fleet and George Holmes Hall, students in Dr. Warren's Surgery, applied for degrees, which were granted on July 16 after considerable discussion on the part of the professors. The degree was M. B., called Bachelor in Physic, and Fleet's name coming alphabetically before that of his classmate Hall, was thus the first to receive a medical degree from Harvard. The bestowal of this new degree was referred to by John Quincy Adams in his Diary thus: "There was a new ceremony of giving a Bachelor in Physic. Two young fellows by the names of Fleet and Hall received these diplomas, and even the President (Willard) in giving them seemed to have the awkwardness of novelty about him.

Seven years later, in 1795, John Fleet was the first to receive the degree of M. D. from the College, having passed an examination and been approved by the medical professors and also having presented a thesis in Latin, which was printed by his brother Thomas. The title of the thesis was: "Observationes ad Chirurgiae Operationes Pertinentes." A copy of this is in the Boston Medical Library.

Another of his publications that has come down to us is a Discourse delivered before the Massachusetts Humane Society, of which he was a member, June 13, 1797, on "Animation," having reference to drowning. For this he received a vote of thanks of the Society and was asked for a copy for the press. Dr. Fleet was the first assistant appointed in the medical department of Harvard College, being made assistant to Dr. John Warren in 1793.

He was associated with the best medical men in Boston in his practice, and was one of the founders of the Medical Improvement Society in 1803. From this Society grew the first Boston Medical Library, instituted July 1, 1805, of which Dr. Fleet was the first librarian, the books being kept at his house in Milk Street until he was succeeded by Dr. Warren, in 1807.

He was librarian of the Massachusetts Medical Society from 1800 to 1813, the year of his death, and secretary of the Society from 1798 to 1802, at a time when it was in a most decadent condition, as is evidenced by the scanty entries in his handwriting in the records of the Society.

Proc. Mass. Hist. Soc., vol. vii.
Harvard Grads. Mag., vol. xvii.

Fleming, Alexander (1841–1897).

Born in Curmumrock, Lanark, Scotland, March 8, 1841, he came to America when his father emigrated in 1859 owing to ill health. The family then settled in Sackville, New Brunswick.

He took part of his course in medicine before leaving Scotland but was unable to complete it till 1867, when he took his M. D. at Harvard, first studying at Chicago University where Dr. Brown-Sequard (q. v.), going on a visit, asked if he would travel with him as assistant demonstrator at his physiological lectures, but this offer was declined; later going back to Scotland to study further, and