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Charles Quintard : ウィキペディア英語版 | Charles Todd Quintard
Charles Todd Quintard (December 22, 1824 – February 15, 1898)〔''The Episcopalians'', David Hein and Gardiner H. Shattuck Jr. (2004, Praeger Publishers), p. 279〕 was an American physician and clergyman who became the second bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Tennessee and the first Vice-Chancellor of the University of the South at Sewanee. ==Medical career== He was born in Stamford, Connecticut, to a Huguenot-descended family and attended school in New York City, including medical studies at University Medical College, New York University and Bellevue Hospital, graduating in 1847. Quintard moved to Athens, Georgia, in 1848 to take up a medical practice, then moved to Memphis in 1851 to teach physiology and pathological anatomy at Memphis Medical College. Dr. Quintard's 1854 report on Memphis mortality statistics was covered in the New York Times, including his assessment of the city as being "the first considerable place to be without the range of yellow fever,"〔("Medical" New York Times, April 1, 1854. )〕 a boast that was to prove incorrect in the 1870s, when Memphis experienced several yellow fever epidemics.
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