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・ Edward Littleton
・ Edward Littleton (colonial administrator)
・ Edward Littleton (died 1558)
・ Edward Littleton (died 1610)
・ Edward Littleton (died 1629)
・ Edward Littleton, 1st Baron Hatherton
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・ Edward Litton
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Edward Livingston Trudeau
・ Edward Livingston Wilson
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・ Edward Llewellyn-Thomas
・ Edward Lloyd
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・ Edward Lloyd (Continental Congress)
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Edward Livingston Trudeau : ウィキペディア英語版
Edward Livingston Trudeau

Edward Livingston Trudeau (5 October 1848 – 15 November 1915) was an American physician who established the Adirondack Cottage Sanitarium at Saranac Lake for treatment of tuberculosis. Dr. Trudeau also established the Saranac Laboratory for the Study of Tuberculosis, the first laboratory in the United States dedicated to the study of tuberculosis. He was a public health pioneer who helped to establish principles for disease prevention and control.
==Life and career==
Trudeau was born in New York City to a family of physicians, the son of Cephise (née Berger) and James de Berty Trudeau, who was of French descent.〔http://pds.lib.harvard.edu/pds/viewtext/7950633?op=t&n=16〕〔http://www.nyam.org/library/rare-book-room/newsletter-archives/rb_newsletter_malloch12.pdf〕 During his late teens, his older brother James contracted tuberculosis and Edward nursed him until his death three months later. At twenty, he enrolled in the College of Physicians and Surgeons at Columbia University (then Columbia College), completing his medical training in 1871.
Trudeau married Miss Lottie Beare in June 1871, and after a honeymoon in Europe the couple settled on Long Island NY, where Trudeau began his medical practice. Trudeau mentioned Lottie with great affection in his autobiography and remarked on the fortitude with which she met the many adversities of their married life, which included his long struggle with tuberculosis, and the deaths of three of their four children. Shortly after settling in their new home on Long
Island, Lottie gave birth to the couple's first child, Charlotte, whom they called "Chatte."
He was diagnosed with tuberculosis in 1873, shortly before the birth of their second child, Edward Livingston Jr, whom they called Ned. Following conventional thinking of the times, his physicians and friends urged a change of climate. He went to live in the Adirondack Mountains, initially at Paul Smith's Hotel, spending as much time as possible in the open; he subsequently regained his health. In 1876 he moved his family to Saranac Lake and established a medical practice among the sportsmen, guides and lumber camps of the region. In 1877 Lottie gave birth to a third child, Henry, who died after a brief illness in the winter of 1878 or 1879.
In 1882, Edward Livingston Trudeau read about Prussian Dr. Hermann Brehmer's success treating tuberculosis with the "rest cure" in cold, clear mountain air. Following this example, Trudeau founded the Adirondack Cottage Sanitorium, with the support of several of the wealthy businessmen he had met at Paul Smiths. In 1894, after a fire destroyed his small laboratory, Trudeau organized the Saranac Laboratory for the Study of Tuberculosis with a gift from Elizabeth Milbank Anderson;〔"An Autobiography" by Edward Livingston Trudeau, Garden City, New York, Doubleday, Doran and Co. 1944 copyright 1915〕 it was the first laboratory in the United States for the study of tuberculosis. Renamed the Trudeau Institute, the laboratory continues to study infectious diseases. One of Trudeau's early patients was author Robert Louis Stevenson and in gratitude, Stevenson presented Trudeau with a complete set of his works, each one dedicated with a different verse by Stevenson (the books were later lost in a fire at Saranac). Trudeau's fame helped establish Saranac Lake as a center for the treatment of tuberculosis.
A fourth child, Francis B. Trudeau, was born in 1887. Francis later succeeded his father as director of the sanatorium until 1954. Sadly, Francis was the only one of the four Trudeau children to live a full life. Charlotte (Chatte) contracted tuberculosis at age sixteen while attending a girls school in New York City. She returned home to Saranac Lake where she was nursed by her parents for three years until her death there in 1889. Ned graduated from the Yale College of Physicians and Surgeons in 1900 and began a medical practice in New York City, but died soon after following a bout of pneumonia.
In addition to his work at the sanatorium, Edward Trudeau loved to hunt in the woods around Saranac Lake. Although his illness often limited his activities, he was a crack shot and loved the outdoors. In later years he had a camp on Upper Saint Regis Lake. Trudeau had many friends and was active in the community, helping to found St. John’s in the Wilderness Episcopal Church in Paul Smiths, New York, where he is interred. Edward Livingston Trudeau died in 1915.

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