|
Henry Waldo Coe (November 4, 1857 – February 15, 1927) was a United States frontier physician and politician. Coe was born in Waupun, Wisconsin, to Dr. Samuel Buel Coe and his wife Mary Jane (Cronkhite). After his education and training, Coe would go on to become a pioneer doctor in the Dakota Territory, a member of the territorial legislature, and close friend of Theodore Roosevelt. ==Biography== When he was very young Coe and his parents moved to Morristown, Minnesota. After graduating from high school, Coe took classes at the University of Minnesota and then supplemented this by study with his father and attending classes at the University of Michigan - Ann Arbor. He graduated from Long Island College Hospital in New York in July 1880. He moved to Mandan, North Dakota and was the first physician to settle in the Dakota Territory. He was elected to the last territorial legislature (1885) before the territory was divided. He also served as mayor of Mandan.〔 While in the Dakota Territory, Coe met a young Theodore Roosevelt who had gone there to regain his health. Their friendship would last until Roosevelt's death in 1919. Henry and his wife Viola moved to Portland, Oregon in 1890 where he focused on treating nervous and mental diseases, and where he owned and operated the Morningside Hospital. He quickly rose to a prominent position in financial and political affairs of the Northwest. He was president of the First National Bank of St. Johns, Oregon, president of the First National Bank of Kelso, Washington, vice-president of the Scandinavian-American Bank of Portland, Oregon, director of the Scandinavian-American Savings Bank of Astoria, Oregon, one of the proprietors of the Сое-Furnish Irrigation Project of Stanfield, Oregon, and also had extensive mining interests. Always an active Republican he was a delegate to the Republican National Conventions at Chicago in 1904 and 1908, and in 1906 and 1907 was a member for Portland in the Oregon State Senate. As a close friend of Theodore Roosevelt, during his presidency Coe served as a confidential representative of his interest in Oregon. He was president of the First National he was a party leader of the national Progressive Party in the 1900s. After retiring from practice in 1920, Henry and his second wife traveled extensively in Europe, Africa, Asia, and South America.〔 In 1906, he was president of the American Medical Editor's Association. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Henry Waldo Coe」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
|