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・ Samuel James Ervin III
・ Samuel James Hume
・ Samuel James Kitson
・ Samuel James Meltzer
・ Samuel James Mitchell
・ Samuel James Smith
・ Samuel James Supalla
・ Samuel James Thomson
・ Samuel Janus
・ Samuel Jaquinta
・ Samuel Jarvis
・ Samuel Jarvis (American)
・ Samuel Jaskilka
・ Samuel Jasper Loring
・ Samuel Jaudon
Samuel Jay Crumbine
・ Samuel Jay Keyser
・ Samuel Jeake
・ Samuel Jean de Pozzi
・ Samuel Jebb
・ Samuel Jefferson Mason
・ Samuel Jenkins, Jr.
・ Samuel Jennings
・ Samuel Jesi
・ Samuel Jessurun de Mesquita
・ Samuel Jickell
・ Samuel Joelah Tribble
・ Samuel John
・ Samuel John Atlee
・ Samuel John Carter


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Samuel Jay Crumbine : ウィキペディア英語版
Samuel Jay Crumbine
Samuel Jay Crumbine (September 17, 1862 - July 12, 1954) was a pioneer in public health who campaigned against the common drinking cup, the common towel, and spitting in public in order to prevent the spread of tuberculosis and other germs. Dr. Crumbine was born at Emlenton, Pa., Sept. 17, 1862, the son of Samuel D. Crumbine and Sarah (Mull) Crumbine, both natives of Pennsylvania. His mother was of German and English descent; his father, who was of German descent and a mechanic, served the Union during the Civil war as a member of the One Hundred and Third Pennsylvania infantry, being first sergeant of Company H. He was captured by the Confederates and confined in Libby prison, where he died of sickness, his death occurring prior to the birth of his son, Samuel. The mother of Dr. Crumbine died in Pennsylvania, in 1902, aged sixty-two years.
At the age of twenty-one, Dr. Crumbine entered the Cincinnati College of Medicine and Surgery, where he worked his way through and graduated in 1888. Upon receiving his diploma, he moved to Kansas and engaged in the practice of his profession at Dodge City. While there, he was appointed to the State Board of Health by Gov. W. E. Stanley. Then on Sept. 1, 1911, he assumed the duties of Dean of the School of Medicine of the University of Kansas. Dr. Crumbine was married Sept. 17, 1890, his twenty-eighth birthday, to Miss Catharine Zuercher, of Cincinnati, Ohio. They had two children: Warren, born Jan. 29, 1892, and Violet, born March 5, 1896.

Image:nmhm-brick.jpg|Brick - "Don't Spit on the Sidewalk" in the collection of the National Museum of Health and Medicine, AFIP in Washington, DC

==Life in Dodge City==
Dr. Crumbine began his medical practice “in rip-roaring, untamed Dodge City during its heyday,” the late 1880s and early 1890s. Fresh from medical school in 1885, he was taken on a tour of the saloons in the unsavory South Side. “I heard peals of laughter,” he related in later days, “staccato calls of the floor manager, occasional whoops of cowboys, and constant shuffling of heavy boots. At one end of the hall was a bar, doing a rushing business. At the other, on a small platform, was an orchestra—fiddle, guitar and banjo. The women were house entertainers, servants or demimondes.”
Dr. Crumbine was the model for "Doc Adams" on the long running TV show "Gunsmoke". The legendary lawmen of Dodge City—Wyatt Earp, Bat Masterson, Luke Short and Bill Tilghman—were his contemporaries. On one occasion, he saw Tilghman through a severe siege of pneumonia. The lawman became one of the few to live to a ripe old age.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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