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William James Mayo

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American surgeon

William James Mayo
Born(1861-06-29)June 29, 1861
DiedJuly 28, 1939(1939-07-28) (aged 78)
Alma materUniversity of Michigan (M.D.)
Known forOne of the principal founders of theMayo Clinic
AwardsDistinguished Service Medal (U.S. Army)
Scientific career
FieldsMedicine &Surgery
InstitutionsMayo Clinic

William James Mayo (June 29, 1861 – July 28, 1939) was aphysician andsurgeon in the United States and one of the seven founders of theMayo Clinic. He and his brother,Charles Horace Mayo, both joinedtheir father's private medical practice inRochester, Minnesota, US, after graduating from medical school in the 1880s. In 1919, that practice became the not-for-profit Mayo Clinic.

Augustus Stinchfield was also asked to join the medical practice in 1892 by William Worrall Mayo. Once Stinchfield was hired, W. W. Mayo retired at age 73. Others who were invited to be part of the enterprise were C. Graham, E. Starr Judd,Henry Stanley Plummer, Melvin Millet andDonald Balfour.

Early years

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William James Mayo

William James Mayo was born toWilliam Worrall Mayo and his wife Louise inLe Sueur, Minnesota, in hisparents' home. As a child, William and his brother Charles frequently accompanied their father as he went about his business as a pioneer physician. They began by helping out with very menial tasks, and were gradually given more responsibility. Eventually, the boys were administering anesthesia and tying off blood vessels.

One night at the age of 16, Will accompanied his father to an abandoned hotel where one of the elder Mayo's patients worked as the caretaker. The patient had just died and Mayo was going to perform anautopsy. Will stood by and watched the procedure and after about an hour, it was time to go to another patient's home. Mayo asked his son to stay behind and clean up. "Sew up the incisions and then tuck the sheet around the corpse. When you finish, go right home." Will nervously began to stitch up the incisions on the body and recounted the incident many years later saying, "I'm about as proud of the fact that I walked out of there, instead of ran, as of anything else I ever made myself do".

Education and career

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Mayo earned his medical degree at the University of Michigan Medical School in 1883,[1] where he became a founder ofNu Sigma Nu Medical Fraternity. Afterwards he returned to Rochester to practice medicine alongside his father and his brother Charles.

OnAugust 21, 1883, atornado struck Rochester, killing 29 people and seriously injuring over 55 others. One-third of the town was destroyed, but young Will and his family escaped serious harm. The relief efforts began immediately with a temporary hospital being established at the town's dance hall. The Mayo brothers were extensively involved in treating the injured who were brought there for help.Mother Alfred Moes and theSisters of Saint Francis were called in to act as nurses (despite the fact they were trained as teachers and had little if any medical experience).

After the crisis had subsided, Mother Alfred Moes approachedWilliam Worrall Mayo about establishing a hospital in Rochester. On September 30, 1889,Saint Mary's Hospital opened. W.W. Mayo, 70 years old, became the consulting physician and surgeon at the hospital, and his two sons began seeing patients and performing surgery with the assistance of theSisters of Saint Francis.

Personal life and death

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William J. Mayo married Hattie Marie Damon (1864–1952) in 1884. They had 5 children, two of whom survived infancy. Carrie born in 1887 and Pheobe in 1897 both married physicians at the Mayo Clinic.

He died in July 1939 ofgastric carcinoma (stomach cancer) in Rochester, Minnesota. That type of tumor had been a major focus of his surgical practice. Mayo is buried with his family members near his parents and brother at Oakwood Cemetery in Rochester.

TheUnited States Postal Service printed astamp depicting him and his brother,Charles Horace Mayo, on September 11, 1964.

Will's father and his brother Charles H. Mayo were prominentFreemasons of theGrand Lodge of Minnesota, and members of Rochester Lodge #21. Will petitioned the lodge but his medical practice and time with his family did not allow him the time to join the fraternity.

TheDr. William J. Mayo House in Rochester is listed on the U.S.National Register of Historic Places.

Military service

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William J. Mayo served inWorld War I at the rank ofcolonel (O6), as chief adviser for U.S. Army surgical services[2] in the office of theU.S. Army Surgeon General. His brother Charles was also a Colonel in theU.S. Army Medical Corps and alternated with William as the associate chief adviser for surgical care of U.S. Army soldiers. When PresidentWoodrow Wilson organized the Committee of American Physicians for Medical Preparedness in 1916, William was named its chairman and Charles as one of its members. That committee subsequently became the General Medical Board of the Council for National Defense. William was made a member of its executive committee and Charles was his alternate.

DuringWorld War I, the Mayo Clinic continued to be busy. Many draftees were examined and war training classes were conducted for new physicians in the medical corps. William and Charles designed courses to educate military doctors on the latest scientific and surgical developments. The two brothers divided their time between Rochester and their duties in Washington, D.C. so that one of them would always be at the Clinic. This schedule took a toll on their health; Charles contractedpneumonia during one of his stints in Washington, and William developedhepatitis while in Rochester in 1918.[3]

After hostilities ended in November 1918, both of the Mayo brothers were promoted to the rank ofbrigadier general (O7) in theU.S. Army Reserve. In addition, they both received the U.S.Distinguished Service Medal[4] for their wartime service to the country.

  • William J. Mayo as a colonel in the U.S. Army Medical Corps, 1917
    William J. Mayo as a colonel in the U.S. Army Medical Corps, 1917
  • Mayo as a major in the Medical Corps
    Mayo as a major in the Medical Corps
  • U.S. Distinguished Service Medal
    U.S. Distinguished Service Medal
  • Letter from U.S. War Department to William Mayo for Distinguished Service Medal
    Letter from U.S. War Department to William Mayo for Distinguished Service Medal
  • William James Mayo's last office in the Plummer Building, as it was during his lifetime.
    William James Mayo's last office in thePlummer Building, as it was during his lifetime.
  • Doctors Mayo stamp
    Doctors Mayo stamp

Predictions

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In September 1931, Mayo and other prominent individuals of the time were invited byThe New York Times to make a prediction concerning the world in eighty years time in the future, in 2011, to celebrate the paper's hundred-and-sixtieth anniversary since its establishment in 1851. Mayo's prediction was that thelife expectancy of developed countries would reach 70 years, compared to less than sixty years in 1931.

Contagious and infectious diseases have been largely overcome, and the average length of life of man has increased to fifty-eight years. The great causes of death in middle and later life are diseases of heart, blood vessels and kidneys, diseases of the nervous system, and cancer. The progress that is being made would suggest that within the measure of time for this forecast the average life time of civilized man would be raised to the biblical term of three-score and ten.[5]

"Three-score and ten" means 70 years. The average life expectancy in the United States was approximately 78 years as of 2010, and it exceeded 80 years in other countries such as Japan.

References

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  1. ^"The brilliant brothers behind the Mayo Clinic".PBS NewsHour. June 29, 2018. RetrievedSeptember 25, 2018.
  2. ^Rutkow, I. M. (2001). "World War I Surgery".Archives of Surgery.136 (11): 1328.doi:10.1001/archsurg.136.11.1328.PMID 11695985.
  3. ^Mayo Brothers Biography. notablebiographies.com
  4. ^Recipients of the Army Distinguished Service Medal. homeofheroes.com
  5. ^Mayo, W. J. (September 13, 1931).""The Average Lifetime of Man May Rise to the Biblical 70"; Dr. Mayo Says Also That a Proper Use of Our Leisure Will Be Evolved".The New York Times. RetrievedDecember 15, 2010.

Further reading

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  • Clapesattle, Helen.The Doctors Mayo, University of Minnesota Press (1975).ISBN 0-8166-0465-7

External links

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Wikimedia Commons has media related toWilliam James Mayo.
Wikiquote has quotations related toWilliam James Mayo.
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