The Taft Family and Homeopathy
January 27, 2008
The Taft family is extraordinary
and wide spread. They had influence across America in every sphere, and
some of them were homeopaths.
Alphonso Taft 1810 -
1891 was the Attorney
General
and Secretary of
War under
Ulysses S.
Grant
and the founder of an American political dynasty. He ran unsuccessfully
against Rutherford B
Hayes.
Taft was ambassador to
Austria-Hungary in 1882,
and to Imperial Russia
from 1884 to 1885.
Charles
H Taft was Florence’s
brother
was a homeopathic dental surgeon, who presented a
paper,
Injurious Effects of Amalgam Fillings Medical Advance, 30,6, June,
1893,
422-430.
Once these fillings were removed, he found that the medicines worked, and the person’s chronic condition disappeared or was significantly reduced.
As far back as the late 1800s, Dr. Charles Taft, professor of dental surgery at a Homeopathic Medical College in Chicago, claimed that amalgam fillings were responsible for the fact that some patients with chronic disease were not responding to homeopathic medicines. Once these fillings were removed, he found that the medicines worked, and the person’s chronic condition disappeared or was significantly reduced.
Charles was Professor of Dental Surgery and Therapeutics at the Hering Medical College in Chicago. (Charles’ father Jonathan was also a prominant doctor of dental surgery). He founded the Dentistry Laboratory at the University of Michigan.
The UM School of Dentistry shared space with the Homeopathic Medical College in its early days. Dr. Taft, the founding Dean of the School of Dentistry, wrote about the profession of homeopathy in his journal, Dental Register of the West (and his father before him). Some stories about interactions between the two schools are in the exhibit on Dr. Taft’s life.
In the same meeting, the Regents approved faculty for the Department of Homeopathy, including a specialist in Materia Medica (herbal remedies). The Homeopathy program later became a source of difficulties for Dr. Taft and his dental students…
After three years in planning, the School opened in 1875 with Dr. Taft as the founding Dean. Dr. Taft was at the time the Dean of the Ohio College of Dental Surgery and Professor of Operative Dentistry. In 1877 Dr. Taft… was inducted into the Michigan Dental Association.
What convinced him to stay at the University of Michigan was the unique opportunity to define a dental curriculum to meet the very highest educational standards, to truly lead the profession into the future, and to create future leaders of the dental profession.
During his tenure as Dean of the School, he consistently lobbied for a longer and more complex dental education program, succeeding in 1901 in establishing the four-year model of dental education which later became the national standard.
In 1881 he received the honorary degree of Doctor of Medicine from the University of Michigan.
In 1891 the School of Dentistry moved into facilities previously occupied by the University Hospitals. Dean Taft had asked every year for almost fifteen years for expanded teaching facilities for the School. The original teaching space for the School was shared with the Homeopathy Department…
Charles Phelps
Taft, brother of
President William Howard
Taft and an
American lawyer and
politician. Born in
Cincinnati, S&B
1918, headed “Republicans
for Progress,” created the Evironmental Protection Agency and lobbied
for it to proclaim that secondhand smoke causes cancer.
Charles
Phelps Taft II,
son of President William Howard
Taft was as Mayor of
Cincinnati,
Ohio
and the youngest President of the International
YMCA.
Cincinnatus A
Hartford Taft (?1820
?1822-1884) brother of Gustavus was the homeopath and eclectic
physician of
Mark
Twain.
(Note the name Cincinnatus denotes membership of the Society of the
Cincinnati of
which President William Howard
Taft was also a
member).
Cincinnatus A Taft was
a leading homeopathic physician in
Cincinnati and
he lived a full life on only one
lung and
died at the age of 64 in 1884.
When Mark Twain and his family lived in Hartford, they consulted homeopath Cincinnatus Taft, of whom Mark Twain wrote:
‘… And to my mind, first of all the good physician is our physician…’
Dr. Cincinnatus A. Taft, brother of Gustavus M. Taft, graduated from the College of Physicians and Surgeons of New York in 1846, and settled in Hartford the same year.
He had studied with his brothers and was the third homœopathic physician to locate in Hartford and the seventh in the state. (He was in partnership with Gardner S. Browne, F. Brownell, H. T. Brownell, Russell Caulkins and George S. Green).
He became one of the leading physicians of Connecticut. He died June 26, 1884.
Frederick P
Taft
graduated
from the New York Homeopathic Medical
College in 1892.
In 1903, however, the Tafts were listed as living at 713 3rd Avenue, while this house on Terry Street was occupied by the R.G and Sarah Sutphen family. Mr. Sutphen worked as a real estate agent. The Taft family lived in this home for but a few years (between circa 1904 and 1908), before moving to 320 Bross Street.
On March 5, 1909, Dr. Taft died suddenly from an intestinal hemorrhage, at the young age of 37. He was survived by his wife, and a young son. Dr Taft had been born at Richfield Springs, New York in 1871, but had grown up in Washington, D.C., and in Waterville, New York. He was an honors graduate of the New York City Homeopathy College, where he received a medical degree as a physician and surgeon.
Taft became assistant surgeon and physician at the Minnesota State Hospital at Fergus Falls in the 1890s, and it was during these years that he met and married Miss Margaret Cowie of Arcadia, Wisconsin. The Tafts moved to Longmont in 1899where Fred worked in private practice until his untimely death in 1909.
Gustavus M. Hartford
Taft brother of Cincinnatus,
was a pioneer of
homeopathy
in New Orleans and
active
in the yellow fever epidemic of
1853.
Dr. Taft of Hartford, Connecticut, and graduated in March, 1846, from the College of Physicians and Surgeons in New York. His interest in homeopathy having been piqued by cases of friends, he settled in Mobile, Alabama, in the fall of 1846 to practice it there. He was the pioneer homeopathic physician in that city. After a year there, he relocated to New Orleans.
Hartford was the second town in Connecticut in which homœopathy was introduced in 1842 Dr. Gustavus M. Taft located there. He was born in Dedham, Mass., December 7, 1820, read medicine with Dr. Josiah Flagg (first Vice President of the American Institute of Homeopathy) of Boston, and later with Drs. Amos Gerald Hull and John Franklin Gray of New York. He graduated at the University of New York in 1842, and at once began to practice in Hartford… in partnership with homeopath John Schue…
His health failed and he went to New Orleans in November, 1845. Dr. Holcombe says he was an elegant and accomplished gentleman, a thoroughly educated physician, and to fascinating address he added the charm of fine personal appearance. He acquired an immense business, and his sudden death, August 10, 1847, was regarded as a public calamity. Dr. Taft was one of the original members of the American Institute of Homœopathy.
He died of yellow fever August 10, 1847, aged twenty-seven years.
Mary Florence
Taft 1853-1927 was a
cousin
of President William Howard
Taft. She
graduated
from the Homeopathic
Department
at Boston University and
the
Massachusetts Homoeopathic
Hospital
where she
studied
under William
Wesselhoeft.
She was Professer of Gynaecology at the Hering College in Chicago, where she met Professors James Tyler Kent and Henry Clay Allen. Taft was a member of the International Hahnemannian Association and she wrote articles in numerous journals homeopathy.
Taft worked for 4 years in the library of Harvard and founded a private day care for children, in Newport, Rhode Island. After graduation, Taft began her medical Practice in Waterbury, Connecticut and a second practice in Boston.
Taft was a disciple of Emanuel Swedenborg, and she collected a large library both homeopathic and religious during her lifetime.
William Howard
Taft was the
twenty-seventh President of the United
States,
the tenth Chief Justice of the United
States,
a leader of the progressive conservative wing of the Republican
Party
in the early 20th century, a pioneer in international
arbitration and
staunch advocate of world peace verging on pacifism, and scion of a
leading political family, the
Tafts, in
Ohio. Son of Alphonso Taft and the
cousin of homeopath Mary Florence
Taft.