Sanger Brown

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Sanger Brown
Bellevue Hospital Medical College
OccupationPhysician
Spouse
Bella Christy
(m. 1885)
Children1

Sanger Brown (February 16, 1852 – April 1, 1928) was an American physician.

Biography

Sanger Brown was born in

Bellevue Hospital Medical College in New York City, was assistant physician at the Bloomingdale Asylum for the Insane in White Plains, New York
in 1882–1885, and acting medical superintendent there in 1886.

He married Bella Christy on July 9, 1885, and they had one son.[2][3]

In 1890, he was appointed professor of

Chicago, and in 1901–1906 was associate professor of medicine and clinical medicine at the College of Physicians and Surgeons in the same city.[2] In his experiments with E. A. Schäfer at University College London, in 1886–1887, he was the first to demonstrate conclusively that in monkeys the centre of vision is located in the occipital lobe
.

In 1908 he joined the United States Army Medical Reserve Corps with rank of first lieutenant.[2]

He died at

Presbyterian Hospital in Chicago on April 1, 1928, and was buried at Graceland Cemetery.[3]

Work

He is known for describing Sanger-Brown cerebellar ataxia in 1892. It is one of the unusual types collected by Pierre Marie in 1893. It is accompanied by numerous ophthalmic abnormalities and pathologic changes in several tracts of the spinal cord.[4]

Publications

References

  1. archive.org
  2. ^ a b c d History of Medicine and Surgery, and Physicians and Surgeons of Chicago. Chicago: The Biographical Publishing Corporation. 1922. p. 426. Retrieved April 17, 2024 – via Internet Archive.
  3. ^ a b "Sanger Brown, Noted Alienist, Taken By Death". Chicago Tribune. April 2, 1928. p. 20. Retrieved April 17, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
  4. PMID 26207266
    .
  • wikisource-logo.svg This article incorporates text from a publication now in the
    New International Encyclopedia
    (1st ed.). New York: Dodd, Mead. p. 563.