Chap. 8. 



EDUCATION AND LITERATURE. 



165 



ALUMNI ANU HONORARY GRADUATES. 



VERMONT MEDICAL COLLEGE. 



John S. Miller 

 Samuel Potter 

 Isaac S.Stackpole 

 Benjamin Weeks 

 Rennet Wing 

 Samuel S. Wright 

 Calvin S. Wells. 23 



HONORARY. 



Joseph Braman 

 Solomon Dean 

 William Noble 

 William Perrine 

 Mather Williams 

 1837. 

 Sjning Term. 

 E. A. Anderson 

 Edward S. Belleau 

 Israel M. Brown 

 John Branch, jun. 

 Henry Cartier 

 Lucian P. Cheney 

 A. P. L. Consigny 

 Ira De La Mater 

 Jean B. Desrosiers 

 George W. Fish 

 George S. Gale 

 John R. Goodrich 

 W. Halsey, jun. 

 Hosea A. Hamilton 

 Tliomas M. Hayes 

 N. M. Herrington 

 William Holmes 

 O. A. Hollenbeck 

 Egbert Jamieson 

 Myron Knowlton 

 Van Buren Lockrow 

 Joseph Lusingan 

 Henry Miller 

 Joseph N. Northrop 

 Jacob H. Norwood 

 Henry P. Pulling 

 Fred. A. Putnam 

 Lewis Ptpynolds 

 Russell Tiffany 

 Lucius A. Thomas 

 U. H. Wheeler 

 Joseph Whelpley 

 S. G. Stickney. 33 



HONORARY. 



Abraham Pullino-. 

 Fall. Term. ° 

 Timothy Amiot 



Fred. R. Bailey 

 John C. Benham 

 Ephraim Brewster 

 D. C. Chamberlain 

 James Christie 

 I. Des Reviores 

 NahumP. Monroe 

 Stephen G. Talmage 

 Louis H. Ferland 

 Robert Frasier 

 Alplieus Goodman 

 Charles F. Goss 

 Joseph N. Gouin 

 Edward Grew 

 Henry R. Hamilton 

 John B. Holmes 

 Ezekiel M. Wade 

 David D. Wilcox 

 DeW.C.Willoughby 

 Geo. H. Young. 21 



HONORARY. 



Eli Bois 



John De Wolf, jun. 



1840. 

 Elon G. Carpenter 

 Theodore Gay 

 Robert Hatliaway 

 James Sandford 

 Fred. P. Wheeler 

 John A. Yates. 6 



HONORARY. 



Moses Cobb 

 Clias. W. Horton. 



1841. 

 Henry Baxter 

 Davis L. Carroll 

 Solomon Deck 

 James Ferguson 

 Backus H. Haynes 

 Jolin M. Johnstone 

 Hiram Monroe 

 J. N. Northrop 

 Edwin H. Sprague 

 C. A. L. Sprague 

 J. Tunnicliff, jun. 

 T. G. Walker 

 Wm. S. Way. 13 



HONORARY. 



Wm.C. Wallace 

 John Salter 

 Nelson Monroe. 



Whole number of Alumni, 531 



" " of Honorary graduates, G3 



Section VI. 



Vermont Medical College. 



This institution owes its origin to the 

 labors and efforts of Dr. Joseph A. Gal- 



lup. Soon after the dissolution of his 

 connection with the Vermont Academy 

 of Medicine at Castleton, he commenced 

 preparations for opening a medical school 

 at Woodstock. A suitable building hav- 

 ing been prepared, lectures were com- 

 menced, and the first course given in the 

 autumn of 1827. The institution re- 

 ceived the name of the " Clinical School 

 of Medicine," and the students for several 

 years received their degrees from Water- 

 ville College, in the state of Maine. In 

 1830 a connection was formed between 

 this institution and Middlebury College, 

 in consequence of which the President of 

 that Colleg-e attended the anniversaries 

 of the school at Woodstock, and conferred 

 degrees upon such students as wen> rec- 

 ommended for that purpose by the medi- 

 cal faculty. This arrangement continued 

 till 1836. 



In October, 1835, an act of incorpora- 

 tion was obtained from the legislature of 

 the state, and the institution took the 

 name of the Vermont Medical Colleire. 

 By this act it was constituted an indepen- 

 dent medical school, and was placed un- 

 der tlie direction of a board of trustees, 

 with power " to give and confer all such 

 medical degrees, honors, diplomas, or li- 

 censes as are usually given or conferred 

 in colleges or medical institutions." The 

 same act also provided for the annual ap 

 pointment of a board of examiners by the 

 judges of the supreme court. 



The annual lecture term in the Ver- 

 mont Medical College at Woodstock, com- 

 mences on the second Thursday in March, 

 and continues 13 weeks. Examinations 

 are held at the close of the lecture term, 

 in the presence of the trustees, faculty 

 and board of examiners, and degrees are 

 conferred upon such as are entitled to re- 

 ceive t'lem. Fee for the course of lec- 

 tures .f 50 ; fee for those, who liave at- 

 tended two full courses at a regularly es- 

 tablished medical scJiool, or schools, .'{510 ; 

 graduation fee $18. In the recess of the 

 lectures, there is a reading term, in which 

 instruction is given to resident students 

 in connection with daily recitations. The 

 reading term is conducted by Dr. Palmer, 

 and the fee is $10 per quarter. 



Previous to its incorporation, the medi- 

 cal school at Woodstock was controlled 

 principally by its founder, Dr. Gallup, 

 who procured the assistance of such lec- 

 turers as were deemed necessary. Since 

 that period, the affairs of the institution 

 have been managed by a board of trustees, 

 a list of whom, together with the officers 

 and medical faculty since its incorpora* 

 tion, and all the graduates from the be- 

 ginning, is contained in the following 



