Source: NMHS Newsletter Nov 1998
Philip Shaffer, M. D.
Taken from the
BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIRS OF
WABASH COUNTY, INDIANA
Published in Chicago l901
Philip Shaffer, M.D. an old and reliable
physician and surgeon of North Manchester,
practicing his profession continuously since
1862, was born in Stark County, Ohio, September
22,1834. He was reared to agricultural pursuits
and remained on his father's farm in the above
state until about nineteen years old, when he
accompanied his parents to Whitley County, IND.,
where he continued to till the soil until the
age of twenty-four. Meantime young Shaffer
concluded to enter the medical profession and
about 1859 began a course of preliminary reading
in the office of Dr. F.S.C. Grayston, of
Huntington, under whose instruction he continued
until entering the Lynn University, now the
Chicago Medical College, and, after taking one
course, went to Bracken, Huntington County,
where he began the practice of medicine, which
he continued at that place until 1863, when he
entered the Rush Medical College of Chicago from
which he was graduated in 1864.(The length of
this sentence is in contrast to the brevity of
medical training. ed)
He then returned to Bracken, Ind., and
resumed his practice for a short time, then
moved to Liberty Mills, in the county of Wabash,
which he made his location for several years,
meeting with good success in the meantime. From
the above town the Doctor went to Elkhart County
and located at Wakarusa. Here he again resumed
his practice and remained until 1873, then
removed to Bracken, Huntington County, where he
resided until 1881 , then moved to North
Manchester, Wabash County.
On locating in this city, Dr. Shaffer at once
forged to the front as a successful practitioner
and has ever since sustained that reputation, as
is attested by the extensive business he built
up and the high esteem in which he is held by
the people in a large area of territory.
The Doctor has had a long and eminently
satisfactory career, during which he has
ministered relief to thousands of suffering
mortals, earning a reputation for skill and
efficiency which has
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
brought him to the favorable notice of the
leading medical men throughout the northern part
of the state. While a long time in the practice
and remarkably busy in responding to the
numerous calls upon him for professional
service, the Doctor has never permitted himself
to fall behind the onward march of professional
thought, and he stands today among the
progressive physicians in a county noted for the
high order of its medical talent. He was long a
member of the medical societies of Huntington,
Elkhart and Wabash counties, not a nominal
member merely, but an active participant in
their deliberations.
Believing that a physician should not be too
closely tied to his profession, that is, to the
exclusion of other matters of importance, the
Doctor has long been a man of public spirit,
deeply interested in the progress of the country
and a factor in promoting the prosperity of the
city of his residence. In politics he long ago
manifested more than passing interest and voted
with the Republican party from its organization
in 1894. Not agreeing with its attitude on
certain great questions, he repudiated it in
that year and has since affiliated with the
party of the opposition, though by no means a
partisan in the sense of aspiring to official
honors at the hands of his fellow citizens.
In matters religious he entertains decided
views with the courage to express them when he
finds it necessary so to do. He believes in
being Christian only, consequently rejects all
man-made creeds and statements of faith and
worships with the Christian church, with which
he has long been identified.
Dr. Shaffer was joined in marriage the first
time in Huntington county to Miss Mary Ann
Smith, who died in North Manchester on the 24th
day of April, 1896, at the age of sixty years.
The children born to this union are as follows:
Michael; Lydia E. wife of Martin V. Kesler;
William H; and one that died in infancy. The
Doctor's second marriage occurred on the lst of
July, 1897, when Mrs. Elizabeth Abbott, widow of
the late Rev. George Abbott, of North
Manchester, became his wife.
As a citizen the Doctor is highly respected
by all classes of people is held by the
community is a compliment to his worth. He is a
man of sound judgment and unswerving integrity,
and as far as known no
|
|
|
|
Page Twelve
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
breath of suspicion has ever attached to his
character, nor has the rectitude of his
intentions ever been called in question by
captious critic or chronic fault-finder. His
life has been read to his fellow men, and it is
a more appropriate epitaph than cherished
inscription on marble shaft or granite obelisk.
The Doctor has always been very kind to the
poor in his profession doing much charity
practice for the worthy poor, of which he never
exacted a dollar, and also having been imposed
on to a large sum by professional deadbeats.
While he is not a wealthy man, the Doctor has
accumulated a sufficient amount of this world's
goods to place him in easy and comfortable
circumstances the remainder of his life.
|
|