His occupations were in the State of New York. In 1892 he set up practice in New York City. He was a consulting physician to the Italian Hospital, New York, and to the Binghamton State Hospital. From September 23, 1907 - December 27, 1911 he was president of the New York State Commission in Lunacy.[2] He was also president of the Schuyler County Medical Society, and an associate editor of the New York State Journal of Medicine.[3] He was also the Director of the Saratoga Springs (New York) State Reservation Commission from 1913 - 1916.[4]
His biography in The Home Medical Library states that he was a, "Former Assistant in Neurology, Columbia University; Former Chairman, Section on Neurology and Psychiatry, New York Academy of Medicine; Assistant in Medicine, University and Bellvue Hospital Medical College; Medical Editor, New International Encyclopedia."[5]
References
^Murlin, Edgar (1911). The New York Red Book. Albany, New York: J. B. Lyon Company. pp. 67–68.
^Sanger, William; Bissell, Herbert; May, James (1913). State of New York, State Hospital Commission, Twenty-fourth Annual Report, October 1, 1911 to September 30, 1912. Albany, New York: J. B. Lyon Company. p. 44.
^"Masthead". New York State Journal of Medicine. 22 (6): 289. June 1922.
^"Death of Fellows of the Academy". Bulletin of the New York Medical Academy. 13 (12): 737. December 1937.
^Winslow, Kenelm (1907). The Home Medical Library, Vol. IV. New York: The Review of Reviews Company. p. 2.