









Who Was Hezekiah Beardsley?
Hezekiah Beardsley
CT Chapter of the American Academy of Pediatrics
104 Hungerford St.
Hartford, CT 06106
Voice 860-525-9738
Fax 860-727-9863
Executive Director
Jillian Wood
jwood@aap.org
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Who Was Hezekiah Beardsley? Howard A. Pearson, M.D., FAAP
The Hezekiah Beardsley Connecticut Chapter of the
American Academy of Pediatrics is only one of 59 state or regional chapters of the AAP that bears the name of a person.
There was a Hezekiah Beardsley Pediatric Club in Connecticut as early as 1935 that later became the Hezekiah Beardsley
Pediatric Section of the Connecticut Medical Society. When the Connecticut Chapter of the AAP was organized in 1948, the
Hezekiah Beardsley eponym of the pre-existing associations was retained.
Hezekiah Beardsley was born in Stratford, Connecticut in 1748. He had no
formal medical education, for indeed there were no schools of medicine in
Connecticut until the Medical Institution at Yale College opened in 1813. He
became a pharmacist and physician, probably through apprenticeships, and
practiced both professions in Southington and Hartford between 1778 and 1782.
In 1782 he moved to New Haven where he practiced medicine and opened a
apothecary shop on Chapel Street between Church and Orange Streets. He died
of consumption in 1790 and was buried on the New Haven Green. Later his
headstone was moved to the Grove Street Cemetery.
Beardsley was one of 13 New Haven physicians who founded the Medical
Society of New Haven County in 1784. One of the stated purposes of the Society
was "collecting and preserving useful papers relative to the practice of
medicine." Only four years later in 1788, the Society published Cases and
Observations: by the Medical Society of New Haven County in the State of
Connecticut. This volume, copies of which are preserved in the historical library
of the Yale School of Medicine, was the first published transactions of a county
medical society in America.
The most renowned of 26 reports in the transactions was contributed by
Hezekiah Beardsley. He described a male infant, son of a Southington farmer,
who had the onset of "constant puking in the first week of life." The child
continued to immediately vomit almost everything that he was fed. Beardsley
first examined the child in Southington when he was two years of age and noted
that he was "lean with a pale countenance and wrinkled skin like that of old
people." Beardsley, on the basis of his
clinical observations and examinations, later
diagnosed the child as having a "scirrosity in
the pylorus." The child died when he was
five years old. Beardsley, who had moved to
New Haven, did not hear of the death until
two days later. He went immediately to Southington to
perform an autopsy. He wrote:
"The later period, the almost intolerable stench, and
the impatience of the people who had collected for the funeral
prevented so thorough an examination of the body as might
otherwise have been made...The stomach was unusually
large, the coats were about the thickness of a hog's bladder.
The pylorus was invested with a hard, compact substance or
scirrosity which completely obstructed the passage into the
duodenum, to admit with greatest difficulty the finest fluid."
Beardsley's report was reprinted in its entirety in the
1903 Archive of Pediatrics by Sir William Osler who
considered himself a pediatric practitioner and, in fact, was
a founding member of the American Pediatric Society in
1888. Osler wrote that Beardsley had "completely and
accurately" described the condition of hypertrophic pyloric
stenosis of infancy. Although subsequent historical research
has uncovered earlier possible cases from England,
Beardsley's report is notable for its clinical and pathological
correlations and, of course, for its uniquely American origin.
Photo: Dr. Hezekiah Beardsley 1748-1790. Courtesey of the Yale Art Gallery |