Showing posts with label William E.B. Davis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label William E.B. Davis. Show all posts

Friday, February 19, 2021

Birmingham Photo of the Day (78): Motorcycle Police

I came across this photograph as I wandered through the Alabama Mosaic site and thought I would explore it a bit. The item is from the digital collections at the Birmingham Public Library, as linked below. That entry tells us nothing beyond noting it shows Birmingham police officers on motorcycles and was taken by O.V. Hunt [1881-1962]. Oscar Virgil Hunt was a commercial photographer in the city for many years and his work documents decades of Birmingham history. The Library maintains a Hunt collection; more about it and him can be found here

I'm sure someone familiar with the history of Birmingham police uniforms and/or the motorcycle type could date this photo more precisely than I can. However, there is another feature that tells us something. That statue in the background is one of William Elias B. Davis, a prominent city physician who died in February 1903 at the age of forty. 

The statue was dedicated in Capitol Park [now Linn Park] on December 14, 1904. In 1957 it was moved to the front of the New Hillman Building and has stood there, more or less, ever since. I've written a blog post on Davis and his physician brother John and their accomplishments. You can also read about them here.  

Thus this photo was taken sometime between 1904 and 1957, no doubt closer to the former than the latter. If you have any more ideas, please leave them in the comments!



Source: Birmingham Public Library Digital Collections


Wednesday, December 17, 2014

Standing Tall at UAB: The Statue of Dr. William E.B. Davis


This statue is found to your left as you start up the front entrance steps of the New Hillman building on the UAB campus. You can find out more about the building in an earlier blog post. The man depicted is William Elias Brownlee Davis [1863-1903], described in the subtitle of an article about him as "surgeon--teacher--organizer." Davis was one of Alabama's most prominent 19th century physicians.

Born in Trussville, William and his older brother John formed a third generation of doctors in the family. Grandfather Dr. Daniel Elias Davis was an early settler in Alabama; their father, Dr. Elias Davis, was killed at the Battle of Petersburg during the Civil War.

John Daniel Sinkler Davis graduated from the Medical College of Georgia in 1879, and when he set up practice in Birmingham two years later invited his sibling to come "read" medicine under him. William studied at the University of Alabama, medicine at Vanderbilt and the University of Louisville and graduated from Bellvue Hospital Medical College in New York City in 1884. Then the Davis brothers began a joint practice in Birmingham.

 
The brothers were nothing if not ambitious. Within a decade they had started the Alabama Medical and Surgical Journal, founded the Birmingham Medical College where experimental surgery on dogs was included in the curriculum, and opened a private clinic for surgery and gynecology on Third Avenue. The brothers also helped organize the Southern Surgical and Gynecological Association at a meeting in October 1887 held in the local YMCA. The organization still exists today as the Southern Surgical Association.

Originally located on 21st Street North in a former hotel, a new building for the Birmingham Medical College was constructed in 1902 in the same block where this statue now stands. A two-story autopsy house was added later. The college graduated its final class in May, 1915. Graduates from the school included one woman, Elizabeth White. Clinical training took place at Hillman Hospital, St. Vincent's Hospital, and other city facilities including the Davis Infirmary.


In addition to the Southern Surgical and Gynecological Association, William served other medical groups before his death in 1903. He was Vice-President of the American Medical Association in 1892 and President of the American Association of Obstetricians and Gynecologists in 1901. Dr. Davis published extensively in the medical literature, as the references in the Carmichael article noted below demonstrate.

He was killed at a railroad crossing in the city when he was only 40 years old. His wife Gertrude lived until June 1953; both are buried in Oak Hill Cemetery.


This bronze sculpture is the work of Giuseppe Moretti and was cast at his Roman Bronze Works in New York in 1904. The work was commissioned by members of the Southern Surgical and Gynecological Association. Moretti's slightly larger cast-iron statue of Vulcan debuted that same year at the St. Louis Exposition.

 










Davis in 1887
Source: BhamWiki



Further Reading

Carmichael EB. William Elias Brownlee Davis: Surgeon--Teacher--Organizer. Ala J Med Sci 1966 April; 3(2): 224-229

Moore RM. The Davis Brothers of Birmingham and the Southern Surgical and Gynecological Association. Ann Surg 1963 May; 157(5): 657-669