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Eneas
Munson
1734-1826
B.A.
1753
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It
seems ironic, if not prophetic, that Eneas Munson was born in New Haven on the
site that is now the Yale School of Medicine. When its predecessor, the Medical
Institution of Yale College, opened in 1813, Munson's name headed the list of
faculty as the Professor of Materia Medica and Botany, even though his actual
teaching days had ended.
Another ironic
circumstance is the way Munson came to practice medicine. On graduation from
Yale he taught school briefly in Northampton, Massachusetts, and studied divinity.
He preached at Yale between 1755 and 1757, and was a minister in Litchfield
and on Long Island until health problems developed. It was the need for something
less strenuous that led Munson to study medicine with the Reverend John Darbe
(a 1748 Yale graduate).
In 1760 Munson
settled in New Haven and embarked on a long, successful career in medicine
and business. He represented New Haven seven times between 1778 and 1781 in
the state General Assembly. Active in founding the first Connecticut Medical
Association in 1792, Munson served as its first vice-president before assuming
the presidency in 1794.
