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Stuart Close, a native of Oakfield, Wisconsin, was born November
24, 1860 in an English family. Son of David and Sophronia Wells
Close, he was eldest of thier three children. He received his education
in the country district schools, and by private reading and study.
He remained on his father's farm until fourteen years of age.
In 1874 the family removed to California and settled in Napa City,
where the youth engaged in various occupations to earn his own expenses
while further pursuing his studies. In 1879 he entered upon the
study of law in the office of a Napa City attorney, but continued
this only about one year. The death of his father in 1879 and the
subsequent marriage of his mother with Dr. J. Pitman Dinsmore, for
many years one of the leading homopathic physicians of San
Francisco, turned the young man's thoughts to medicine as a preferable
profession.
Dr. Dinsmore, who was a classmate of the late Dr. William Tod Helmuth,
encouraged and directed his preliminary studies, giving him a specially
thorough training in Hahnemann's Organon. In 1882 he entered the
Medical College of the Pacific in San Francisco (now the Cooper
Medical College), where he attended the lectures and passed the
examinations of the first and second years of a three years' course.
He then went to New York and entered the New York Homopathic
Medical College, where he graduated in 1885, after taking two more
courses of lectures.
Dr. Close, on leaving college took up a long course of advanced
study in the philosophy and practice of homopathy, under the
late Dr. Phineas Parkhurst Wells of Brooklyn, one of the most eminent
of American homopathicians. This association and friendship,
terminated only by the death of Dr. Wells in 1891, gave form and
precision to the method and technique of practice which Dr. Close
has pursued and which has won for him a high place in the ranks
of American Hahnemannians. He was a therapeutic specialist along
strictly Hahnemannian lines, and an expert in materia medica, devoting
himself largely to chronic and complicated diseases and to consultation
work. He had developed the department of treatment by correspondence
and conducted a large number of cases by this method in all parts
of the United States.
He wrote extensively for the medical press on medico-philosophical
subjects, and delivered addresses before many medical societies.
On April 11, 1905, he delivered the commencement address before
Hering Medical College of Chicago, celebrating at the same time
the one hundred and fiftieth anniversary of Hahnemann's birth. The
subject of his address on this occasion was "The Simple Life
in Medicine." In 1897 Dr. Close organized the Brooklyn Hahnemannian
Union, an association of physicians meeting monthly at his house
for the reading of papers and holding of discussions upon the principles
and practice of pure homopathy.
He was deeply interested in music and in painting. He was also
an enthusiastic genealogist and is engaged on a genealogy and history
of the Close family. The crowning honor of Dr. Close's career was
conferred upon him at Chicago on June' 24, 1905, when he was unanimously
elected president of the International Hahnemannian Association
during the celebration of the twenty-fifth anniversary of the founding
of the association, and the one hundred and fiftieth anniversary
of the birth of Hahnemann. It was regarded as peculiarly fitting
that the association on its twenty-fifth anniversary should elect
as its president one who had sat at the feet of Dr. P. P. Wells,
its first president, and who had so loyally maintained the methods
and principles for which he was famous.
Dr. Close married, April 21, 1885, Evangeline L. Lewis, only child
of Rev. Valentine Augustus and Mary L. Crandall Lewis, then of Boston,
Massachusetts. Shortly after his marriage Dr. Close established
his home in Brooklyn. Three children were born to him - May Lewis
Close, born January 18, 1886 ; Elizabeth Stuart Close, born February
20, 1887, and Bernard Wells Close, born December 21, 1888.
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