Advertisement

Dr Edward Guadalupe Frisbie

Advertisement

Dr Edward Guadalupe Frisbie

Birth
Vallejo, Solano County, California, USA
Death
13 Jul 1911 (aged 53)
San Francisco, San Francisco County, California, USA
Burial
Vallejo, Solano County, California, USA Add to Map
Plot
2804 B
Memorial ID
View Source
Nephew of General John B. Frisbie, founder of the city of Vallejo, and grandson of General Mariano Guadalupe Vallejo. A graduate of University of California at Berkeley and Cooper Medical College, Dr. Frisbie specialized in orthopedic surgery.

Vallejo Times, 14 July 1911

Dr. E. G. Frisbie, president of St. Thomas hospital at 300 Page street and a well known physician, died at the hospital at 7 o'clock yesterday morning from malignant blood poisoning resulting from a slight accident several days ago with his automobile.

About ten days ago Dr. Frisbie slipped while cranking his machine, striking his forehead against the radiator and scraping it badly. He did not consider the wound serious, however, and after dressing it paid no further attention to the matter until last week, during a trip to Yosemite, when he was attacked with blood poisoning.

He hurried to San Francisco for medical treatment, but his condition gradually grew worse and all efforts to save his life were futile.


For more information, please see: "The Bay of San Francisco," Lewis Publishing Co, 1892, Vol. 1, page 500.
Nephew of General John B. Frisbie, founder of the city of Vallejo, and grandson of General Mariano Guadalupe Vallejo. A graduate of University of California at Berkeley and Cooper Medical College, Dr. Frisbie specialized in orthopedic surgery.

Vallejo Times, 14 July 1911

Dr. E. G. Frisbie, president of St. Thomas hospital at 300 Page street and a well known physician, died at the hospital at 7 o'clock yesterday morning from malignant blood poisoning resulting from a slight accident several days ago with his automobile.

About ten days ago Dr. Frisbie slipped while cranking his machine, striking his forehead against the radiator and scraping it badly. He did not consider the wound serious, however, and after dressing it paid no further attention to the matter until last week, during a trip to Yosemite, when he was attacked with blood poisoning.

He hurried to San Francisco for medical treatment, but his condition gradually grew worse and all efforts to save his life were futile.


For more information, please see: "The Bay of San Francisco," Lewis Publishing Co, 1892, Vol. 1, page 500.


Sponsored by Ancestry

Advertisement