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Dr Charles Woodhouse

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Dr Charles Woodhouse

Birth
Wethersfield, Hartford County, Connecticut, USA
Death
15 Oct 1894 (aged 81)
Rutland, Rutland County, Vermont, USA
Burial
Rutland, Rutland County, Vermont, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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Charles Woodhouse, M.D. , born in Weathersfield, Conn., Nov 11, 1812, died at his home in Rutland, Vt., Oct. 15, 1894. Dr. Woodhouse fitted for the ministry in the study of the late Rev. Dr. I.D. Williamson, while the latter was settled in Albany, N.Y. He was ordained at Lansingburgh, N.Y., Sept. 12, 1834, where he had his first settlement. Afterwards he was at Brattleboro, Vt.; Westmoreland, N.H.; Clarendon, Vt.; Fitchburg, Mass.; Louisville, Ky.; St. Johnsbury Centre, Vt.; Boonsboro, Iowa; Moline, Ill.; Muscatine, Iowa; Plainfield, Ill. He became a Doctor of Medicine in 1865, receiving his diploma at the Hahneman Homoeopathic Medical College in Chicago, in which institution he afterwards became the Professor of Medical Jurisprudence and Insanity. In his later years be devoted himself to the practice of Medicine in Rutland, Vt. He was also prominent in the Independent Order of Odd Fellows in that State. He was scholarly and eloquent, and always kept up his interest in and efforts for the spread of the doctrines of Universalism. (from The Universalist Register for 1895, ed. by Richard Eddy D.D.; pub. by the Universalist Publishing House, Boston, 1895)
Charles Woodhouse, M.D. , born in Weathersfield, Conn., Nov 11, 1812, died at his home in Rutland, Vt., Oct. 15, 1894. Dr. Woodhouse fitted for the ministry in the study of the late Rev. Dr. I.D. Williamson, while the latter was settled in Albany, N.Y. He was ordained at Lansingburgh, N.Y., Sept. 12, 1834, where he had his first settlement. Afterwards he was at Brattleboro, Vt.; Westmoreland, N.H.; Clarendon, Vt.; Fitchburg, Mass.; Louisville, Ky.; St. Johnsbury Centre, Vt.; Boonsboro, Iowa; Moline, Ill.; Muscatine, Iowa; Plainfield, Ill. He became a Doctor of Medicine in 1865, receiving his diploma at the Hahneman Homoeopathic Medical College in Chicago, in which institution he afterwards became the Professor of Medical Jurisprudence and Insanity. In his later years be devoted himself to the practice of Medicine in Rutland, Vt. He was also prominent in the Independent Order of Odd Fellows in that State. He was scholarly and eloquent, and always kept up his interest in and efforts for the spread of the doctrines of Universalism. (from The Universalist Register for 1895, ed. by Richard Eddy D.D.; pub. by the Universalist Publishing House, Boston, 1895)


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