"Dr. Henry
Maynadier Fitzhugh" Several years ago while researching
my book about Carroll County during World War I, I quickly became aware of a local
physician, Dr. Henry Maynadier Fitzhugh, who was a leading figure in volunteer work. Dr.
Fitzhugh served as the chairman of the Council for Defense for Carroll County, an
organization that coordinated all local civilian war work activity. After the war, he
became a leader in the fields of education and medicine. Tragically, his life was cut
short by a fatal disease on January 25, 1935 and his obituary noted his important
contributions: |
"LONG
ILLNESS HERE IS FATAL TO DR. FITZHUGH Westminster Physician Dies in University
Hospital--Was Widely Known Throughout StateHeaded Education Board and Professional
Organizations Dr. Henry M. Fitzhugh, of Westminster, one of the most
widely known physicians in the State, died this morning in the University of Maryland
Hospital, where he had been a patient since November. He had been the
president of the State Board of Education since 1920, a member of the State Board of
Medical Examiners since 1910, and its secretary and treasurer since 1924. He was the president of the Medical and
Chirurgical Faculty in 1930, and was a member of its council and one of its delegates to
the American Medical Association at the time of his death.
For the past year he had been the president of the Federation of State
Medical Boards of the United States. Widow, Two
Sons Survive Surviving are Mrs. Fitzhugh who, before their
marriage, was Miss Mary Aldridge, of Virginia, and two sons, Robert Tyson Fitzhugh,
professor of English of the University of Maryland at College Park, and Henry M. Fitzhugh
3d, a student at the University of Virginia. Dr. Fitzhugh suffered
a deep-seated infection which did not yield to treatment and in November he entered the
hospital. Osteomylitis was the final cause of
death. Mrs. Fitzhugh had been living in the
institution and was with him at the time of his death. Born in
Michigan Born in Bay City, Michigan, September 16, 1875, Doctor
Fitzhugh was the son of Henry M. and Lucy Tyson Fitzhugh.
The family moved to Maryland. The
father was for some time Clerk of the Court of Baltimore County. Doctor Fitzhugh was a descendant on his fathers
side of Col. Henry Maynadier, of Revolutionary fame, who extracted a ball from
Lafayettes leg at the battle of Brandywine. His
mother was descended from the Ellicotts, who settled at the falls of the Patapsco and
established flour mills there, and also from the Tysons, who were among the first Maryland
Quakers. U. of M. Graduate Doctor Fitzhugh was educated in the public and private schools of Baltimore and graduated from the University of Maryland Medical School in 1897. He was an intern there and resident physician of the hospital and in 1904 entered private practice in this city. Married in 1904, he and Mrs. Fitzhugh moved to Westminster four years
later. Their home 'Sunset Hill,' has become a
familiar spot to most of the residents of Carroll county.
Praised for Character Dr. Fitzhughs friends say of him he was one of the finest American examples of the old-fashioned family physician and friend as described in Ian McClarens 'Country Doctor,' published a generation or more ago. It is said of him by those who knew him most intimately that he carried
into a home where illness had caused distress not only the skill of the medical men of his
kind and the capacity to meet all orders of unexpected emergencies, but also qualities of
character which endeared him to his patients. Draft Board Chairman In the years of the World War he served as the chairman of his local draft board and as chairman of the Carroll county branch of the State Council of Defense. He was for some years a director of the Union National Bank of Westminster, but retired from that position some years ago. The service which he gave to the public positions he held was never
perfunctory, according to those who knew him. A
man of strong convictions, he did not hesitate to express them. The period in which he served on the State Board
of Education was one in which the whole educational system of the State was reorganized
and in which Marylands rating in national organizations concerned with education was
much improved. Nationally Known The year in which he served as president of the Medical and Chirurgical Faculty was the centennial of its library and that celebration was aided much in its success through his efforts. Because of his attendance at the meetings of the American Medical Association and his attendance at the meetings at the Conference of the Association of American Medical Colleges, he was widely known throughout the United States among educators and members of the faculties of medical schools. He was a charter member of two groups of physicians organized about thirty years ago for scientific discussion and friendly intercourse, the Avicenna Club and the Splint Club. He was a member of the Carroll County Medical Society and the University Club of Baltimore." |
| As noted in his obituary, Dr. Fitzhugh
was widely known throughout the state as a physician and an educator. He also had an
interest in American antique furniture and several pieces from his collection were
published in pioneering books on the subject. Had he lived, he might have become involved
in the founding the Historical Society in 1939.
|
| Photo caption: | Dr. Henry M. Fitzhugh of Westminster
was a leading physician, educator and community leader until his death in 1935. Historical
Society of Carroll County collection. |