Post by Doris McCraw
aka Angela Raines
Photo (C) Doris McCraw |
For the purpose of this post, I will focus on three doctors who are buried there. While there is a woman doctor on the hill, the doctors discussed here are all men and were practicing in the region prior to 1900. Additionally, these three were also at one time the president of the Colorado Medical Society.
Beginning with the gravesite at the top of the hill lies the first of the three. The headstone sits in a slight depression at the edge of a precipice where the hill has the beginning of a gully. Whether true or not, Dr. Boswell P. Anderson's life feels like it was one of living on the edge.
Dr. Boswell P. Anderson
Photo from Find a Grave
Anderson was born in 1847 in Virginia. He served in the Confederate Army as a
member of Mosby’s Raiders. He carried a bullet in his lung as a
result of his military service. A story in the book by the Colorado
Medical Society is his meeting with General Sherman when in Colorado.
It seems he’d been captured as a spy when he met with a Union
soldier to trade food/tobacco. He told Sherman that he was trading
for coffee for his mother. The story goes, that he and Sherman celebrated
the meeting all those years later in the fashion of the day, lots of
alcohol. It was also mentioned that two historians called him the most picturesque and colorful character - and the most handsome. He served as president of the society from 1879-1880
Dr. William B. Strickler
Image from Find a Grave
Moving
down the hill, almost straight west from Anderson is the resting
place of William B. Strickler and his wife. Virginia. Dr. Strickler
was also born in Virginia in 1838. Stickler also served in the
Confederate Army but unlike Anderson, he was an assistant surgeon in
his unit. In addition to his medical work, Strickler was also
involved in politics and sheep and cattle growing. One young doctor was to have said, "If there was anything going on that Dr. Strickler wasn't mixed up in, it was not good. And he was a great surgeon." He served two one-year terms as the Mayor of Colorado Springs. He was president of the CMS from 1891-92.
Dr. Samuel E. Solly Image from Find a Grave |
Samuel Edwin Solly is down a slight incline and slightly to the north of Strickler. Dr. Solly was born in 1845 in London England. He was the first British-born doctor to head the Colorado Medical Society. He arrived in the Pikes Peak Region with his wife, who like Solly suffered from tuberculous. The properties that drew so many invalids to the region helped Solly recover but not his wife. Dr. Solly focused his message on the atmosphere of the area and its healing properties. In 1906 his doctors suggested he try a lower altitude due to a failing heart. He passed in Ashville, NC while 'visiting' there. Dr. Solly served as president from 187-88 and was treasurer of the society at the time of his death.
There is a wealth of stories and information about these doctors and the others who have ‘Doctor’s Hill’ as their final resting place.
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Until Next Time: Stay safe, Stay happy, and Stay healthy.
Doris
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