Genealogy | Native American | DNA | About Us
Tell A Friend! FTM 2012

Discover your family's story.

Enter a grandparent's name to get started.

Start Now

Genealogy Records

Genealogy
Biographies
Cemetery Records
Census Records
DNA - Genetic Genealogy
Family Tree Search
History Books Online
Military Records
Native American Records
Surnames
Vital Records
World Genealogy

US Genealogy

Alabama Genealogy
Alaska Genealogy
Arizona Genealogy
Arkansas Genealogy
California Genealogy
Colorado Genealogy
Connecticut Genealogy
Delaware Genealogy
Florida Genealogy
Georgia Genealogy
Hawaii Genealogy
Idaho Genealogy
Illinois Genealogy
Indiana Genealogy
Iowa Genealogy
Kansas Genealogy
Kentucky Genealogy
Louisiana Genealogy
Maine Genealogy
Maryland Genealogy
Massachusetts Genealogy
Michigan Genealogy
Minnesota Genealogy
Mississippi Genealogy
Missouri Genealogy
Montana Genealogy
Nebraska Genealogy
Nevada Genealogy
New Hampshire Genealogy
New Jersey Genealogy
New Mexico Genealogy
New York Genealogy
North Carolina Genealogy
North Dakota Genealogy
Ohio Genealogy
Oklahoma Genealogy
Oregon Genealogy
Pennsylvania Genealogy
Rhode Island Genealogy
South Carolina Genealogy
South Dakota Genealogy
Tennessee Genealogy
Texas Genealogy
Utah Genealogy
Vermont Genealogy
Virginia Genealogy
Washington Genealogy
West Virginia Genealogy
Wisconsin Genealogy
Wyoming Genealogy

Free Charts

Correspondence Record
Family Group Chart
Family Tree Chart
Free Census Forms
Research Calendar
Research Extract
Source Summary

 

Rowland, L. L., M.D.

The following data is extracted from History of the Pacific Northwest, Oregon and Washington, 1889.

L.L. ROWLAND, M.D. - L.L. Rowland, M.D., LL. D., F.R.S., was born at Nashville, Tennessee, September 17, 1831, and came with his father, Judge Jeremiah Rowland, across the plains to Oregon in 1844. He dutifully remained and helped at home on the old Donation land claim. North Yamhill, until the day he was twenty-one, when he entered the district school with the ambition and hope of finally finishing, if possible, a full classical course of education in some Eastern university. By working somewhat successfully in the California gold mines in 1849 and 1851, giving his father for his time half the product of his mining labors, and by investing the remaining half in the cheap Mexican cattle of that day, he acquired the necessary means, for the most part, to take him through college. Having qualified himself as best he could in the schools of the country, supplemented by private instruction, for matriculation, as ordinarily required by our universities, he left Lafayette for the East February 8, 1853, aboard the little steamer that first plied the Upper Willamette and Yamhill rivers, proceeding without other than the usual delays incident to travels at that early day, via San Francisco, Panama, Havana and New York, and arriving two months afterwards at his destination. he was the first youth of the new and distant territory in the Union, and teaching in some of the best schools (meanwhile studying medicine), he was married in Marivin, Alabama, November 18, 1859, to Miss Emma J. Sanders, who was born May 1, 1839, and was educated in Franklin College, Tennessee. She bore him five children, only one of whom, however, Levia, now Mrs. Jay C. Smith, survived childhood.

For many years he was among the foremost in educational work, having as a teacher occupied some of the most responsible positions in the country, and having as county school superintendent organized and conducted, in1860, the first teachers' institute in the state. He also served as a member of the state board of examination, and filled for four years, from 1874 to 1878, the office of state superintendent of public instruction, - the first person elected to that office.

Although he graduated in a theological school, and was ordained a minister in the Christian church, serving in some of the highest and most responsible positions under the state and national associations, and filling for seven years the pastorate of the Christian church in Salem; yet he never deemed it his duty to confine his labors at any time exclusively to the ministry. His many-sided character and versatility of taste fitted him acceptably for many vocations. The profession of medicine, however, has always commanded his best energies. He spared neither pains nor money in his thorough qualification by careful study in the best universities and hospitals in both America and Europe for the best work in his professions; and he constantly keeps abreast with the advances of science by his many valuable society relations, several of which were conferred upon him during his sojourn in the Old World. His professional brethren have often honored him with the highest marks of confidence.

Doctor Rowland was one of the organizing members of the Oregon State Medical Society in 1874, filling subsequently many of its important offices, including that of the presidency. He was several times elected by societies in which he held membership as a representative to the American Medical Association. In 1879 he attended the Amsterdam (Holland) International Medical Association, as a representative of the Medical Department of the Willamette University, of whose faculty he was for a time dean, for several years secretary, and for eight years professor of physiology and microscopy. He is now engaged in the practice of medicine in Salem, Oregon, where he is lecturer on hygiene in the Willamette University, physician to the Oregon State School for the Blind, emeritus professor of physiology and microscopy in the Medical Department of the Willamette University, and president of the State Insurance Company, of which he was one of the organizing members.

Source: History of the Pacific Northwest, Oregon and Washington, 1889

  Go Back  

 

Genealogy Websites

Other Websites

Special Offers

Family Tree Maker 2011

Pre-order Family Tree Maker 2011 using our link and support free genealogy online!

Access Genealogy is the largest free genealogy website not owned by Ancestry.com. As such, it relies on the revenue from commercial genealogy companies such as Ancestry and Fold3 to pay for the server and other expenses related to producing and warehousing such a large collection of data. If you're considering joining either of these programs, why not join from our pages, and help support free genealogy online!

Copyright 1999-2013, by Access Genealogy.com
A project by Webified Development