If you have information on a patient who cured in Saranac Lake that you would like to add, please use the comment box below, or contact [email protected].
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Patients whose last names start with: | A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z |
Patient Name | Dates of Birth & Death | Place of Birth/Hometown | Dates in Saranac Lake | Residence in Saranac Lake (post-911 address) | Notes | |
Hilda E. Aass | October 11, 1913 - 1943 | Norway | Daughter of sea captain; buried with the Norwegian sailors in Pine Ridge Cemetery. | |||
Alfred Abrahamsen | April 9, 1920 - September 13, 1945 | Norway | 1943-1945 | One of the Norwegian Sailors who cured in Saranac Lake during WWII. | ||
Bernard M. Acosta | 1931 - | San Juan, Costa Rica | A photographer who acquired the former William L. Distin studio | |||
Arturo Alemán | Cuba | Gonzalez Cottage | A prominent advisor to Batista in Cuba. | |||
Irving Altman | 1900 - post 1980 | New York City | 1922 - 1924 | Evergreen Lodge, Trudeau Sanatorium | After trying to return to the city and having a relapse, he opened Altman's ladies clothing store | |
Helene A. Anderson | 1941 | Alta Vista Lodge | A dietician and patient at the Alta Vista Lodge, Helene married Camilo Panerai and they bought the Alta Vista, operating it until it burned in 1958. | |||
Tony Anderson | 5/25/1899 - 8/20/1981 | Long Island | 1919 - 1981 | 8 South Hope Street | Manager of the Pontiac Theater and mayor of Saranac Lake for sixteen years. | |
Helen Antalek | Through October 1931 | Will Rogers | A vaudeville performer. | |||
Albert Charles Bagdasarian | April 4th, 1897 - August 27, 1968 | Cambridge, Massachusetts | 1922 - 1968 | Downing Block, Berkeley House, Hotel Saranac | For 15 years he covered local news for WNBZ. He was devoted to contract bridge. | |
Raymond K. Baker | 1881-1944 | Watertown, NY & Washington D.C. | c.1908-1915 | He cured for a number of years and had two daughters. | ||
Dr. Edward R. Baldwin | 1865 - 1947 | Bethel, Connecticut | c.1891 - 1947 | Trudeau Sanatorium | Close friend of E.L. Trudeau, became Director of Saranac Laboratory | |
Beanie Barnet | 1886 - 1977 | Boston, MA | 1907 - 1977 | Trudeau Sanatorium, Ledger Cottage | Launched a publication, The Trotty Veck Messengers, that would ultimately sell four million copies. | |
Elizabeth Widmer Barnet | 1902 - 1980 | Berne, Switzerland | ? - 1980 | Trudeau Sanatorium | A graduate of Johns Hopkins Nursing School, She married Beanie Barnet on 6/22/1940 at Camp Intermission | |
Béla Bartók | March 25, 1881 - September 26, 1945 | Nagyszentmiklós, Austria-Hungary | summers of 1943,'44,'45 | Sageman Cottage, Béla Bartók Cottage | Considered to be one of the greatest composers of the 20th century. Did not have TB, but a form of leukemia | |
Theodora Becker | August 18, 1922 - August 18, 2002 | Lake Grove, Long Island, NY | Gabriels Sanatorium | She was a nurse who contracted TB while at training at a hospital on 14th Street in New York City while a student at St. Mary's in Brooklyn | ||
Wilbur F. Beckett | c. 1868 - Post 1952 | August 1923 - April 1924 | Sageman Cottage | Dr. Bradley Sageman was a child when Beckett was curing at Sageman Cottage | ||
Manolo Benero | November 19, 1888 - October 9, 1963 | Puerto Rico | 1917 - 1963 | 31 Franklin Avenue | Met and married Pilar Gordon of Cuba. The couple settled in town and raised two sons, hosted many Latin American visitors. Manny worked at the Troy Laundry | |
Olaf Berge | 2/18/1920-2/2/1945 | Norway | One of the Norwegian Sailors that cured in SL during WWII | |||
Rachel Rae Berger | 1887-1955 | Ringoes, New Jersey | c. 1917 | A cure cottage | Rachel Rae Berger's engagement was broken when she was diagnosed with TB, and she never married. She became a postmistress in New Jersey. | |
John Birmingham | Brooklyn NY | c. 1940s | Trudeau Sanatorium | Cured twice at Trudeau. After second time he became a full time resident of the North Country. Was morning announcer at WNBZ 1947 - 1951 | ||
Ena Aurelia Bontomase | May 6, 1905 - December 16, 1940 | Oswego, New York | Ena Bontomase had to leave medical school in the late 1920s when she developed Tuberculosis. | |||
Priscilla Christensen Bergren | Perth Amboy, New Jersey | early 1930s | Parker's cure cottage | Friend of Louis MacKay, married Walter Bergren, settled in Saranac Lake. | ||
Charlotte Stuart Best | 1870-1931 | Belfast, Ireland | c.1906-1908 | presumably Trudeau Sanatorium | She published poems in the Journal of the Outdoor Life, including, "Ef You Won't Sit Out," "Battlin' With Bacilli," "Taking the Cure," and "One Physician, E. L. T" in honor of Dr. Trudeau on his 60th birthday. | |
Dr. Norman Bethune | March 3, 1890 - November 12, 1939 | Gravenhurst, Ontario, Canada | 1926-? | Trudeau Sanatorium worked at New York State Hospital at Ray Brook | Served in the Spanish Civil War and was a hero of the Chinese revolution. | |
Louise S. Birk | 1892 - December 21, 1979 | 1918 - 1920 | 6 Elm Street | After her cure, Louise Birk was joined by her husband and their son. They opened Birk's Swiss Chalet on Bloomingdale Road. | ||
John Baxter Black | 1896 - 1923 | Mansfield, Ohio | July, 1918 - May, 1923 | 112 Park Ave. | WWI Officer, Family built the John Black Room at the Saranac Laboratory in his memory. | |
Sidney Blanchet | June 4, 1882 - November 12, 1937 | Canada | Early 1900s | Trudeau Sanatorium | Sidney Blanchet was studying medicine when he was diagnosed with TB. After his cure, he completed his degree and then returned to Trudeau as a member of the staff, working closely with Dr. Lawrason Brown, and directing the operations of the Sanatorium for a time. | |
George S. Brewster | New York City | 1904 - | Brewster served on the board of the Adirondack Cottage Sanitarium and later as secretary and treasurer. | |||
Tony Brescia | January 1, 1915 - July 11, 1963 | New York | c. 1942-1963 | Ray Brook Sanatorium | Cured at Ray Brook and then stayed to work as an X-Ray Technician | |
Bill Brown | Montreal, Canada | c. 1933 | Bill Brown was a friend of Louis Mackay. | |||
Georgia Watson Lee Brown | 3/5/1906-10/19/1935 | Thomson, GA | 1934-1935 | Smithwick Cottage | The granddaughter of Thomas E. Watson, the leader of the southern Populists, she died in SL at age 29, leaving her husband and young son | |
Dr. Lawrason Brown | September 29, 1871 - December 26, 1937 | Baltimore, Maryland | c. 1898 - 1937 | Trudeau Sanatorium | Resident Physician at the Adirondack Cottage Sanitarium and an internationally known TB specialist | |
Dr. Daniel Brumfiel | January 20 - August 20, 1958 | Fayette County, Indiana | 1925 | Trudeau Sanatorium | After his recovery, he practiced medicine for two years with Dr. Francis B. Trudeau, Sr.; he lived the rest of his life in Saranac Lake. | |
Mary Acheson Bundy | Washington, DC | mid-1940s | 29 Church Street | Mary Acheson Bundy was the daughter of US Secretary of State Dean Acheson and wife of Assistant Secretary of State, William P. Bundy. | ||
Ernie Burnett | 12/19/1884 - 9/11/1959 | Cincinnati, Ohio | 1944 - 1959 | Fallon Cottage Annex | Vaudeville performer and accomplished composer. Famous for the song, My Melancholy Baby" | |
Esther Capone | 4/28/1900 - 10/23/1986 | Solvay, New York | 1928 - 1942 | Ray Brook San | Esther Sullivan worked as a stenographer/typist for Emmett Dobbs in Washington, D.C. During her cure, she met her husband to be, Thomas Capone. | |
Thomas Capone | 5/6/1893 - 1/16/1970 | Rocco Ste. Felice, Italy | 1925 - 1941 | Ray Brook San | Thomas Capone operated a smoke shop and played coronet in a band in Syracuse when he was diagnosed with TB. After their cure, Thomas and Esther married and lived in Saranac Lake | |
Keith Carr | 1856 - 1904 | Scotland | 1898, 1900 - 1904 | Adirondack Cottage Sanatorium, 22 Bloomingdale Avenue and 104 Main Street | After Carr's death, his wife Emma Carr became a respected cure cottage operator. | |
Asunción Castro | c.1890-1924 | Spain | 1924 | Adirondack Cottage Sanatorium | She emigrated with her family from Spain to NYC, where she contracted TB. She died at the Trudeau Sanatorium | |
Ida Mannhart Chadikian | January 1, 1880 - January 1, 1929 | Switzerland | 1926- | St. Mary's Hospital | Met and married Boghos Chadikian and emigrated to New Rochelle, NY, where she died of TB. | |
Roy Chamberlain | Roy Chamberlain was the minister of the First Presbyterian Church of Saranac Lake starting in 1915. | |||||
Donald Mott Chapin | March 19, 1909 - March 25, 1986 | Niagara Falls, New York | 1926 - 1930s | Mott Chapin became a potter and a civic leader, who was deeply involved in the Saranac Lake Free Library, Rotary Club, and the Saranac Lake Study and Craft Guild. | ||
Elise Kalb Chapin | June 21, 1913 - July 14, 2009 | Catonsville, Maryland | 1935 | 68 Franklin Avenue, Smithwick Cottage, Knabe Cottage, Fraser Cottage | Elise Chapin married Mott Chapin, and together they ran the Pot Shop in the 1950s. She was active with the Village Improvement Society, the General Hospital, St. Luke's Church and the Saranac Lake Free Library. | |
John Paul Clancy | Mid 1920s | Trudeau Sanatorium | After his cure, he bought what became known as the Clancy Cottage, which catered mostly to Italian patients, as Clancy's wife, Lena, spoke Italian. There were 38 patients. | |||
William Clements | 9/9/1919 - 1/22/1962 | Glasgow, Scotland | 1947 - | Ray Brook Sanatorium | William Clements came to America with his parents when he was one year old. He married in 1941 and in 1942 he came down with TB. At first he was in Seaview Hospital on Staten Island, New York and was transferred up to Ray Brook about 1947. | |
Alexander S. Cochran | 1874 - June 20, 1929 | Yonkers, New York | 147 Park Avenue | A man of great inherited wealth, the founder of the Elizabethan Club at Yale University, he died of T.B. in Saranac Lake at age 55 | ||
Edith Kostyk Cole | Stony Wold Sanatorium | Cole later worked at Gabriels Sanatorium and Will Rogers Hospital | ||||
Robert H. Coleman | March 27, 1856 - 1930 | Savannah, Georgia | 1896-1930 | 33 Church Street | Coleman was a bankrupt and tubercular iron magnate from Lebanon, Pennsylvania, owner of the Cornwall Iron Furnace | |
Edith Elliott Johnstone Coleman | died of TB in 1903 | 1896 - 1903 | 33 Church Street |
The wife of bankrupt and tubercular iron magnate from Lebanon, Pennsylvania, owner of the Cornwall Iron Furnace |
||
Bess Comstock | May 31, 1884 | January 12, 1937 | Rome, NY | ~1920-1927 | Santanoni Apartments | Bess' illness and its effect on her family are the subject of a memoir, In The Shadow of the White Plague, by her daughter, Elizabeth Mooney. |
Henry J. Conley | - April 16, 1935 | Brooklyn, New York | 1905 | Gabriels Sanatorium | After curing at Gabriels he returned to Brooklyn, but in 1907 he again came to the Adirondacks and opened a funeral home on Bloomingdale avenue. | |
Marc Cook | 1879 - 1880 | Osgood Pond | Cook's account of his experience curing on Osgood Pond was instrumental in the growth of the cure industry in Saranac Lake. | |||
Herbert P. Corey | September 11, 1901 - November 9, 1933 | Brooklyn, New York | 1925 - ? | Grossman Cottage and 57 Bloomingdale Ave. | Herbert Corey was a clerk living in Brooklyn with his wife and two children when he contracted TB. He cured but died of a heart attack not long after. His brother Vincent also came to cure in the 1920s. | |
Vincent Corey | February 13, 1899 - November 24, 1971 | Brooklyn, New York | 1922 - ? | 42 Woodruff St. and 52 Park Ave. | Vincent Corey worked as a clerk and lived in Brooklyn prior to coming to cure in 1922. He married a showgirl in Saranac Lake. His brother Herbert also came to Saranac Lake to cure. | |
William L. Coulter | 1865 - 1907 | Norwich, Connecticut | 1896 - 1907 | 38 Shepard Avenue and 34 Shepard Ave (residences) | Architect, Partner of Max Westhoff in Coulter & Westhoff | |
Adelaide Crapsey | September 9, 1878 - October 8, 1914 | Brooklyn, New York | 1913 - 1914 | 71 Clinton Avenue | A teacher and a poet who wrote some of her best poems in Saranac Lake. | |
Edwin Charles Cushman Jr | died Nov, 1907 | Bar Harbor, Maine | c.1904-1907 | An amateur anthropologist from a notable family, he worked on Navajo and Anazasi ruins, was a “special agent” for the St Louis World’s Fair, transporting the Cocopa Indians, and worked with the Ute tribes | ||
John Theodore Dalton | 1899-1927 | 1923-1927 | Ludington Infirmary, Trudeau Sanatorium | Composer, Poet, Lyricist, Contributor to the Thursday Evening Club | ||
Elizabeth Jessie Dawe | September 12, 1926 - | Bay Roberts, Newfoundland, Canada | 1944 | 84 Park Avenue, 58 Riverside Drive | Came to Saranac Lake from Canada at age 17. | |
John De Giovanni | October 29, 1904 - July 16, 1939 | New York City | 1936-1939 | Will Rogers Memorial Hospital | An artist and film projector, he is believed to have cured at Will Rogers. He died in Saranac Lake in the 1930s. | |
Eddie Diamond | June 9, 1902 - January 14, 1930 | January 8, 1929 - January 14, 1930 | 6 Shepard Avenue | Eddie Diamond was the brother of the notorious gangster, Jack "Legs" Diamond. | ||
Anthony di Bona | 1929 - | Trudeau Sanatorium | Di Bona was a sculptor and artist who helped to organize the Saranac Lake Art League, serving as its president for many years. | |||
Mili Distin | c. 1920 - February 3, 2011 | Glen Cove, Long Island | mid-1940s | After her cure, she married William G. Distin, Jr., and helped him manage the sawmill and construction business, Branch and Callanan from 1953 until 1993, and the Distin Boat Company. In 1980, they hosted VIPs for the Winter Olympics | ||
Juan Dobal Zarza | October 21, 1893 - February 23, 1920 | Havana, Cuba | May 12, 1913 - June 5, 1914 | Rumenapp Cottage | He was nineteen when he arrived. Returning to Cuba, he married and had 3 children. When he died his eldest child was 2 1/2. | |
Alfred L. Donaldson | 1866 - 1923 | New York City | 1895 - 1923 | 30 Church Street | A banker turned historian, he wrote the first History of the Adirondacks, in two volumes. | |
J. Cloyd Downs | 11/6/1885 - 12/1958 | Niagara Falls, New York | 1923-1955 | 11 Kiwassa | A chemical engineer, he cured as patient of Dr. Packard. Moved to SL in 1927. | |
Larry Doyle | July 31, 1886 - March 1, 1974 | Caseyville, Illinois | 1942 - 1954 | Trudeau Sanatorium | Larry Doyle was a second baseman for the New York Giants, one of best ballplayers of his time. | |
Hyman Drutz | 1886 - 1941 | New York City | 1926 - ? | Opened Drutz Market, he was cured | ||
George W. Drymalski | 1915 - 1998 | Chicago, Illinois | July 1941 - October 1943 | Trudeau Sanatorium | After leaving Trudeau, he resumed his medical residency and became a radiologist. He married and had nine children. | |
George V. W. Duryee | - 1912 | Duryee was a real estate agent who organized the Saranac Lake Free Library, and later founded the Meadowbrook Farm, a successful dairy operation at Ray Brook | ||||
Percy Eastment | died 1929 | Glen Cove, Long Island | 1925-1929 | "Saranac Hotel" | A publisher from Long Island, he died in S.L. of TB and was buried in Pine Ridge Cemetery | |
Helen Jacobson Effenbach | June 24, 1890 - June 25, 1926 | New York City | 1926 - ? | |||
Edward Edgar | May 31, 1854 - June 19, 1875 | 1874 - 1875 | Main Street Mrs. Lucius "Lute" Evans Boarding House | The first TB patient to spend a winter in Saranac Lake on advice of his doctor. | ||
Dr. Seymour Emans | New York City | Dr. Emans was the founding medical superintendent at the Rainbow Sanatorium. | ||||
Robert Farrell | May 17, 1930 | Saranac Lake | 1947 - | Ray Brook State Hospital | Robert Farrell was diagnosed with tuberculosis while in high school. He cured at Ray Brook and then learned radiology in an occupational therapy program and became a successful radiologist. | |
Sadie Ferguson | 1930s | We know little about her; she was a friend of Louis Mackay. | ||||
Maurice Feustmann | 1870-1943 | 1890s | Maurice Feustmann was an architect; together with William Scopes he designed many of Saranac Lake's most notable buildings. | |||
Frank L. Fisher | - May 23, 1895 | New York, New York | A house on Lake Colby | Frank Fisher was much esteemed for his kindness and liberality and many other noble qualities. | ||
Irving Fisher | February 27, 1867 - April 29, 1947 | Saugerties, New York | 1898 - c.1900 | Trudeau Sanatorium | Irving Fisher was a preeminent American economist who cured at Trudeau | |
John R. Freer | 1876 - May 16, 1961 | Kingston, New York | Trudeau Sanatorium | Freer became president of the Adirondack National Bank. | ||
Charlotte Gallery | 1930s | Charlotte Gallery married Daniel after meeting him while curing in Saranac Lake. The couple moved to Fall River, Mass. after they left Saranac Lake. | ||||
Daniel Gallery | Fall River, Massachusetts | 1930s | Daniel Gallery was a thoracic surgeon who came to Saranac Lake to cure. He met Charlotte Gallery while here for curing, and they married. | |||
Alice Sterling French Gallup | 11/27/1989 - c.1960 | Austin, PA | 1917-1960 | Trudeau Sanatorium and 4 Circle Street (residence) | Came for the cure and settled in SL with her two sons. Was a pianist at a local church and taught piano lessons. | |
Dr. Leroy Upson Gardner | December 9, 1888 - October 24, 1946 | Meriden, Connecticut | 1917-1946 | 36 Old Military Road (residence) | Director of the Saranac Laboratory. Lived on Old Military Road. | |
Anton Gedroiz | 1883-1945 | Detroit, Michigan | 1919-1945 | 112 Lake Street | Anton was born in Russia | |
Irving Gershenz | New York City | - c. 1930 | Irving Gershenz was a cab driver from New York City, who came to Saranac Lake for the cure. | |||
Dr. Samuel Howard Gilliland | 1878-1929 | Marietta, PA | 1920s? | President of the Gilliland Laboratories, founded in Marietta in 1882 | ||
Alfredo Gonzalez | 1903 - 1965 | San Juan, Puerto Rico | 1920 - 1960s | Operated Cure Cottages for Latin American patients, the best known being 80 Park Avenue. | ||
Alicia Gonzalez | Alicia Milanes del Prado married Alfredo Gonzalez; over the next forty years the couple would operate several cure cottage catering to Latin American patients, the largest and longest-running one at 80 Park Avenue. | |||||
Mary R. Gordon | ||||||
Richard Gould | 8/2/1916 - 10/2004 | Vermont | 1947-1949 | Trudeau Sanatorium | A physician who cured in Saranac Lake | |
George Washington Gray | - 1936 | Richmond Hill, New York | 1930s | Came to Saranac Lake for the cure. | ||
Charlie Green | March 23, 1894 - January 13, 1987 | Lancashire, England | Green operated Charlie Green's Market on Main Street for more than sixty years, becoming a beloved figure; he was given the Good Neighbor Award in 1969, and named Citizen of the Year in 1977. | |||
LeRoy A. Grinnell | June 24, 1908 - July 21, 2004 | Hudson Falls, New York | 1934 - 1936 | After recovering his health in 1936, Grinnell began working at the Trudeau Sanatorium in the pulmonary function lab, where he worked until the San closed in 1954. | ||
William H. Haase | September 12, 1866 - March 20, 1913 | St. Louis, Missouri | 1903 - March 20, 1913 | McCarthy Cottage, Riverside Inn, Pinehurst | Haase was the heir of the A.C.L Haase Company; he built Pinehurst and the Haase Block, and was active in community affairs. | |
Helen Hoeschele Haley | February 1, 1891 - February 14, 1932 | Utica, NY | 1920s-1930s | Ray Brook Sanatorium | Helen and her twin sister Mary both had tuberculosis and were treated at Ray Brook. Both died from TB in the 1930s. | |
Kathleen McFarlane Hammond | - 1917 | Gananoque, Ontario | Santanoni Apartments, Morgan Cottage | c. 1916 | Kathleen McFarlane Hammond, the daughter of a wealthy Canadian, was a composer of musical reviews. She was on the Lusitania when it was torpedoed by a German U-Boat, and though she survived she soon contracted tuberculosis. | |
John Harlander | 1893-March 1922 | Rome, NY | 1914-1915 | Reception Hospital, potentially Yorkey Cottage | Historic Saranac Lake has John Harlander's photo album from his time curing in Saranac Lake in its collection, 2022.92.1. | |
Evelyn Bellak Hayes | August 20, 2901 - March 12, 1932 | Endicott, NY | 1917 - c.1925 | Ray Brook Hospital | She came to Ray Brook to cure at the age of 16 and left behind a diary of her 1918 experiences there, in the Saranac Lake Free Library archive. The diary inspired a book by Shirley Morgan published in 2014. | |
Hunter C. Haynes | 1867 - 1918 | October 27, 1916 until April 23, 1917 | 26 Lake Flower Street | Hunter C. Haynes was a barber, inventor, manufacturer, motion picture producer and director, and entrepreneur. | ||
Gerald Haxton | 1892 - 1944 | San Francisco, California | Alta Vista | Gerald Haxton was the secretary and companion of W. Somerset Maugham. | ||
Bernard Stephen Heaney | December 18, 1881 - December 29, 1920 | Rochester, New York | c. 1920 | Trudeau Sanatorium | Bernard Heaney was one of four children orphaned when their mother died of TB. He died of the disease at 39. | |
Morris Hillquit | 1869 - 1933 | born in Latvia, he moved to New York City | 1919 | A founder and leader of the Socialist Party of America. | ||
Mary "Mayme" Hoeschele | February 1, 1891 - January 27, 1938 | Utica, NY | c. 1916 | Ray Brook Sanatorium | Came to Ray Brook from Utica. Her twin sister Helen was also treated. Both died of TB at home in Utica in the 1930s. | |
Lizzie Howard | ?- 1905 | Treated in Saranac Lake/ | ||||
Henry J. Hudson | 1887 - September 14, 1956 | Stamford, Connecticut | With his wife, Hudson founded the Franklin Manor | |||
Harry Hull | 1888 - 1958 | Lebanon Springs, New York | 1907 - c. 1908, 1912 - | 18 Lake Street | After a relapse and a second cure, Harry Hull became the Village Engineer, and his wife ran the Riddle Cottage. | |
Alice Hunt | New York City | 1885 | Little Red | Alice and Mary Hunt were sisters from New York City; they were the first two patients of the Adirondack Cottage Sanitarium | ||
Mary Hunt | New York City | 1885 | Little Red | Alice and Mary Hunt were sisters from New York City; they were the first two patients of the Adirondack Cottage Sanitarium | ||
Duke Huntington | 1930s | 2 Broadway Ave. | After his recovery, Duke Huntington stayed in Saranac Lake and soldjuke boxes, pinball and shuffleboard machines. He was a friend of Louis MacKay. | |||
Arnout Hyde | c. 1910 - | West Virginia | 1944-'45 | 5 Shepard Avenue | Arnout Hyde was a chemical engineer with the DuPont Company; he was working on the Manhattan project during World War II when he was diagnosed with tuberculosis, and was sent to Saranac Lake. His cure was successful, and he later moved back to West Virginia. | |
Mary Ingersoll | 1905 - 1964 | Dallas, Texas | Mary E. Ingersoll was a literary agent who represented authors Walter Farley and Martha Reben. | |||
Edwin J. Johnson | 1904 - | Esperance House | We know very little about Edwin Johnson, but he left some intriguing photographs. (here) | |||
David Blair Jones | 9/27/1891 - 8/1955 | Chicago, IL | c. 1929-1944 | Clara Black Cottage, 86 1/2 Park Avenue | An efficiency expert for the steel industry, he was the husband of artist, Amy Jones. | |
Lincoln Jones | ? - 1906 | 1904 - 1906 | Lincoln Jones owned a garment shop in Manhattan. When he found he had TB he moved to Saranac Lake bringing young Sam Edelberg with him. When he died, he left the shop to Edelberg. | |||
Susan Kosa Jordan | 1950s | 34 Franklin Avenue | ||||
Jack Kenney | 4/20/1904 - 7/2/1931 | Brooklyn, New York | July,1930 - July,1931 | McCabe Cottage | A young father who cured in Saranac Lake and died here after one year. At least half of his family died of TB | |
Jacob Kesner | 9/15/1898-6/15/57 | New York, New York | 1927 | A Navy Veteran of WWI, he cured in 1927 and returned to SL on his honeymoon in 1941. | ||
Dr. Hugh M. Kinghorn | August 9 1869 - November 7, 1957 | Ontario, Canada | July 1896 - June 1897 | Trudeau Sanatorium | Dr. Kinghorn was known as a staunch supporter of absolute bedrest. He lived and had offices at 14 Church Street. | |
Elsie Steiner Kodim | November 15, 1892 - July 18, 1981 | Freiberg, Germany | 1919 - July 18, 1981 | Stony Wold Sanatorium, 26 Cedar Street, Jackson Cottage, 8 Virginia Street, Carson Cottage | Elsie Steiner was a typist in New York City and came to Saranac Lake to cure. She worked as a chamber maid in area homes and at the Hotel Marcy in Lake Placid for forty years. | |
Joseph Kodim, Sr. | March 9, 1883 - May 17, 1933 | Grunau, Austria | November 8, 1926 - May 17, 1933 | 26 Cedar Street, Jackson Cottage, 8 Virginia Street, Carson Cottage | Immigrated from Vienna to New York City. Painter decorator. Married Marie Kodim, mother of his 5 children. Married Adolfine Fromm. Married Elsie Steiner. Left his family and life in New York City for the cure in 1926. Committed suicide in 1933 at Carson Cottage. | |
William F. Kollecker | April 15, 1879 - August 12, 1962 | Brooklyn, New York | 1896 - 1904 | 64 Shepard Avenue | Kollecker was a photographer, whose legacy of thousands of photographs of the Saranac Lake area was nearly lost when he died. What remains is in the Saranac Lake Free Library | |
Thea LaGuardia | c. 1895 - November 29, 1921 | Trieste, Italy | May - November 1929 | 76 Park Avenue | Thea LaGuardia was the young wife of New York Mayor Fiorello LaGuardia; she died of tuberculosis at the age of 27. | |
Dan Landes | London, England | Santanoni Apartments | ||||
Alfred Larsen | November 15, 1913 - March 2, 1988 | Norway | Sageman Cottage | One of the Norwegian sailors sent to cure during WWII, Larsen returned years later to marry the tray girl he had met at the Sageman Cottage. | ||
Eileen Leavitt | April, 1912 - November 21, 1991 | Derby, Connecticut | 1947-1949 | Stony Wold Sanatorium | Cured at Stony Wold in the late forties. | |
Dr. Henry Leetch | 11/5/1895-4/20/1970 | Washington D.C. | 1929 - 1965 | 5 Shepard Avenue | After his cure, Dr. Leetch stayed on in Saranac Lake for more than thirty years, specializing in treating tuberculosis. | |
Henry P. Leis | June 18, 1869 - July 20, 1971 | New York City | 1899 - 1901 | 33 Algonquin Avenue | Leis built The Governor hotel with his brother, George Leis, and then Henry P. Leis Pianos at 3-5 Bloomingdale Avenue. | |
Helen Potter Lewis | 1905-1987 | Evanston, Illinois | 1931-1935 | various cure cottages | The Training Director of Filene's Dept. Store in Boston, Helen came to SL for the cure, where she met her husband, Kirby S. Howlett, Jr. | |
Dr. Esmond R. Long | 1890 - 1979 | Near Chicago, Illinois | 1918 - 1919 | Long became a physician; he was Professor of Pathology at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine and Director of the Henry Phipps Institute for the Study, Treatment and Prevention of Tuberculosis from 1935 to 1955 | ||
Eva Long | 1906-1931 | Nottingham, England | 1927-1929 | Reception Hospital | Eva died at the age of 25. Her great neice shared her scrapbook with us. | |
Dr. Alfred Loomis | 1831 - 1895 | New York City | 1867 | Dr. Loomis recovered from TB during a trip to the Adirondacks in 1867; he met Dr. E. L. Trudeau at Paul Smith's hotel and became his physician. | ||
Carl Sofus Lumholtz | 1851 - May 4, 1922 | Faberg (Lillehammer), Norway | 50 Baker Street | Carl Sofus Lumholtz was a Norwegian discoverer and ethnographer known for his field research and ethnographic publications on the indigenous cultures of Australia and central Mexico. | ||
Rev. John Lundy | 1823 - | Danville Pennsylvania | 1877-78 | Berkeley Hotel | His preaching at the Berkeley Hotel led to the creation of St. Luke's Church. Later he wrote disparagingly of Saranac Lake. | |
Rev. Hiram W. Lyon | 1925 - | The Reverend Hiram W. Lyon was the minister of the First Presbyterian Church of Saranac Lake from 1926 to 1937. | ||||
Patrick Raymond MacDermot | 1903 - 1946 | Galway, Ireland and London | 1944 - 1946 | 88 Riverside Drive, at 5 Birch Street, on Park Avenue, and at 9 Rockledge Road | Patrick MacDermot was a patient of Drs. Brumfiel, J. Woods Price, and Edward Welles. | |
Louis Mackay | July 30, 1906 - July 12, 1973 | Norwalk, Connecticut | approx.1930 - 1936 | Mrs. Witherbee's, Lawrence's, Carey's, Parker's | Friend of Ralph (Duke) Huntington and Priscilla Christensen Bergren" | |
Gustav Martin | December 5, 1910 - February 25, 1967 | Seattle, Washington | Gustav Martin was a noted medical researcher who went on to work at Johns Hopkins after his "cure". | |||
Christy Mathewson | 1880 - 1925 | Factoryville, Pennsylvania | 1920 - 1925 | Santanoni Apartments, Christy Mathewson Cottage | Mathewson was one of the greatest baseball pitchers of all time. | |
Thomas O. May | Washington, D.C. | 1918 | Berkeley Hotel | He came to Saranac Lake for the cure at the age of 39. | ||
D. Lorne McGibbon | November 24, 1870 - April 20, 1927 | Montreal, Quebec | 1908 - | McGibbon became the chief benefactor of Sainte-Agathe-des-Monts, Quebec and of tuberculosis treatment in Canada generally. | ||
Patrick J. McKeown | 1899 - July 11, 1929 | Astoria, NYC | 1928-1929 | 26 Church Street | Patrick McKeown was a young physician from Astoria. He had tuberculosis in his throat and died at the age of 30. | |
William McLaughlin | August 14, 1917 - 1986 | Saranac Lake, New York | McLaughlin was a well regarded cartoonist, newspaper photographer, reporter and columnist. | |||
Dennis McMahon | 1875 | Ensine Miller's house, Sunnyside | McMahon was one of the earliest tuberculosis patients in Saranac Lake. | |||
Daisietta McClellan | 1890s | Dr. McClellan House | Daisietta's tuberculosis brought Dr. Ezra McClellan to Saranac Lake. After his death in 1911, his daughters sold the last few parcels of the land he had acquired in the Park Avenue area. | |||
Dr. Gordon Meade | December 9, 1905 - November 30, 1990 | Rochester, New York | 1932-33, 1937-1938 | Trudeau Sanatorium | Meade was the executive director of the Trudeau Sanatorium when it closed in 1954. | |
Jed Scott Merrill | - 1888 | Jed Merrill's early death from tuberculosis led his brother Elmer M. Merrill to establish the Merrillsville Cure Cottage | ||||
Frank Westley Merritt | September 12, 1910 - January 15, 1997 | Brooklyn, New York | at least 1930 - 1935 | Ecenbarger Cottage | Frank Merritt graduated from the Saranac Lake High School having taken his courses in bed as a patient of Dr. Edward Packard. He became the head of the English department at Bucknell University. | |
Joseph Messing | 1886 - November 27, 1925 | Poland | June 1925 | Joseph Messing was living in New York City in 1923 when he was diagnosed with TB, and first sought a cure at the Jewish Consumptives' Relief Society Sanatorium of Denver, Colorado. He died back in the city not long after attempting a cure in Saranac Lake. | ||
Jennie Meyers | Plainfield, NJ | 1930 and 1945 | Altavista Lodge in 1945 |
Mrs. Meyers cured twice in Saranac Lake. Her TB card in the Adirondack Room archives was found by her grandson on a visit to Saranac Lake. |
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Isobel Millen | February 15, 1894 - June 24, 1976 | Montreal, QC | Arrived May 16, 1908. | Pearse Cottage | Came to Saranac Lake at the age of 14 and stayed for 6-8 months under the care of Dr. Kinghorn. Continued care back at home in Montreal. | |
Frank G. Miller | 1929 - September 24, 1972 | Saranac Lake | 1929-1971 | Ray Brook State Hospital | Frank Miller operated a dental laboratory at 29 Bloomingdale Avenue. | |
Helen O'Reilly Miller | c. 1900 - May 10, 1978 | 1920s-1930s | Will Rogers | A showgirl who remained in Saranac Lake after treatment. She married Loren Miller, and operated several businesses. | ||
William Minshull | 1865 - October 2, 1924 | New York City | In 1897 with two other TB patients, he formed the Adirondack National Bank. | |||
George Jarvis Mirick | died May 27, 1916 | Palmyra, New York | Mirick was the Circulation Manager for the New York American newspaper | |||
Jean Monahan | Patient at Stony Wold Sanatorium, friend of Eileen Leavitt | |||||
Dominic Morabito | August 4, 1904 - May 8, 1988 | Brooklyn, New York | c. 1938 - c. 1945 | New York State Hospital at Ray Brook | Mr. Morabito cured with Richard H. Ray and appears in his book. He may have cured as long as 7 years. | |
William Morris | 1873 - November 2, 1932 | Vienna, Austria | 1902 - 1906 | Algonquin Hotel | William Morris was a theatrical agent who founded the William Morris Agency; he represented Charlie Chaplin, Will Rogers, Eddie Cantor and Al Jolson. He later built Camp Intermission | |
Hattie Bishop Hussey Morse | November 8, 1862 - July 29, 1897 | Brooklyn, NY | c. 1897 | Hattie Bishop Hussey Morse was the wife of Charles W. Morse. | ||
Frank Edward Mueller | August 24, 1923 - | Littleton, Massachusetts | September 1960 - November 1961 | Gabriels Sanatorium | Frank Mueller was an engineer. | |
Florence Mulhern | New York City | early 1950s | Trudeau Sanatorium | In 2011 Florence published a book about taking the cure, "The Last Lambs on the Mountain." | ||
Elmer Mundy | ||||||
Patrick Murphy | October 18, 1920 - January 30, 1937 | Cambridge, Massachusetts | May 1935 - January 30, 1937 | Steel Camp, 29 Church Street, Lower St. Regis Lake, Rumsey Cottage | Patrick Murphy was the son of Sara and Gerald Murphy, who were friends of of F. Scott Fitzgerald | |
Ernest Malcolm Myatt | March 28, 1888 - March 16, 1914 | Raleigh, North Carolina | 11 Park Place | c. 1913 | Earnest Myatt was a 25-year-old with a new law degree when he died, two years after his younger brother. | |
James McRae Myatt | April 22, 1894 - August 22, 1912 | Raleigh, North Carolina | 11 Park Place? | c. 1913 | James McRae was nineteen when he died of tuberculosis, two years before his elder brother. | |
Edwin Bernard Nagle | November 13, 1879 - August, 1919 | Minnesota | 1918-1919 | 9 Church Street | Edwin Nagle was a life-long miner in the United States and in Cuba, where he worked as Superintendent of the El Cobre Copper mine for several years. His attempted cure was unsuccessful. | |
Dr. Frederick L. Neely | Dr. Neely came to Saranac Lake for the cure and married Magaret Gardner, the daughter of LeRoy Upson Gardner | |||||
John F. Neilson | - 1899 | With two other TB patients, John Neilson founded the Adirondack National Bank in 1897. | ||||
Aaron S.R. Newmark | A patient at the Trudeau Sanatorium, father of patient, Helen M. Sandhaus | |||||
Dr. Joseph Nichols | November 10, 1870 - June 17, 1918 | Cincinnati, Ohio | c. 1903 | Dr. Nichols served as secretary of the T.B. Society and as president of the General Hospital. | ||
Dick Norton | Harvard University | 1952 | New York State Hospital at Ray Brook | The boyfriend of Sylvia Plath, fictionalized as Buddy in The Bell Jar, she visited him here and broke her leg while skiing on Mount Pisgah. | ||
c. 1910
- October 22, 1975 |
Wisconsin | 1930 | Trudeau Sanatorium | Lucille Nystrom was a patient at Trudeau when she was 20, which we know from Census data. As is common, her obituary makes no mention of her cure. | ||
Paul Ludwig Ott | 1879 - 1910 | Ohio | ? - 1910 | Died in Saranac Lake while attempting a cure. | ||
Dr. Edward Packard | 1883 - November 16, 1968 | Dorchester, Massachusetts | 1912 - | Trudeau Sanatorium | Dr. Packard was director of Trudeau Sanatorium from 1946 to 1950. | |
Carl Palmer | Pink Palace | Carl Palmer was the son of newspaper magnate C. M. Palmer, who moved to Saranac Lake for Carl's cure. | ||||
Edward Parrott | 1875 - 1944 | New York City | 1898 | After his cure, he moved to Lake George, where he became an Episcopal priest. | ||
Mary Kelly Parry | 1918-1984 | Jackson Heights, New York | 1941-1955 | Trudeau Sanatorium | Mary was a housewife, and was married to Dr. Frazer Parry | |
Camilo Panerai | 8/9/1910-1991 | Havana, Cuba | 1933-1934, 1941-1991 | 144 Main Street | Trained as an architect in Cuba. He and his wife Helene A. Anderson owned the Alta Vista Lodge from 1941-1958 | |
Cornelia Panos |
1897m - November 28, 1924 |
Greece | 1920 | 15 Jenkins Street, 4 Riverside Drive, 4 Kiwassa Road | ||
Walker Percy | May 28, 1916 – May 10, 1990 | Birmingham, Alabama | c.1941-c.1945 | Trudeau Sanatorium | A Southern author, won the National Book Award for The Moviegoer. | |
Edna Caroline Petotte | July 29, 1924 - December 26, 1975 | Parishville | 1930s | Ray Brook Sanatorium | Edna Petotte was a laboratory technician at Ray Brook after her recovery. She married James E. LaPan. | |
Joseph Peter Pohl | October 8, 1884 - March 26, 1924 | Schenectady, NY | 1919-1924 | His wife Mildred May Helms Pohl ran a laundry service for TB patients in the 1930's and early-1940's. Joseph had 2 sons and 3 grandchildren who grew up in Saranac Lake. | ||
Mary Poppick | c. 1900 | Jermyn, Pennsylvania | c. 1933 | Trudeau Sanatorium, 1 Pine Street | Mary Poppick was a shoe worker with Endicott-Johnson. | |
Mary Prescott | October 12, 1871 - January 7, 1961 | New Bedford, Massachusetts | 1895 - 1950s | 40 Shepard Avenue, 38 Shepard Avenue | She built and funded the Reception Hospital, and donated the land for Prescott Park | |
Dr. J. Woods Price | 1877 - 1951 | Virginia | Early 1900s - 1951 | 116 Main Street | He was president of the Reception Hospital for more than 17 years. | |
Manuel Quezon | August 19, 1878 - August 1, 1944 | The Philippines | 1944 | Camp Massapequa | He was the president of the Commonwealth of the Philippines from 1935 to 1944. At the outset of World War II and the threat of the Japanese invasion, Quezón established a government in exile in the US He died of TB in Saranac Lake. | |
Richard H. Ray | 1937-1940 | A private cottage on Pine Street, Trudeau Sanatorium, Ray Brook Sanatorium | Richard Ray learned photography while a patient here; he went on to become a professional medical photographer, and wrote a memoir: Saranac 1937-1940 | |||
Martha Reben | 1911 - 1964 | New York City | 1927 - 1964 | Trudeau Sanatorium, Weller Pond | Guided by Fred Rice, Martha Reben camped on the shores of Weller Pond; this led to her book, The Healing Woods | |
Ortanza Redinger | b.1886 | Pennsylvania | c.1912 | Adirondack Cottage Sanitarium | "Tennys" employer, California industrialist, James Cox Brady arranged for her cure at the San, c.1912. | |
Thomas F. Reilly | b.1915 | Queens, NY | 1969 | Trudeau Sanatorium | Thomas F. Reilly, son of an Irish immigrant, came to Saranac Lake about 1949 for the cure. He died in 1969. | |
Branch Rickey | December 20, 1881 – December 9, 1965 | Stockdale, Ohio | 1908-1909 | Branch Rickey was an innovative Major League Baseball executive who broke professional baseball's color barrier by signing Jackie Robinson, and who drafted the first Hispanic superstar, Roberto Clemente; he was elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1967. | ||
Daniel W. Riddle | 1833 - June 8, 1913 | 1879 - | Adirondack Cottage Sanitarium | Riddle became the Sanitarium's first treasurer; he built the Franklin Manor, and managed the Saranac Inn for 25 years. | ||
Fred Bernhardt Roedel | 2/4/1890 - 8/6/1938 | Greitz, Germany/ Clifton, New Jersey | Three years curing as young man | 93 Riverside Drive | Fred Roedel was an engineer and poultry farmer, husband of Pearl Maria Gould | |
Dr. Cordt E. Rose | Dr. Rose was an anesthesiologist who lived at 170 Park Avenue. | |||||
William Richard Rosevear | June 3, 1896 - December 19, 1945 | Haverigg, England / Endicott, NY | sometime between 1940-1945 | Went by "Red," "Poppy," and "Bill." | ||
George C. Sageman | 1877 - 1930 | Chicago, Illinois | 8 Franklin Avenue, Saranac Inn |
After his cure, Sageman worked for Branch and Callanan, and his wife ran a well-regarded cure cottage at 32 Park Avenue. |
||
Lucy Sandella | - January 11, 1937 | late 1930s | Died in Saranac Lake at age 25 and is buried in St. Bernard's Cemetery. | |||
Helen M. Sandhaus | 1923 - 2009 | Lancaster, PA | Trudeau Sanatorium | Reported to be the youngest patient to cure at the San, Helen was 16 when she came for the cure with her father. | ||
William H. Scopes | 1877 - 1964 | 1896 - | Adirondack Cottage Sanitarium | William Scopes was an architect. With partner Maurice Feustmann he designed many of Saranac Lakes most notable buildings. | ||
July 7, 1923 - |
North was one of the last patients to cure at Trudeau, when the new chemotherapy came into use. He later returned to New York City where he was an Assistant U. S. Attorney in 1956. |
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Isabel Shaw | - February 26, 1926 | Jay, New York | c. 1923 | Lane Cottage | Isabel Shaw was a young mother who had TB. She and her husband built two houses— one for the children, hoping to sheild them from disease. | |
Dr. Norman Shefrin | 1907 - 1996 | Brooklyn, New York | late 1940s - ? | Trudeau Sanatorium | Dr. Shefrin stayed on after his cure and worked on the medical staff at Ray Brook Sanatorium. | |
Helen Yacishyn Simeone | 1910-1939 | White Plains, New York | 1939 | Saranac Lake General Hospital | Helen came for the TB cure and died in Saranac Lake at the age of 29. | |
Dwight S. Simpson | 1883-1962 | New York City | 1916-1919 | Trudeau Sanatorium | A naval architect, he cured in Saranac Lake for three years. | |
Carol Smith | Late 1940s | Stony Wold Sanatorium | Carol Smith was a friend of Eileen Leavitt. | |||
Isabel Smith | - January 19, 1958 | 1928-1948 | Trudeau Sanatorium | Isabel Smith spent twenty years at Trudeau; she wrote "Wish I Might," a memoir of the cure in Saranac Lake. | ||
Madeline Smith | Came for treatment of TB, but may not have had the disease | |||||
Christian Sporck | 1892 - 1985 | Brooklyn, New York | Reception Hospital | The Sporck family remained in Saranac Lake, operating a taxi stand and grocery store on River Street and then a motel on Lake Flower Avenue. | ||
William Stearns | - June 6, 1983 | 1926 - 1930 | William Stearns returned to Saranac Lake six years after his cure and became the director of the Saranac Lake Study and Craft Guild for twenty years. | |||
William Steenken | April 24, 1901 - October 2, 1983 | Brooklyn, New York | 1925 - 1983 | William Steenken after his cure went to work for the Trudeau Foundation | ||
Robert Louis Stevenson | 11/13/1850 - 12/3/1894 | Edinburgh, Scotland | 1887 - 1888 | Stevenson Cottage | Came to SL at height of fame. Began Writing The Master of Ballantrae in SL. Probably did not have TB, but another lung ailment. | |
Edwin R. Stonaker | 1907 - 1910 | Adirondack Cottage Sanitarium | Stonaker was the president of Northern New York Telephone. He and his wife designed the Stonaker Cottage in Glenwood. He was a founder of the Saranac Lake Golf Club. | |||
Robert M. Stover | May 27, 1917 - May 5, 1995 | Irvington, New York | 1940 to 1942 | |||
LaVerne Strough | Dolgeville, New York | 1911 - c. 1927 | LaVerne Strough and her family moved to Saranac Lake because she and her mother were diagnosed with TB. | |||
Harry Sullivan | New York, New York | born 1881/2 | In 1920 was a TB patient living at 77 Algonquin Avenue | |||
E. Hallie Sutton | 1902-1939 | Buffalo, New York | 1926 - 1939 | Freer Cottage | E. Hallie Sutton came for the cure, and lived in the village for 13 years with his wife and daughter. | |
Samuel D. Telford | May 25, 1898-December 28, 1924 | North Hoosick, NY | Ray Brook State Hospital | Telford's cure was unsuccessful and he returned to North Hoosick and died there. | ||
Anthony Treybal | 1889 - 1935 | Queens, New York | c. 1927 to 1934 | Baker Street | Anthony Treybal died after returning to his home in Queens, New York, after an unsuccessful cure. | |
Dr. Charles C. Trembley | September 17, 1873 - October 20, 1957 | Utica, New York | 1900 - | Adirondack Cottage Sanitarium |
After his cure, Dr. Trembley practiced medicine in Saranac Lake for more than fifty years. He was know for his story telling and practical jokes. |
|
Mary Trombino | January 15, 1923 - March 18, 2018 | Brooklyn, New York | 1940-1942 | Ray Brook Sanatorium | Came to Ray Brook as a teenager and cured successfully. Died at the age of 95. | |
Denis Troy | New York City | 1930's | Ray Brook Sanatorium | Cured at Ray Brook with his two brothers, Peter and Denis. | ||
Peter Troy | New York City | 1930's | Ray Brook Sanatorium | Cured at Ray Brook with his two brothers, Thomas and Denis. | ||
Thomas Troy | New York City | 1930's | Ray Brook Sanatorium | Cured at Ray Brook with his two brothers, Denis and Peter. He eventually retired in Saranac Lake. | ||
Dr. Edward Livingston Trudeau | 1848 - 1915 | New York City | 1870s - 1915 | 118 Main Street | Founder of the Trudeau Sanatorium and Saranac Laboratory | |
Jack Valdez | ||||||
Jeanette Valdez | ||||||
James Roosevelt Waldron | December 20, 1902-July 31, 1970 | Newark, New Jersey | 1928-1954 | Hudson Cottage, Noyes Cottage | A building contractor, Waldron cured in the village and rented a house in Glenwood through the 1950s. | |
Ethel Mae Walsh | October 28, 1893 - July 29, 1988 | New York City | 1909 - | Ethel Walsh came to Saranac Lake at 16 to be treated for TB. She became an LPN, and stayed in the village until her death at 94 | ||
Thomas P. Ward | March 22, 1898 - February, 1982 | Before 1922 | Fallon Cottage | Thomas Ward regained his health and became a well known realtor and insurance agent; he served as mayor of the village from 1935 to 1941, and as postmaster from 1941 to 1964. During the New Deal era, he was head of the regional Works Progress Administration. | ||
James M. Wardner | 1831 - 1904 | Keeseville, New York | 1854 - 1855 | Osgood Pond | James Wardner was one of the first consumptives to cure in the Adirondacks. He went on to found the successful Rainbow Inn on Rainbow Lake. | |
Arthur Wareham | June 26, 1914 - March 10, 2005 | Yardley, Pennsylvania | January 13, 1943 - March 10, 2005 | Shults Cottage, Agnew Cottage | He was an architect who became William G. Distin's partner starting in 1950. He designed the Trudeau Institute. | |
Henry William Wehrle | December 15, 1889 - October 14, 1926 | Utica, New York | 1925-26 | 28 Front Street | Henry Wehrle was a brakeman for the New York Central; he came for the cure and died in Saranac Lake. | |
William Weiss | - c. 1925 | New York, New York | c. 1925 | William Weiss was Harry Houdini's brother. Houdini visited him in Saranac Lake to demonstrate his new routine. | ||
Edith R. Schultz Welton | Jan 1887-circa 1928 | Brooklyn, New York | 1926-27 | Alta Vista Lodge | The wife of a famous surgeon in Brooklyn, she died in her early thirties of TB | |
Max Westhoff |
October 13, 1874- 1951 |
Brooklyn, New York | 1902-1917 | 406 Park Avenue | Architect, partner of W. L. Coulter in Coulter & Westhoff. | |
Edwin A. White | c. 1901 - ? | Brooklyn, New York | 1930 - ? | 72 Park Avenue | Edwin White's "cure" was not successful; he never returned home. | |
Joseph Wiedenmayer | c. 1905 | 1952-53 | Trudeau Sanatorium | |||
James Forbes Williams | c. 1907 - 1960 | Wisconsin | c. 1949 | |||
Emanuel Wolinsky | born 9/23/1917 | New York City | 1941-1943,1946-1958 | Trudeau Sanatorium | A physician in the forefront of discovering the cure for TB. | |
Marjorie Claster Wolinsky | born March 9, 1918 | Lock Haven, Pennsylvania | 1939-1958 | Trudeau Sanatorium | She cured for six years, met and married Dr. Manny Wolinsky | |
Benjamin William Woodburn | 1884-1962 | Montreal, Quebec, Canada | 1905 | He was around 21 years of age when he came to Saranac Lake. He was cured and went on to marry in 1911 and had one surviving child. | ||
Juanita Hayman Worthington | ||||||
Ed Worthington | October 2, 1909 - September 24, 1996 | Dansville, New York | 1934 - | Trudeau Sanatorium | Worthington met his wife, a nurse, while curing. He was active in rehabilitation activities such as radio, and later taught at the Saranac Lake Study and Craft Guild. | |
Robert L. Yeager | 1907 - 1988 | Mineral Wells, Texas | mid-1930s | Trudeau Sanatorium | Yeager's cure was successful, and he became Resident Physician at Trudeau from 1935 to 1942, when he left to take a position with the Rockland County Sanatorium; the latter became a major health center which now bears his name. | |
Edward R. Young | - 1911 | Late 1890s | Trudeau Sanatorium | Young was an insurance agent who wrote policies for the Winter Carnival's Ice Palaces. Later, he was vice-president of the Adirondack National Bank | ||
The nurses of the D. Ogden Mills Training School for Nurses | The school had an unusual admission requirement: an arrested case of tuberculosis. |
Articles on Patient Groups
- African-American Patients
- Famous Patients
- Latin American Patients
- Greek Patients
- Norwegian Sailors
- Vaudeville Entertainers
See also
Comments
2011-06-03 08:40:23 I am trying to find out information about my Grandfather, Edwin White who died of Tuberculosis in early 1930s. We only know that he was sent to a sanotarium in Upstate New York. —71.125.0.119
- Hello — the librarian in the Saranac Lake Free Library archives checked and found 4 records for Edwin White! Please email me at [email protected] and I can send you the information.
2011-09-03 16:15:43 Please add: George Washington Drymalski - patient at Trudeau from July 1941 - October 1943. Resident of Chicago, Illinois. At the time of entry he was 26 years old and a medical student at Northwestern University, Evanston, Ill. After leaving Trudeau, he resumed his medical residency and became a radiologist. He married Cecil Jordan in February of 1945. They eventually settled in a northwest suburb of Chicago, (Northbrook), which was then very rural. They had 9 children, 8 of whom grew up, and 7 of whom are still living. Dr. Drymalski suffered a relapse of TB in the 1950s when he and Cecil had 3 or 4 children. He was quarantined at Cook County Hospital and had a lung collapsed or removed entirely. He worked at Resurrection Hospital for most of his medical career, until he retired in the 1980s. He died peacefully in his sleep, perhaps of heart failure, in February, 1998, just a few weeks short of his 83rd birthday. He rarely talked about Saranac or Trudeau, but wrote letters during his stay there. It is clear that he was changed by his experience at Trudeau, being transformed from a city boy to a country gentleman; he loved being outdoors, especially in the North Woods of Wisconsin where he and his family frequently vacationed and fished. He also read x rays, pro bono, for the TB society in Chicago. He left all his children with an appreciation and love of the outdoors, a love of reading and of handcrafts, such as woodworking. —71.126.185.238
- Thanks! The entry is done. If you have a photo you would like to add, please email me at [email protected].
2011-09-25 13:37:23 I am trying to find out some information on my Aunt who had TB and was treated I believe at Saranac Lake for 2 or 3 years as a child. Her name was Dorothy M Watt born about 1905. I was told she had some "major operation" to her ribs/lungs that was very drastic and painful but saved her life. She was "cured" and went on to marry and live a good life. —76.203.21.119 — Our librarian looked up your Aunt in the TB cards. She did find a few Watts listed, but unfortunately, no Dorothy M. May we add your information to our table of patients?
2012-04-05 23:49:25 my mother contractded tb around 1929/30 and was in a hospital in upstate new york, her name was delia herling. Born in 1908. I would like to know if she was a patient at saranac lake. Any information would be great. —72.169.224.102
2012-04-06 11:34:12 Hello — We will search for Delia in the library archives and let you know if her name appears there. I will post the info. here, or you can email me at [email protected]. —amycatania
2012-06-08 06:05:30 Marc — could you please add Robert Farrell here? — see oral history — thanks. —amycatania
2012-08-28 13:46:26 My name is John Holiday and i am trying to find my Father who was a patient there in 1944 if you have any information i would deeply appreciate it. his name was Frank H Holiday. my email address is [email protected] —67.76.125.71 *Responded 8/28/12- libbyclark
2012-10-14 20:37:12 My grandfather, (Francis) Frank M. Ewing died of Tuberculosis in 1937. I know he was sent to the sanotarium and I am trying to find out more information and where he is buried. My email is [email protected]. Thank you. —99.6.147.134
2012-12-19 08:29:24 I was at Ray Brook 1963 1964 was cured.............Barbara Hyatt —174.107.154.14
2013-02-14 13:45:48 this is a lot of people
2013-05-22 12:24:28 Please add: Paul Ludwig Ott, born 1879 in Ohio and died 1910 in Saranac Lake of TB. I have a photo album of his stay there which I downloaded to a Saranac Lake history website. He married Jane Bowen Phillps and they had one son, Gordon Joseph Ott, born 1907. I know so little as I have found nothing written down. If anyone knows anything else, I would appreciate the information. Kathy Ott Sader, [email protected]. —173.246.248.133
2013-07-12 22:27:39 trying to find out information on my great grandfather Joseph Meyers, he contracted TB and died in the 1930`s i can not find out any information on him and i do not even know were he is buried my grandfather did not speak much of him he was only 8 yrs old when he became an orphan, cause his mom died in childbirth. i do know that my great grandfather was born in New brunswick, nj any information would be helpful you can contact me at [email protected] thank you kelly-anne hilliard —71.15.122.205
2013-08-13 14:16:32 I do not find the name of my aunt who was a patient there. I do not know the exact year. ENA AURELIA BONTOMASE, sometimes used Catherine Ena Bontomase was born in Oswego NY 05/06/1905 and died in Oswego 12/16/1940. We know she had to leave medical school in the late 1920's as she developed TB. Thank you. [email protected] —108.183.14.89