Sometimes “Scolley” is seen, but “Scollay”is probably correct.
Harrington, Thomas Francis. The Harvard medical school; a history, narrative and documentary. 1782-1905. Lewis Pub. Co., 1905. (Volume 3), page 1554: 2062. William Scollay Whitwell, A.B. 1869; A.M.; b. April 14, 1846, Keene, N. H.; d. April 8, 1903, Fishkill, N. Y.; memb. staff Utica Hosp. for Insane; house phys. Woman's Hosp., N. Y. City; practiced San Francisco; specialty, mental diseases; 1889 established in San Mateo private sanatorium: 1898 commenced practice in N. Y. City and had private Sanatorium at Fishkill-on-the-Hudson; .Am. Med. Assn.; M.M.S.S.; Harv. Med. Alum. Assn.
Source: http://books.google.com/books?id=waMxAAAAYAAJ
Southern California Practitioner, 22(9): September 1907, page 493: Editorial Notes: ... Dr. H.P. Shattuck, of Tucson, Ariz., has been spending a few days in Los Angeles. The doctor will soon open in Tucson the W.S. Whitwell Hospital, which Mrs. Blanche Whitwell has established as a memorial to her late distinguished husband. The institution Dr. Whitwell had in California is most creditable, and Mrs. Whitwell and Dr. Shattuck will perpetuate his work in Arizona.
http://books.google.com/books?id=b9pXAAAAMAAJ
J Am Med Assoc, Jan 1909; LII: 303: Hospital Burned. -- The Whitwell Hospital, Tucson, completed less than a year ago at a cost of $75,000, by Mrs. Whitwell of Brooklyn, N. Y., in memory of her husband, was totally destroyed by fire December 26….
J Am Med Assoc, Apr 1909; LII: 1114: General plans have been completed for the new Whitwell Hospital, Tucson, which was recently destroyed by fire. The new building will be a fireproof structure throughout; will be two stories in height, and will contain rooms for thirty-two patients, in addition to two large wards. The accommodation of the hospital will be more than double that of the old building.
J Am Med Assoc, Jan 1910; LIV: 381: Burned Hospital Rebuilt.–Whitwell Hospital and Sanitarium, Tucson, which was destroyed by fire December 29, last, has been rebuilt and reopened. The new structure is fireproof and is provided with outside villas for the use of patients suffering from asthmatic and pulmonary affections. The hospital was originally built in 1907 by Mrs. W. S. Whitwell, New York City, in memory of Mr. William Scollay Whitwell. The hospital maintains one free bed. Dr. Hobart P. Shattuck is resident physician.
Boston medical and surgical journal, 148(17); April 23, 1903, page 456: William Scolley Whitwell, M.D. [obituary]. | Dr. William Scolley Whitwell, whose death in New York occurred recently, was a Bostonian by association and parentage. His father was an engineer of distinction who lived in Boston the greater part of his life, and whose work, the large granite reservoir on Beacon Hill (removed a few years ago), was for a generation a testimonial of unusual professional skill and thoroughness. | Dr. Whitwell was born April 14, 1847, at Keene, N.H., while his father was living there in charge of the engineering work in that region. | Dr. Whitwell was educated in Boston schools, at the Phillips Exeter Academy, and at Harvard College, being graduated in 1869. He afterwards entered the Harvard Medical, and was graduated there, studying also in New York and at Vienna. | He served as a resident physician at the Charity Hospital, Blackwell's Island, New York, and as an assistant in Dr. Gray's asylum at Utica. Later he commenced practice in San Francisco, where for a time he was editor in charge of the leading medical journal of San Francisco. Subsequently he devoted especial attention to mental diseases, and established a private sanitarium in a suburb of San Francisco. A few years ago he moved to New York and practiced his specialty there until his death, having in connection with his city practice a sanitarium at Fishkill. | His death came unexpectedly, although his health had been somewhat impaired in the last two years. | Of an unusually attractive personality, he made warm friends among all who came in contact with him. All who knew him will always recall with pleasure his friendliness, geniality and the indefinable attraction which made his companionship something to be prized and not to be forgotten. He left a widow with three sons.
Source: http://books.google.com/books?id=TD8BAAAAYAAJ
J Am Med Assoc. 1903;XL(17):1154: William S. Whitwell, M.D. Harvard University Medical School, Boston, 1872, of New York City, a member of the American Medical Association, died at the Riverview Sanitarium, Fishkill Landing, of which he was proprietor, from Bright's disease, April 8, aged 57.
NY Times, May 2, 1908: “Wants $500,000 Fund Divided: Mrs. Whitwell Believes Her Son, Who Disappeared In 1903, Is Dead.” Dr. Whitwell’s son, William S. Whitwell III, disappeared shortly before his father died. There are conflicting reports as to whether he was ever seen again. On May 1, 1908 Mrs. Whitwell, believing that her son who disappeared in 1903 was dead, appeared in court asking that the fund that was to have been split among the three sons, now be divided equally between the remaining two. Source: http://query.nytimes.com/mem/archive-free/pdf?res=F10711FC3D5517738DDDAB...
Harrington, Thomas Francis. The Harvard medical school; a history, narrative and documentary. 1782-1905. Lewis Pub. Co., 1905. (Volume 3), page 1554: 2062. William Scollay Whitwell, A.B. 1869; A.M.; b. April 14, 1846, Keene, N. H.; d. April 8, 1903, Fishkill, N. Y.; memb. staff Utica Hosp. for Insane; house phys. Woman's Hosp., N. Y. City; practiced San Francisco; specialty, mental diseases; 1889 established in San Mateo private sanatorium: 1898 commenced practice in N. Y. City and had private Sanatorium at Fishkill-on-the-Hudson; .Am. Med. Assn.; M.M.S.S.; Harv. Med. Alum. Assn.
Source: http://books.google.com/books?id=waMxAAAAYAAJ
Southern California Practitioner, 22(9): September 1907, page 493: Editorial Notes: ... Dr. H.P. Shattuck, of Tucson, Ariz., has been spending a few days in Los Angeles. The doctor will soon open in Tucson the W.S. Whitwell Hospital, which Mrs. Blanche Whitwell has established as a memorial to her late distinguished husband. The institution Dr. Whitwell had in California is most creditable, and Mrs. Whitwell and Dr. Shattuck will perpetuate his work in Arizona.
http://books.google.com/books?id=b9pXAAAAMAAJ
J Am Med Assoc, Jan 1909; LII: 303: Hospital Burned. -- The Whitwell Hospital, Tucson, completed less than a year ago at a cost of $75,000, by Mrs. Whitwell of Brooklyn, N. Y., in memory of her husband, was totally destroyed by fire December 26….
J Am Med Assoc, Apr 1909; LII: 1114: General plans have been completed for the new Whitwell Hospital, Tucson, which was recently destroyed by fire. The new building will be a fireproof structure throughout; will be two stories in height, and will contain rooms for thirty-two patients, in addition to two large wards. The accommodation of the hospital will be more than double that of the old building.
J Am Med Assoc, Jan 1910; LIV: 381: Burned Hospital Rebuilt.–Whitwell Hospital and Sanitarium, Tucson, which was destroyed by fire December 29, last, has been rebuilt and reopened. The new structure is fireproof and is provided with outside villas for the use of patients suffering from asthmatic and pulmonary affections. The hospital was originally built in 1907 by Mrs. W. S. Whitwell, New York City, in memory of Mr. William Scollay Whitwell. The hospital maintains one free bed. Dr. Hobart P. Shattuck is resident physician.
Boston medical and surgical journal, 148(17); April 23, 1903, page 456: William Scolley Whitwell, M.D. [obituary]. | Dr. William Scolley Whitwell, whose death in New York occurred recently, was a Bostonian by association and parentage. His father was an engineer of distinction who lived in Boston the greater part of his life, and whose work, the large granite reservoir on Beacon Hill (removed a few years ago), was for a generation a testimonial of unusual professional skill and thoroughness. | Dr. Whitwell was born April 14, 1847, at Keene, N.H., while his father was living there in charge of the engineering work in that region. | Dr. Whitwell was educated in Boston schools, at the Phillips Exeter Academy, and at Harvard College, being graduated in 1869. He afterwards entered the Harvard Medical, and was graduated there, studying also in New York and at Vienna. | He served as a resident physician at the Charity Hospital, Blackwell's Island, New York, and as an assistant in Dr. Gray's asylum at Utica. Later he commenced practice in San Francisco, where for a time he was editor in charge of the leading medical journal of San Francisco. Subsequently he devoted especial attention to mental diseases, and established a private sanitarium in a suburb of San Francisco. A few years ago he moved to New York and practiced his specialty there until his death, having in connection with his city practice a sanitarium at Fishkill. | His death came unexpectedly, although his health had been somewhat impaired in the last two years. | Of an unusually attractive personality, he made warm friends among all who came in contact with him. All who knew him will always recall with pleasure his friendliness, geniality and the indefinable attraction which made his companionship something to be prized and not to be forgotten. He left a widow with three sons.
Source: http://books.google.com/books?id=TD8BAAAAYAAJ
J Am Med Assoc. 1903;XL(17):1154: William S. Whitwell, M.D. Harvard University Medical School, Boston, 1872, of New York City, a member of the American Medical Association, died at the Riverview Sanitarium, Fishkill Landing, of which he was proprietor, from Bright's disease, April 8, aged 57.
NY Times, May 2, 1908: “Wants $500,000 Fund Divided: Mrs. Whitwell Believes Her Son, Who Disappeared In 1903, Is Dead.” Dr. Whitwell’s son, William S. Whitwell III, disappeared shortly before his father died. There are conflicting reports as to whether he was ever seen again. On May 1, 1908 Mrs. Whitwell, believing that her son who disappeared in 1903 was dead, appeared in court asking that the fund that was to have been split among the three sons, now be divided equally between the remaining two. Source: http://query.nytimes.com/mem/archive-free/pdf?res=F10711FC3D5517738DDDAB...
Master pnID
AMH-PN4023
Src1 DP
AHSL-DP
Residence(s)
New York NY