Hugh Jackson Morgan
Hugh Jackson Morgan | |
---|---|
Born | 1893 |
Died | 1961 |
Nationality | American |
Alma mater | Vanderbilt University Johns Hopkins University |
Known for | world-renowned internist, professor |
Scientific career | |
Institutions | School of Medicine Vanderbilt University |
College football career | |
Vanderbilt Commodores | |
Position | Center |
Career history | |
College | Vanderbilt (1910–1912) |
Career highlights and awards | |
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Hugh Jackson "Buddy" Morgan (1893–1961) was a world-renowned internist and medical professor. In his younger days he was an accomplished college football player.
Early life and education
Hugh J. Morgan was born into a prominent Nashville, Tennessee family in 1893 and graduated from Vanderbilt University in 1914. The Jackson family's ancestral home, Forks of Cypress, remains a landmark in Florence, Alabama. A scholar and athlete, he was a prominent member of the Vanderbilt varsity football team and was selected as an All Southern center.[1] Morgan played on the 1911 and 1912 SIAA championship teams. He was nominated though not selected for an Associated Press All-Time Southeast 1869-1919 era team.[2]
Academia
After two years at Vanderbilt Medical School, he transferred to Johns Hopkins University and received his doctorate in 1918. As a medical student, Dr. Morgan served in the prestigious Hopkins unit during World War I, and was stationed primarily in France. After the war, Dr. Morgan professed at both Hopkins and the Rockefeller Institute before returning home to Nashville in 1925 to accept an offered position as Associate Professor of Medicine. Dr. Morgan became Chair of the Department of Medicine in 1935. In this capacity Dr. Morgan established Vanderbilt's
World War II
During World War II, Dr. Morgan entered the U.S. Army as a Brigadier General, appointed Chief Medical Consultant to the Surgeon General. This position entailed the oversight and direction of field military medical personnel throughout the European theater.
Legacy
A former colleague wrote of Dr. Morgan, "He was a charming man with firm convictions. He was courteous, gallant, and had a warm twinkling humor. He was delicately sensitive to and careful of the smallest human weaknesses and respected the well-grounded opinions of others." Dr. Hugh Morgan's contributions to Vanderbilt and The U.S. Army were many. Dr. Morgan is honored namesake of multiple chairs and endowments, most notably the Hugh J Morgan Chair in Medicine.
Hugh J. Morgan died in his Nashville, Tennessee home in 1961 of cancer. Dr. Morgan's son-in-law was prominent cancer researcher Lloyd Saxon Graham. Dr. Morgan's son, Hugh J. Morgan Jr, is a former chairman of Sonat; Dr. Morgan's son Robert P. Morgan is a composer and theorist on the faculty of Yale University.
References
- ^ e.g. "Consolidated All-Southern Chosen by Ten Scribes; Eleven Like Innis Brown's". Atlanta Constitution. December 3, 1912. p. 10. Retrieved March 4, 2015 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ "U-T Greats On All-Time Southeast Team". Kingsport Post. July 31, 1969.