William Whitty Hall (October 15, 1810 - May 10, 1876) was an American physician, writer and pioneer editor of health magazines.
William Whitty Hall | |
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Born | October 15, 1810 |
Died | May 10, 1876 (aged 65) New York City |
Occupation | Physician, health writer |
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Hall was born in Paris, Kentucky. He graduated from Centre College in 1830 and studied both medicine and theology.[1] He received his M.D. from Transylvania College in 1836.[1] He was ordained to the Presbyterian ministry and was a missionary in Texas. He practiced medicine in New Orleans and Cincinnati and established his consultation practice in New York City in 1851.[1]
In 1854, he began to publish Hall's Journal of Health. After his death the journal was absorbed by Popular Science.[1] From 1875, he edited Hall's Medical Adviser.[2] Hall married twice. His first wife was Hannah Mattock and his second was Magdalen Matilda Robertson.[1]
Anthropologist Matthew Wolf-Meyer has described Hall as a forgotten researcher in the field of sleep science.[3]
It was reported that Hall never weighed more than 125 pounds and he worked from 5 am to 10 pm every day.[1] He fell in a fit on a street in New York and died on May 10, 1876.[4]