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One of Founders of the Medical School
The Michigan Alumnus 452
WHEN, in 1850 the Medical School of the University of Michigan was organized and established, no other more fully earned the right to be called one of the fathers of the new depart ment, along with Dr. Zina Pitcher, one of the Regents who was also a leader in the medical profession of the State, than Professor Abram Sager, who was in charge of the instruction in botany and zoology.
One of the Fathers of the Medical School
Abram Sager, A.M., M.D., was one of those patient, skillful and high-minded scholars who in the twilight of modern science, almost unaided by libraries, appara tus, and laboratories, but constant in their search for the facts of nature, built up stone by stone the edifice that is our biology, our medicine, our physical science. He was born at Bethlehem, New York, December 22, 1810. In 1831 he was graduated from Renssalaer Polytechnic Institute, where, apparently, from Profes sors Torrey and Eaton he gained a thorough training in botany and zoology and a life-long interest in them. In 1835 he received his medical degree at Castleton, Vermont, and entered general practice—and he was a skillful physician and surgeon. In 1837-39, as Zoolo gist, he assisted Douglas Houghton in the survey of the state: and then in 1842 he came to the University as professor of botany and zoology. Thereafter his titles were Professor of Obstetrics, Diseases of Women and Children, and Professor of Botany and Zoology, 1850-54; of Obstetrics. Physiology, Botany and Zoology, 1854-55; of Obstetrics and Physiology 1855-60; of Obstetrics and Diseases of Women and Children, 1860-75. His herbarium and the zoological specimens collected and prepared by him were the foundations of the University herbarium and the Museum of Zoology.
Biologist and Physician
He was a tireless worker (he had to be. just to carry all these titles; and he was an active practitioner, much sought as a consultant, besides), an omnivorous reader, and the author of many papers on medical and biological subjects. Epoch-making discoveries did not fall to his lot, but his scientific work was accurate, original and of real value. He was modest and retiring, but firm and courageous against charlatanry and anything which outraged his sense of the integrity of his profession. He was a real scientist, a broadly grounded scholar, and a quietly persistent enthusiast. An early medical graduate once, speaking of Dr. Sager's lectures, mentioned the fact that he dwelt in detail upon observation which he and others had made on the segmentation of frog's eggs, concluding. "At that time some of us did not see what that had to do with obstetrics and gyn ecology, but let me say, those lectures and many others which he delivered gave us the only idea many of us had of what was going on in the animal world around us." Medical educators today recognize the necessity of such instruction as Dr. Sager's instincts compelled him to impart eighty years ago. He died August 6, 1877, and let his name be remembered forever at Michigan as one of its great scientists and a sound builder of educational foundations.