Men of progress; biographical sketches and portraits of leaders in business and professional life in the state of Rhode Island and Providence plantations . erne as never to lose a typhoid patient, a resultwhich he attributes largely to a discreet, and yet amore than usually persistent, treatment by thesponge. In devising ingenious appliances for therelief and cure of spinal and hip diseases he hasbrought into play inherited mechanical skill. He isan ardent believer in the possibility of arrest of lungdisease in its earlier stages, and the sufferings ofmotherhood have led him to study closely h
Men of progress; biographical sketches and portraits of leaders in business and professional life in the state of Rhode Island and Providence plantations . erne as never to lose a typhoid patient, a resultwhich he attributes largely to a discreet, and yet amore than usually persistent, treatment by thesponge. In devising ingenious appliances for therelief and cure of spinal and hip diseases he hasbrought into play inherited mechanical skill. He isan ardent believer in the possibility of arrest of lungdisease in its earlier stages, and the sufferings ofmotherhood have led him to study closely how toreduce them to the greatest extent possible. Lately 68 MEN OF PROGRESS. he has made a successful debut as a is intensely devoted to his profession, and waitspatiently for the larger successes which come slowlybut surely to those who set for themselves a highstandard of professional and personal honor. is a member of the Masonic fraternity, theProvidence Medical Association and the Rhode Is-land Medical Society. He is unmarried. STUD LEY, John Edward, manager of real estatecorporations, Providence, was born in Worcester,. JOHN E, STUDLEY. Mass., November 13, 1852, son of John Moore andJulia Ann (Gill) Studley. The Studleys are an oldEnglish family found in Kent and Yorkshire, theseat of the family in the latter county being StudleyPark. There were two families of this name in NewEngland at an early date, one in Boston and one inSandwich, Mass. The Providence Studleys de-scended from the Boston branch, and among theirancestors was Benjamin Studley who was a lieuten-ant in the Massachusetts troops during the war ofthe Revolution, and was a Selectman in Hanover,Mass., in [778. The subject of this sketch receivedhis early education in the public schools of Worces-ter, Mass., Brooklyn, N. Y., and Providence, R. graduated from the high school in Providence, May 5, 1869. His early training was all of a busi-ness character. Much of his spare time out o
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, bookidmenofprogres, bookyear1896