*** Welcome to piglix ***

John Rathbone Oliver


John Rathbone Oliver (January 4, 1872 – January 21, 1943) was an American psychiatrist, medical historian, author, and priest. His novel Victim and Victor was a contender for the 1929 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction, but was beat out by Julia Peterkin's Scarlet Sister Mary.

Oliver was born in Albany, New York in 1872; his father Robert Shaw Oliver would later serve as Assistant Secretary of War. Oliver graduated from Harvard University in 1894 where he served as editor-in-chief of The Harvard Monthly. He taught at St. Paul's School in Concord, New Hampshire from 1894 to 1897. He entered the General Theological Seminary, became a priest in 1900, and served at St. Mark's Church in Philadelphia until 1903. He left the priesthood in 1903, likely due to coming to terms with being gay.

He obtained his M.D. from the University of Innsbruck in 1910, and served in the Austrian Army in 1914-15. Returning to the United States in 1915, he was Chief Medical Officer for the Supreme Bench of Balitmore from 1917-30 and was a psychiatrist at Johns Hopkins University Hospital. He was also a professor of the History of Medicine at the University of Maryland and an Associate Professor at Johns Hopkins (where he also received a Ph.D. in 1927) from 1930 to 1939. He returned to the priesthood in 1927.

After retiring in 1940 in poor health, Oliver died in Waverley, Massachusetts at the age of 71 on January 21, 1941, survived by two sisters.


...
Wikipedia

...