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Harry Martin (urologist)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Harry Watson Martin
BornJanuary 16, 1890
DiedJune 24, 1951 (aged 61)
OccupationUrologist
Spouses
(m. 1924; div. 1926)
(m. 1930)

Harry Watson Martin (January 16, 1890 – June 24, 1951) was a urologist and third husband of Louella Parsons.

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Transcription

Early years and education

Harry Martin was the son of Watson Jesse Martin, a dentist, and Annie Amelia Moriarty. He was the younger of two brothers. His paternal grandfather, David D. Martin, was also a physician.[1][2] Harry Martin graduated from John Marshall High School, Chicago and received his M.D. from the University of Illinois, Chicago on June 4, 1912.[3] He served in the Army Medical Corps during World War I.[4]

Hollywood Physician

Martin moved to Los Angeles in 1919. He was a urologist[5] who specialized in the treatment of venereal disease. He became medical director of Twentieth Century Fox studios in 1937. He performed abortions and dispensed stimulant drugs to the actors, as needed, to keep them alert while films were being shot.[6]

Personal life

On November 1, 1924, Martin married actress Sylvia Breamer at Glenwood Inn in Riverside, California. She divorced him in 1926, complaining that he failed to return home for meals and treated her with complete indifference, while Martin accused her of cruelty.[7]

He married gossip columnist Louella Parsons in 1930; the couple remained together until he died.

Death

Martin died at Cedars of Lebanon Hospital of a tropical ailment contracted while he served in the South Pacific with the Army Medical Corps during the Second World War. He had been a hospital patient for several weeks, and had been in a coma for a few days. The cause of the persistent fever from which he died was never diagnosed, although he visited Johns Hopkins Hospital, many other leading clinics, and consulted specialists. With him at his death were his wife and step-daughter, Harriet Parsons, a motion-picture producer.[8]

Selected publications

  • Robert V. Day, M.D.; Harry W. Martin, M.D. Diverticula of the Urinary Bladder. Feature Observations. JAMA. 1925;84(4):268–272
  • Harry W. Martin. Injuries of the Posterior Urethra. Cal West Med. Jan 1936; 44(1): 16–20.
  • Harry W. Martin, M.D.; Rachel E. Arbuthnot, M.D. Spinal Anesthesia. A Review Of More Than Six Thousand Cases In The Los Angeles General Hospital, With Especial Consideration Of Genito-Urinary Operations. JAMA. 1926;87(21):1723–1725.
  • Harry W. Martin. Ruptured Bladder—A Method of Diagnosis. Cal West Med. Apr 1932; 36(4): 230–232.
  • Robert V. Day, M.D.; Harry W. Martin, M.D. Vesical Diverticulum. A Feature Study. JAMA. 1939;112(6):509–513.
  • Robert V. Day and Harry W. Martin. Injuries to The Urinary Organs in Relation to Industrial Accidents. Cal West Med. Jul 1925; 23(7): 849–853.
  • Harry W. Martin. Cysto-Urethroscopic Resection of the Prostate. Cal West Med. Feb 1932; 36(2): 76–79.
  • Day, R. V., Martin, H. W., Kutzmann, A. A., & Kessler, E. E. (1938). Sex hormone therapy for prostatism. The American Journal of Surgery, 39(1), 100–103.
  • Martin, Harry W. "The Treatment Of Bladder Neck Contracture Or Median Bar." The Journal of Urology (1930): 313.

References

  1. ^ 1880 United States Federal Census for David D. Martin
  2. ^ 1900 United States Federal Census for Harry Martin
  3. ^ Annual Register. University of Illinois (Urbana-Champaign campus) 1913 Page 527
  4. ^ The alumni record of the University of Illinois, Chicago 1912, p 188
  5. ^ IN MEMORIAM: Harry W. Martin, 1890–1951. "Transactions. American Urological Association. Western Section 18: 1951 pg 5–6". Trans West Sect Am Urol Assoc. 18: 5–6. 1951. PMID 14922495.
  6. ^ Ted Schwarz. Marilyn Revealed: The Ambitious Life of an American Icon. Taylor Trade Publishing. January 16, 2009 p 164
  7. ^ The Los Angeles Times "Physician seeks divorce." April 20, 1926. Page A10. Accessed 13/12/2015
  8. ^ Dr. Martin is dead. Fox Film official. New York Times. June 25, 1951
This page was last edited on 2 December 2023, at 01:24
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