Augustus Stinchfield

Augustus Stinchfield

Augustus W. Stinchfield (December 21, 1842–1917) was one of the founders, along with Drs. Charles Horace Mayo, William James Mayo, Christopher Graham, E. Starr Judd, Henry Stanley Plummer, Melvin Millet and Donald Balfour, of the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, USA.

Born at Phillips, Maine, he received his early education at Strong, Maine. As a young man he moved from Maine to Wisconsin, and, in 1864, enlisted as a private in Company F of the Thirty-ninth Wisconsin Volunteer Army. After the Civil War, he attended Bowdoin College and the University of Michigan. He received his M.D. degree from Bowdoin College in 1868. After practicing medicine in Verona, Missouri, as well as Dundas and Eyota, Minnesota, Stinchfield was asked by William Worrall Mayo to join the Mayos' practice in 1892. William Worrall Mayo was retiring and wanted a mid-career physician to balance the growing private practice.

While the Mayo brothers excelled in surgery, Stinchfield was well qualified to handle the non-surgical duties of the practice. When Will Mayo approached the remaining partners in 1915 about changing the private practice to a not-for-profit practice, Stinchfield was the first to sign the agreement. When the remaining partners signed the transfer papers, this gift insured the long term survival, development and growth of the Mayo Clinic.

The living great-grandson of Dr. Stinchfield (Douglas Anderson) continues to work at Mayo Clinic in the department of information technology.

Read more about Augustus Stinchfield:  Bibliography

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