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- Dr.
and Mrs. Washington Emmet McGowan Family
Dr. Washington Emmet McGowan was born August
31, 1858 in the Township of Warren, Waushara
County, Wisconsin. He was the youngest of six
children born to Alexander Orr McGowan and
Margaret McKittrick. They, in 1849, during the
country's potato famine, emigrated from
Ballyhalbert, Northern Ireland, a small town
which is just south of Belfast.
Alexander and Margaret McGowan and three older
children, settled in Carrol County, Ohio. They
remained there for almost a year. In the spring
of 1850 they moved to Wisconsin and settled on
government land, in the town of Warren, Waushara
County. Here the remainder of their six children
were born. David Alexander Orr, Eliza Nessy Mary
Jane, and Washington Emmet, the future doctor.
His "youth was spent
growing up in his native county, and there he
received such education as the schools in the
vicinity afforded him". On May 27, 1877 he
married Harriet (Hattie) O'Dell. Their first of
four children, Nessie Margaret, shown here, was
born in 1878. Second to follow was son Edward
(affectionately known as Ned) born in 1881. To
follow were Emmet Jr. (Winn) in 1885 and
Katherine in 1894.
Although Washington Emmet was a practicing
farmer at the time of his marriage, in the spring
of 1884 he received his certification as a
medical practitioner from the Hahneman Institute. During
the next year he looked for a suitable location
to start a medical practice. He decided on
Friendship Wisconsin, in Adams County. Just after
relocating his family to Friendship, the latter
two of his children were born, Emmet Jr. and
Katherine.
In this photo you will see Hattie in the center,
surrounded by three of her children. Daughter
Nessie on the upper left, Ned on the lower right,
Katherine on the lower left, and Barbra Sarb (a
house maid) on the upper right. Winn is not
pictured.
As Dr. McGowan's number of cases increased so
did his popularity. He traveled widely throughout
central Adams County, attending those in need and
seemed, "to be getting a very good
reputation", for his skills in the treatment
of disease. Along with his medical practice Dr.
McGowan became involved in many community
affairs. He became a member of the Good Templar
organization and was selected to serve on the
committee for festivities in association with a
thirty-foot hot air balloon. Several articles are
written about that day. In the spring of 1889 the
doctor was elected chairman of the Town of Adams.
In October of 1889 Dr. Sneary, (a
lady doctor from Ohio) came into the area and
started seeing patients at the McGowan's home.
This freed up some time to allow Dr. McGowan to
see to his political duties, which included
appointment to several committees. He worked as
the overseer to county medical finances and even
once had to analyze the contents of a horse's
stomach for a court case.
Serving the medical needs of the area however,
was the Doctor's primary task. He traveled in
many directions. Occasionally in the company of a
fellow doctor, Dr. Harrison, to treat and examine
those in need. Inevitably, though, he became
faced with a problem encountered by many
physicians of the times. With an increase in the
number of patients, especially those whose
financial situations were far from ideal, he was
forced to issue a statement in August of 1887,
pictured above, calling for payment of past due
bills. This is an excerpt from the Adams County
Press where Dr. McGowan posted his request.
The doctor had become a busy man. He had a
very busy medical practice, was elected to be the
President of the Adams County Agricultural
Society, was installed as Worthy Master of the
Quincy Lodge #71 Free and Accepted Masons, and
still found the time to build a barn and wire
fence on his property. But, in the fall of
1893, the good doctor had become his own patient.
He was diagnosed with typhoid fever. He did well
to fight his ailment, but eventually the fever
overcame him. Dr. Washington Emmet McGowan passed
away, at his home, on December 3rd, 1893.
The loss of Dr. McGowan was keenly felt not
only by the family, but the community as well.
Hattie McGowan, carrying an unborn child who
would never know it's father, had lost her young
husband and was left with the responsibility of
caring for a fatherless family. Hattie managed to
keep the family and house together, maintaining
the level of caring that the community had come
to respect, until 1946, when she too, was laid to
rest.
In the coming
years their children continued their family
traditions. Nessie Margaret, never married,
became a teacher and passed away in 1952. Edward
became a soldier and served in the Spanish
American War. He later moved to Walla Walla,
Washington and died in 1958. "Winn"
McGowan remained in Friendship and married Edna
Dawes in 1918. Edna gave birth to their daughter,
Elizabeth "Betty" Louise McGowan in
Friendship. Edna passed on in 1973. Katherine
served as Adams County's Supervising Teacher for
37 years, and passed away in 1991. Betty, who is
the only living direct descendant to Dr. McGowan,
still lives in the Village of Friendship, at a
retirement home. The above photo, was taken in
the 1930's. First Row L-R: Katherine McGowan,
Hattie McGowan, Nessie McGowan. Second Row L-R:
Ned McGowan, Betty McGowan, Edna McGowan, and
Winn McGowan.
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