Ohio County, West Virginia  Biography of John C. Hupp.

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DR. JOHN C. HUPP

Dr. John C. Hupp is a grandson  of John Hupp, a pioneer who was 
killed while defending Miller's block-house, on Buffalo creek, from 
the Indians, and was born in Donegal township, Washington county, 
Pennsylvania, November 24th, 1819.  He was educated at West Alexander 
Academy, and at Washington College, from which he graduated in 1844;  
subsequently, in 1848, taking the degree of A. M.  Studied medicine 
under F. Julius LeMoyne, and at the Jefferson Medical College, whence 
he graduated M.D. in 1847, settling in Wheeling in general practice.  
He was one of the founders of the Medical Society of the State of 
West Virginia, having introduced into the convention called to form 
that society the resolution "to establish and organize" it; brought 
chloral hydrate to the notice of the profession of Wheeling, February 
21st, 1870;  made in 1873 a successful effort before the board of 
education to extend to the colored children of Wheeling a free-school 
education, and a like effort before the same body in 1875, to make 
German a regular branch of study in the public schools of Wheeling;  
was appointed in 1875 a delegate to the American Medical Association 
to the European Medical association;  was also a member of the 
executive committee of the Centennial Medical Commission to the 
International Medical Congress, which convened at Philadelphia, 
September 4, 1876;  and witnessed the cremation of Baron de Palm, at 
Washington, Pa., December 6th, 1876.  His notable cases include the 
case of a ruptured uterus, reported in the Transactions of the State 
Medical Society for 1874.

He is a member of the American Medical Association, in which he was 
secretary of the section on the practice of medicine and obstetrics 
in 1869, and of the committee on nominations in 1875, 1876 and 1878;  
of the Medical Socirty of the State of West Virginia, of which he is 
treasurer, having been elected at its formation in 1867 and re-
elected annually;  of the Medical Society of the City of Wheeling and 
County of Ohio, of which also he is treasurer, having been in like 
manner elected at its formation in 1868, and annually re-elected;  
and of the Historical Society of West Virginia;  a corresponding 
member of the Gynaecological Society of Boston, and a life member and 
vice president for West Virginia of the Alumni Association of 
Jefferson Medical College.  Among other contributions to medical 
literature, he is the author of papers on "Placenta Praevia," 1863;  
"Salivary Calculus," 1863; "Vaccination and its Protective Powers," 
1870;  "Chloral in Puerperal Insanity," 1870, copied into medical 
journals from the Transactions of the State Medical Society;  
"Congenital Phymosis and Stone in the Urethra," 1870;  "Opium 
Poisoning Treated by Belladonna," 1872;  "Ruptured Uterus," 1874, 
copied into medical journals from Transactions of the State Medical 
Society; and "Encephaloid Abdominal Tumor," 1875; of a "Biographical 
Sketch of Joseph Thoburn, M. D.," prepared by request of the medical 
profession of Wheeling, 1865; of a memorial to the legislature of 
West Virginia on the appointment of a state geologist, 1870;  and of 
a memorial to the same body on the establishment of a state board of 
health, 1877; and cases of "Phymosis and Adherent Prepuce," 1877, 
copied into medical journals from the Transactions of the State 
Medical Society; "Diagnostic Importance of Symptoms," 1878, copied 
into medical journals from Transactions of the State Medical Society.  
In 1850 he was physician to the Ohio county almshouse and Ohio county 
jail;  has been physician ordinary to the prisoners of the United 
States district court from 1863 to the present time;  was physician 
and secretary of the city board of health in 1864;  has been 
physician to the Children's Home of Wheeling since 1863;  was 
commissioned by Governor Pierpoint state vaccine agent, January 1, 
1863, and successively reappointed by Governors Boreman, Stevenson 
and Jacob, making a service of nearly fifteen years;  was president 
of the board of supervisors of the county of Ohio from 1863 to 1866, 
inclusive;  is a member of the board of education of the independent 
school district of Wheeling, and has been since 1873, and president 
of the United States board of examining surgeons for pensions.  At 
the formation, in 1863, of the state of West Virginia, including the 
establishment of its county organizations, he was elected a member of 
the board of supervisors of the county of  Ohio, serving for three 
consecutive terms, during all of which he was president of the board;  
but when he was urged, subsequently, to stand for the city council, 
and also for the State Senate, he declined, the period of civil war 
and governmental transition, which impelled him to accept public 
office as a duty, having passed away.  In March, 1853, he married 
Caroline Louisa, daughter of Dr. A. S. Todd, of Wheeling.


From HISTORY OF THE PAN-HANDLE, West Virginia, 1879, by J. H. 
Newton, G. G. Nichols, and A. G. Sprankle.  

Contributed by Linda Cunningham Fluharty.