H C. RUTTER, M. D.,
superintendent of the Ohio State Hospital for Epileptics at Gallipolis, was
born in Virginia, on the 6th of February, 1849, and is a son of Dr. John H. Rutter, M. D., who died in Bellefontaine in 1856. He was a
native of Giles County, Virginia, and a son of one of the old judges of that
county. Being opposed to the institution of slavery he removed his family to
Ohio and practiced his profession in Bellefontaine until his death. Deeply
interested in the political situation of the country and the questions that
were agitating the people, he studied the subject closely and viewed the matter
from a broad standpoint. Realizing fully the evils of slavery he was opposed Lo
its further extension and when the Republican party
was formed to prevent that he at once joined its ranks and cast his last vote
for John C. Fremont, its first presidential candidate. He had a family of seven
sons, all of whom became strong Republicans, but only the Doctor is now living.
During his early
boyhood Dr. Rutter accompanied his parents to
Bellefontaine, where he was reared to manhood and acquired his literary education.
At the early age of fifteen years he entered the Union army as a defender of
his country, enlisting in 1863 as a member of Company B. One Hundred and Thirty
second Ohio Volunteer Infantry, with which he served until September, 1864.
Wishing to prepare for
the practice of medicine as a life work Dr. Rutter
entered the Ohio Medical College, of Cincinnati, where he was graduated in
1869. He then entered the hospital at Cincinnati, where he put his theoretical
knowledge to the practical test and thus more ably prepared for his chosen
calling. Subsequently he opened an office in Logan county
and engaged in general practice, meeting with good success in his undertakings.
He has been a close student of his profession, carrying his researches far and
wide into the realm of medical knowledge, and pursuing his investigations along
original lines, which have resulted in discoveries concerning the laws of
health and the treatment of disease that have gained him eminent distinction in
his profession.
He left Logan County
to accept the appointment of superintendent of the hospital in Dayton, Ohio. He
was for four years connected with the Dayton Insane Asylum, first as assistant
physician and afterward as superintendent. He left that institution to accept
the appointment of superintendent of the Athens Insane Asylum in 1875, to which
he was chosen by the unanimous vote of the board of trustees. For four years he
filled that position, with credit to himself and to the satisfaction of the
board, his efficient management and excellent understanding of diseases of that
character enabling him to secure the best possible results in the treatment and
care of the patients. He was then elected superintendent of the Columbus Insane
Asylum, where he served four years. Returning then to Bellefontaine he followed
the general practice of medicine until 1893 when the plans for building the new
state asylum at Gallipolis were adopted and he was elected by the board of
trustees to take the management and carry the work forward to completion. There
is no man in Ohio who has more experience or is better qualified for the work
than Dr. Rutter. For fifteen years he has had the
care of insane patients, and his study of the malady has made him especially
well fitted fir treatment of diseases of the mind. In
1877 he wrote much upon the need of separate buildings for insane asylums,
advocated this on all proper occasions and in 1881 drafted a bill which passed
the lower branch of the Ohio legislature, but failed in the senate. The new
institution at Gallipolis is built after his idea, and is most complete in all
its arrangements for sanitation, ventilation and other requisites of a large
institution of this character. The Doctor has made many valuable contributions
to the medical literature of the country, particularly along the line of his
specialty, and to-day ranks among the foremost physicians in the treatment of
the insane in the entire country. He has attained distinctive preferment in his
profession and his successful investigations are deserving
the commendation of all people.
The Doctor has also
long manifested an interest in political questions.
Joseph P. Smith, ed.,
History of the Republican Party in Ohio (Chicago: Lewis Pub. Co.:
1898), pp.560-561.
|