[Fowler, Joseph]
Fowler, Joseph, M. D.,
Buffalo, has the qualities of mind and heart which endear a man
to men, and he is among those citizens of Buffalo who are widely
and favorably known by their fellows. Dr. Fowler is descended on
both paternal and maternal sides from the pioneer families of the
State. His great-grandparents, William Fowler and Mary Weeks Fowler,
and Gideon Wilber and Ruth Bathrick Wilber, were residents of what
is now Saratoga county long before that district had any independent
existence. His grandparents, Joseph Fowler and Margaret Vollwider
Fowler, and Samuel Wilber and Sarah Emes Close Wilber, and his parents,
William J. Fowler and Elizabeth Wilber Fowler, continued to make
their homes where the ancestral roof had been. Dr. Fowler was born
in Clifton Park township, Saratoga county, May 3, 1847. His early
education was obtained in the district school and in the neighboring
academy at Half Moon. At the age of eighteen the student turned
teacher, and the next three years of his life were spent teaching
in the little wooden school house of his native town. His residence
in Buffalo began in 1869, when he entered the medical department
of the University of Buffalo, from which he was graduated in 1873.
His professional career has been successful. For ten years he was
a member of the medical staff of the Sisters of Charity Hospital,
and since 1886 has filled the office of surgeon to the Department
of Police with marked ability and zeal. While giving to the demands
of his profession conscientious care and indefatigable labor, Dr.
Fowler has ever maintained an active interest in public affairs.
An earnest Republican in political belief, he has served both his
party and the city well. In 1881 he was the successful Republican
candidate for coroner and filled the [518][519]
office for three years. On many occasions his name has been considered
by the party in connection with important offices, and in 1889 he
was its nominee for superintendent of education. Neither professional
cares, party obligations nor public duties have prevented Dr. Fowler
from taking an important part in forming and maintaining professional
and fraternal organizations, and much of his leisure time is spent
in promoting their interests. He is a member of several medical
societies and clubs, a Mason of high degree, a prominent Odd Fellow
and an active member of many other fraternal orders.
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