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Dr. W. Doak
Blassingame
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Family
of Helen & Dr. Blassingame
1958
Denison Herald
September
20, 1953
Dr.
Blassingame Follows Father's Footsteps
Here
Dr.
W. Doak Blassingame is one of the
native-born doctors now practicing in
Denison. He is the son of the
late Dr. A.A. Blassingame, for half
a century a leading physician who was
an ear, eye, nose and throat
specialist.
Dr.
Blassingame was born here in 1911 and,
after finishing high school
here, received his BA at the
University of Texas and then obtained
his
MD at the Galveston Medical School of
the University of Texas.
While in school he was
instructor for 2 years in comparative
anatomy.
After
finishing school, he went to the
University of Pittsburgh Medical
Center for his in ternship and then to
Ft. Worth for his residency at
the Methodist Hospital.
He
put in a year in general
practice in Ardmore before returning
to
Denison to open hi soffice in 1940.
In 1939 he married the former
Miss Helen Shryock. The couple
have 5 children, Ames, Jan, Betty,
Dean and Lynne.
He
is secretary of the Grayson County
Medical Society, is a member of t he
Texas Medical Society and the American
Medical Association. Dr.
Blassingame also belongs to the
American Academy of General
Practicioners, and the American
Association of Railway Surgeons.
He
is on the staff of Madonna Hospital
and is the Southern Pacific
surgeon. He presently is vice
president of the Madonna staff
group.
Incidentally
Dr.
Blassingame followed in the footsteps
of his father in his
schooling as both men received their
MDs from the University of Texas'
Galveston medical school. He
belongs to the Lions Club, Rod and
Gun Club and is a member of the First
Christian Church.
Dr.
Blassingame has his own clinic at 501
West Gandy.

501 W. Gandy
Denison, Texas
(office of Dr. W. Doak Blassingame, MD)
Pioneering
Denison Physician Retires After Long Service
A doctor with a sense of humor
Story & photos by John Clift
After 57
years of medical practice, a veteran
Denison physician, Dr. Doak
Blassingame, is retiring as of
September 1.
"There
are multiple reasons for ending my
practice, ranging from the increased
paperwork of Medicare, the threat of
managed medical practice and the
increasing cost of malpractice
insurance," Dr. Blassingame said.
Dr.
Blassingame was one of a trio of Denison
natives who elected to become
physicians at about the same time.
The late Dr. Don Freeman, son
of pioneer Denison physician Dr. William
Freeman, and Dr. Tillman
McDaniel, son of the veteran Denison
educator B.M. McDaniel, all
finished high school within a year or
two of each other.
"We
took pre-med at the University of Texas.
Both Dr. Freeman and Dr.
McDaniel went to Harvard Medical School,
but I completed my medical
education at the University of Texas
medical school in Galveston where
my father had graduated 40 years
earlier," Dr. Blassingame said.
Even
though Dr. Blassingame was the son of an
early-day Denison physician,
Dr. A.A. Blassingame, he said his dad
didn't pressure him into going
into medicine.
"Actually
my father wanted me to enter diplomatic
service. As a result,
when I enrolled at the University of
Texas, I had no idea what I would
major in. But after one year, I
found I had a liking for
biology and that tilted me toward
medicin," Dr.
Blassingame continued.
After
completing his internship at the
Pittsburgh Medical Center, the young
doctor first went to Ardmore, where he
was associated with some cousins
in the practice of medicine.
However, by 1937 he returned to
Denison and launched his long medical
practice.
"Dr.
T.J. Long was major at the time, and
when the city health doctor
resigned, I was appointed to the post.
Shortly after I took over,
a typhoid epidemic broke out in the
Cotton Mill district. I
checked and discovered it came from the
Webb Diary. I was ordered
to tell the dairy to either start
pasteurizing their milk or quit
selling it. They decided to shut
down." Dr. Blassingame said.
Several persons died before
enough vaccines were obtained to end the
epidemic.
Dr.
Blassingame was on the staff at the Katy
Hospital for a number of years
before he left after a dispute with a
board member. Later,
following the retirement of Dr. Roland
Kiefer of St. Louis as the Katy
Hospital medical director, Dr.
Blassingame was appointed to that
position that he held until he resigned
in 1966.
While
the typhoid epidemic at the outset of
his career stands out as the most
memorable medical experience, Dr.
Blassingame has performed both major
and minor surgery, delivered hundreds of
babies and treated hundreds
and hundreds of patients as a general
practioner.
When he first
arrived in Denison to set up his
practice, he went out to the old City
Hospital to check the facilities for
child birth. He was appalled
that the total equipment included only
an old iron cot with two
mattresses. Since he had done his
internship at the Pittsburgh
Medical Center which had the latest in
modern equipment, he got the
City Hospital to order a modern bed,
modern forceps - which,
incidentally, are no longer used because
of malpractice suits - and
other necessary equipment for the
delivery of babies.
When his
father was practicing and during the
first quarter of a century of his
practice, Dr. Blassingame said doctors
were not considered to be
miracle workers.
"We did everything in our
power to treat patients
and improve their health. What we
did was accepted. But not
anymore. Today, people have been
taught to expect 100 pervent or
else. If a baby is born with a
defect, the doctor is blamed," Dr.
Blassingame said.
While his practicing has been
time-consuming, in
recent years Dr. Blassingame has turned
to an assortment of hobbies,
ranging from collecting knick-knacks to
traveling to genealogy.
He has written two books on the
Blassingame family and is working
on a third. He has sold them all
over the world.
His interest
in genealogy was triggered by his father
telling him that his
grandfather was a general during the War
Between the States. In
his research, he uncovered a
great-grandfather who had been a general
in the War of 1812.
"In fact, my book led to a
phone call from a
lady in Dallas who is a direct
descendant of the 1812 general.
That makes her my fourth cousin,
three times removed, who is the
most remote relative I have," Dr.
Blassingame said, smiling.
Dr.
Blassingame was 11 years old when he
found some old postcards with
stamps on them that launched his stamp
collection. He sold that
collection in 1967 and used the money
for both travel abroad and to
start new collections.
He saw his first Japanese
netsuke at a friend's house that
launched that collection.

It
was the same with...and Russian lacquer
boxes Dr. Blassingame is
a member of the International Netsuke
Society, and he said one day he
may just sell out his netsuke collection
at one of their conventions
which include auctions.
"I have always had a great
curiousity which triggered my desire to
collect unusual object," he said.
Dr.
Blassingame was born on Double Ten day in
1911. In 1939 he
married his wife, Helen, who was a nurse
in Fort Worth and one of about
1,000 nurses who applied to become the
initial stewardesses on American
Airlines. She was one of 20
selected.
The
couple have five children, four of whom
survive. They include
Amos of Mt. Laurel, New Jersey; Dean of
North Richmond Hills; Betty
Jane Whiting of Dallas and Lynn Dye if
Kanakee, Illinois.
As a
practical joker, Dr. Blassingame has had
few peers in Denison.
Years before the advent of the
portable telephone, Dr.
Blassingame was sitting in the hospital
office of Administrator Dick
Spaulding and Dr. John Saunders when the
phone rang.
"Is that your phone?" Dr. Blassingame
asked Spaulding.
"No, it doesn't sound like my ring," Dr.
Spaulding said.
"Then
it must be mine," Dr. Blassingame said,
reaching in his coat pocket and
pulling out a phone. After a brief
conversation, he put the phone
back in his pocket, but not before
completely bedazzlzing Spaulding and
Saunders.
Dr. Blassingame had a buzzer hooked up
that he could ring the phone at his
pleasure.
When
Blassingame resigned to take another
position, the doctors had a going
away dinner for him. Dr. Blassingame
was asked to get a suitable
plaque. The one selected was made of
ceramic. At the
appropriate time, Dr. Blassingame got up,
showed the plaque all around
then went to hand it to Spaulding when he
tripped and the plaque hit
the floor and shattered to the total
consternation of both Spaudling
and the guests.
Some time later in the evening Dr.
Blassingame produced a replica.
Years
ago, Dr. Blassingame organized among his
medical and other friends a
"Keep Denison Small" Club. Patterned
after the Bonehead Club of
Dallas, the members came up with wanting
to drain Lake Texoma to keep
the tourists and fishermen away.
The club advocated putting names to all of
the dips in the streets in Denison such as
Avacado Dip, Cheese Dip, etc.
With
the departure of the Katy Railroad, Johns
Manvill and other industries,
Dr. Blassingame said the club was
disbanded "because the chamber of
commerce is doing such a good job of
keeping the town small."
Back
when dress codes were stricter, Dr.
Blassingame cut off the legs from a
pair of slacks, then fastened snaps on
them. When he showed up at
the Denison Rod and Gun Club and was told
he could not get in without
long pants, he reached in a coat pocket,
pulled out the pants legs,
hooked them up and walked in.
Recently Dr. Blassingame found out his
wife wanted to go to Branson, Missouri to
see some of the shows.
Expressing disdain for Branson, he
said he wouldn't go. So
his wife went to book her ticket with a
group going, only to learn not
only had her ticket been paid for, but the
man who booked it, and he
had a funny name, would be her escort.
Naturally, when the bus left "that man"
turned out to be Dr. Blassingame.
Who else?

Biography Index
Susan Hawkins
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