Claude Moore Health Sciences Library 1300 Jefferson Park Avenue P.O. Box 800722 Charlottesville, Virginia 22908-0722 mailto:hsl-historical@virginia.edu URL: https://www.hsl.virginia.edu/historical/
James Lawrence Cabell Papers, Accession #MS-35, Historical Collections, Claude Moore Health Sciences Library, University of
Virginia, Charlottesville, Va.
Immediate Source of Acquisition
Dr. Wilhelm Moll, Director of the Claude Moore Health Sciences Library for many years, apparently collected the documents.
James Lawrence Cabell was born August 26, 1813 in Nelson County, Virginia. He attended private schools in Richmond, matriculated
at the University of Virginia in 1829, and earned his A.M. in 1833. The following year he continued the study of medicine
at the University of Maryland and obtained his M.D degree. To further his education he went to Paris until 1837 when he was
offered the chair of anatomy, physiology, and surgery at the University of Virginia. He remained in this capacity until 1856
when a chair of anatomy and material medica was created. He continued to teach physiology and surgery, and for a time comparative
anatomy, until the end of the 1888-89 session. He was appreciated for his devotion to teaching and was also an able diagnostician.
In addition to his more than 50 years of service to the University of Virginia, Dr. Cabell was in charge of the Confederate
States Military Hospital in Charlottesville during most of the Civil War. A member of the Medical Society of Virginia, he
was elected president in 1876. He was the organizer and served from 1879-1884 as the first president of the National Board
of Health which was created by an Act of Congress on March 3, 1879. In that year he was also president of the American Public
Health Association.
Dr. Cabell married Margaret Gibbons in 1839. He had no biological children but adopted two nieces. He died August 13, 1889
in Albemarle County, Virginia.
The collection contains three original letters from Dr. Cabell, a biographical sketch, interlibrary loan documents, a paper
written by Wilhelm Moll about two of Dr. Cabell's letters, a bibliography of Dr. Cabell's writing, and reprints of those documents.
The box is arranged into two parts. The first section is arranged chronologically with Cabell's original letters and information
concerning Cabell. The second section contains photocopies of Cabell's papers and addresses. These are arranged chronologically
by publication date.