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1822-1828
Through the efforts of Dr. Milton Antony, the Medical College of Georgia’s legacy began. He and
seven other doctors formed the Medical Society of Augusta in 1822 to establish a medical school and
improve the city’s medical standards. Shortly afterward, Dr. Antony quit the society and focused
on opening a medical school. He and Dr. Joseph Eve, an 1826 graduate of the Medical College
of South Carolina, started informally teaching classes to a handful of aspiring students at Augusta's City
Hospital in 1826. Both doctors actively petitioned the state to create a medical school in Augusta.
Their hard work resulted in Georgia’s Legislature passing a charter establishing the Medical Academy
of Georgia on December 20, 1828. The school received the right to award a bachelor of medicine degree
after students attended one year of instruction. After earning their bachelor's degrees, the students would transfer
to another medical school to complete their MD degree.

MCG Charter Act |

Medical Society of Augusta |
Dr. Milton Antony (1789-1839)
Founding Faculty
Despite a limited early education, Dr. Milton Antony began to study
medicine at age 16 as an apprentice. He took a course in
Philadelphia but could not afford to continue and never received a
diploma. He began his practice in rural Georgia, and soon built up a large
practice. After seven years, he moved to New Orleans for a short while and returned
to Augusta in 1819. He became very active
professionally and determined to improve the quality of his profession in
Georgia. He was a member of the Medical Society of Georgia and with his
urging, the Medical Board of Georgia was established which regulated the
practice of medicine. In 1828, Dr. Antony, along with three other physicians,
founded an academy of medicine to prepare students for further medical
studies, soon expanded to become the Medical College of Georgia. He
shepherded the building of a permanent home for the new school, which
resulted in an impressive Greek Revival building. In 1836, he and his
colleague, Dr. Joseph Adams Eve, began the Southern Medical and Surgical Journal
to report the medical advances and practices of the South.
Besides Dr. Antony's contributions to the profession itself, he was also a fine
surgeon, and reported on his bold surgery to remove a portion of a
diseased lung by partially removing the fifth and sixth ribs. Dr. Antony
enjoyed an excellent reputation both in and outside the state. As the
yellow fever epidemic swept through Augusta in 1839, Dr. Antony became one
of its victims. He was buried on the grounds of the original Medical
College of Georgia building.
Dr. Joseph Adams Eve (1805-1886)
Founding Faculty
Dr. Joseph Adams Eve studied medicine under Dr. Milton Antony.
After continuing his
studies in Europe and the Medical College of South Carolina, he returned
to Augusta in 1828 to practice and joined Dr. Antony as a founding faculty member
of the Medical College of Georgia. He served first as chair of materia medica,
then as chair of obstetrics and diseases of women and children for over 50
years. He was an editor of the Southern
Medical and Surgical Journal and wrote many valuable articles for
the profession.
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First City Hospital
Augusta’s first City Hospital opened in 1818 on two and a half
acres of land at 124 Greene Street. The city purchased the land from the Academy of Richmond County trustees
for $1,000. Shortly after, John Lund constructed a wooden frame building for roughly $5,500. The
two-story building housed 10 beds but could care for 21 patients during epidemics. A thriving
hospital, the first City Hospital had an average daily occupancy rate of 11 patients.
Dr. Milton Antony began teaching in two rooms of the hospital in 1826 and was joined a year later by Dr.
Joseph Adams Eve. After the Medical Academy of Georgia received its charter in 1828, the hospital expanded and
served as a site for medical lectures. To support this expanded role and to enhance teaching, the hospital
spent $457 to renovate its rooms. Following the opening of the new City Hospital, the hospital vacated
the building in 1869.
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