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Office Hours: |
Monday 8a-6p
Tuesday Closed
Wednesday 8a-6p
Thursday 8a-6p
Friday 7:30a-2:30p |
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Happy 108th Birthday to
Chiropractic
On September 18, 1895 the first chiropractic adjustment
was given by Dr. DD Palmer, a magnetic healer of the
time, to Harvey Lillard. Mr. Lillard, a janitor in the
Ryan building on the corner of Brady and 2nd Street in
Davenport Iowa, was nearly totally deaf for 17 years.
After the historic first adjustment, Harvey's hearing
returned. This revelation, led Dr. Palmer to theorize
that nerve interference from a spinal bone out of place
was the cause of Harvey's hearing loss. He further
postulated that returning the bone to a more normal
position might help correct the problem. It was from
this simple beginning that the chiropractic profession
was born.
On this anniversary, it might be interesting to read the
words of Dr. DD Palmer, the founder of chiropractic. We
have presented them below.
"Harvey Lillard a janitor in the Ryan Block, where I had
my office, had been so deaf for 17 years that he could
not hear the racket of a wagon on the street or the
ticking of a watch. I made inquiry as to the cause of
his deafness and was informed that when he was exerting
himself in a cramped, stooping position, he felt
something give way in his back and immediately became
deaf. An examination showed a vertebrae racked from its
normal position. I reasoned that if that vertebra was
replaced, the man's hearing should be restored. With
this object in view, a half-hour's talk persuaded Mr.
Lillard to allow me to replace it. I racked it into
position by using the spinous process as a lever and
soon the man could hear as before. There was nothing
"accidental" about this, as it was accomplished with an
object in view, and the result expected was obtained.
There was nothing "crude" about this adjustment; it was
specific, so much so that no Chiropractor has equaled
it."
Within two years Dr. DD Palmer opened the first school
of Chiropractic on Brady Street in Davenport. It was his
son Dr. BJ Palmer, who continued the school after his
death. It is the son, BJ Palmer, who is given credit for
growing and developing the profession into what it has
become today. |
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