Description: LEONARD KEENE HIRSHBERG(H L MENCKEN) WHAT YOU OUGHT TO KNOW ABOUT YOUR BABYFIRST/ONLY PRINTING OF FIRST EDITIONIN FACSIMILE DUST JACKETBUTTERICK (1910) Leonard Keene Hirshberg (January 9, 1877 – October 1, 1969) was a physician and popular medical writer turned quack and fabulist who was convicted off - and jailed for - mail fraud. Early life and education Hirshberg was born in Baltimore to a Jewish family. He earned his M.D. from Johns Hopkins University in 1902. He developed a successful career as a health writer, with his articles appearing in mainstream medical columns and journals. With H. L. Mencken as his uncredited ghost writer, he collaborated on a series of baby care articles for the magazine The Delineator that were published as What You Ought to Know About Your Baby (1910). The scarce first edition of the book - consisting of only one printing - listed Hirschberg as sole author, when in fact the writing was Mencken’s. According to Mencken, at least some of Hirshberg's other magazine articles were also written by Mencken with Hirshberg providing the information. In 1913, Hirshberg resigned from the Baltimore County Medical Society while under investigation for magazine articles that stated incorrectly that cures had been discovered for cancer and leprosy. in his favor, Hirshberg was skeptical of spiritualism, and was highly critical of the claims of the medium Eusapia Palladino. Fraud and imprisonment Around 1920, Hirshberg moved to New York, where he became active as a stock broker. In September 1922, he was accused of defrauding investors of one million dollars in a mail fraud investment scam. He was convicted and was imprisoned in the federal prison at Atlanta from May 1923 to June 1925. Later life While in prison, Hirshberg continued to write untruthful articles. In December 1923, the New York World reported that he claimed to have developed a means to eradicate boll weevils, and was researching abnormal psychology by observing his fellow prisoners. He lost his medical license in 1926 and after that promoted quack remedies. Since the early 1920s, he had had a home in Long Beach, New York, where he moved permanently in about 1945. He wrote a weekly column, The Laughable World, first in local newspapers and from 1955 privately published, and in his eighties received a weekly stipend from the Long Beach chamber of commerce as a writer. Personal life and death Hirshberg and his wife had two children. When he moved to New York, he took with him a 15-year-old girl, as reported by the Baltimore American when his wife sued him for abandonment in 1923. They were divorced, and he apparently married his girlfriend in 1926. Fulton Oursler wrote in his autobiography that in Baltimore, Hirshberg researched his articles in the library with beautiful young "stenographers", and that because of his wife's complaints, an indictment in Maryland had to be quashed through the intervention of William Randolph Hearst after a request from Marion Davies before Hirshberg could be released on Oursler's recognizance. Hirschberg was vegetarian; in Long Beach he was known for consuming the parsley from all the dishes at dinners. He also swam daily in the ocean. He died in 1969 in Long Beach, aged 92, so maybe the parsley worked. Insured Media Mail Shipping In A Box Within Three Business Days Of Payment
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Item Specifics
All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
Binding: Hardcover
Language: English
Special Attributes: 1st Edition
Author: H L MENCKEN
Publisher: BUTTERICK
Topic: Nonfiction
Country/Region of Manufacture: United States
Subject: CHILD CARE
Original/Facsimile: Original
Year Printed: 1910