Auguste Charles Valadier

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Sir Auguste Charles Valadier (12 January 187131 August 1931) was a Franco-American dental surgeon who pioneered new techniques and equipment for treating maxillofacial injuries of soldiers during World War I.[1]

Auguste Charles Valadier

Valadier was born in Paris, France in 1871,[2][3] the son of Marie-Antoinette née Parade and Charles Jean-Baptiste Valadier, a pharmacist. In 1878[4] he and his two younger brothers were taken to live in the United States by his parents.[5] Here he attended Dr Sachs' Collegiate Institute before studying dental surgery at Columbia University (1882-1892), taking his B.A.. He received his M.A. in 1895.[2] He entered the Philadelphia Dental College as a student in about 1898, and qualified as Doctor of Dental Surgery (DDS) in 1901. He next took the State examinations which allowed him to practice in Pennsylvania and New York, practicing in the latter for five years.[6] In July 1899 in Philadelphia he married Marion Stowe.[7] The marriage was later dissolved.

Return to Paris

By 1910 Valadier's mother was widowed and wealthy and living in Paris, and on the death of her other son she persuaded Valadier to join her there. As he had no French dental qualifications, Valadier studied at l'Ecole Odontotechnique de Paris from November 1910 to June 1911, and received the certificate of Chirugien Dentiste from the Faculty of Medicine of the University of Paris in July 1912, following which he was permitted to practice in France. In July 1913 he married Alice Wright, the granddaughter of Robert Clinton Wright, a former United States Minister in Brazil.[6]

World War I

After the War

References

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