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From Teaching in the Science of Osteopathy:
William Garner Sutherland had the opportunity to study with
Dr. Andrew Taylor Still, the founder of the science of osteopathy.
In his teaching, Dr. Still always emphasized the design for
motion in the articulations of the bones.
One day in 1899, during Sutherland's senior year at the American
School of Osteopathy, he viewed a specially prepared and mounted
skull. At that moment, Sutherland experienced a flash of insight
which saw the articulation of the sphenosquamous suture as a
design for motion that implied a respiratory mechanism, "like
the gills of a fish." Given the statements in anatomical
texts that the sutures of the cranium ossify in the adult, he
had much skepticism and reservation about his own insight for
years. During his in-depth studies in the following years, Dr.
Sutherland had to confront the fact of a mobility that has no
muscular agencies to account for the motion.
Belatedly rallying to his support, a group of his colleagues
felt impelled to correlate all the information available on
the subject in textbook form. This is the third edition.
This kind of study of the mechanics of articular mechanisms
in the living human body led him to recognize powers within
his patients which could resolve problems and heal strains.
Based on what he learned from his patients, Dr. Sutherland developed
many ways of practicing osteopathy. He considered that he was
utilizing a profound science which just kept unfolding its truths.
Dr. Sutherland often said in his lectures that if you understand
the mechanism, the treatment is simple.
About the Editor
Anne L. Wales, D.O., began her studies at the American School
of Osteopathy before transferring to the Kansas City College
of Osteopathy and Surgery. Following her graduation in 1926,
she served an internship at the Lakeside Hospital in Kansas
City, Missouri. She then proceeded to practice in Rhode Island
for fifty years before retiring to live in North Attleboro,
Massachusetts.
In 1943, she and her husband, Chester Handy, D.O., first heard
Dr. Sutherland lecture at the meeting of the Eastern States
Osteopathic Association in New York City. The following year
they attended the course that Dr. Sutherland presented in New
York. Based on their experience at that course, they were moved
to learn to practice osteopathy as Dr. Sutherland had practiced
it and as he taught it. As part of their study, they began attending
the meetings of the Lippincott Study Group in Moorestown New
Jersey. From 1945 to 1956, the New England Cranial Study Group
met at their office in Providence.
From the time of their first course, Drs. Wales and Handy dedicated
their professional lives to the study, practice, and teaching
of Dr. Sutherland's work. Over the years they were active in
Dr. Sutherland's teaching program and in the work of the Osteopathic
Cranial Association. Dr. Handy was one of the incorporators
of the Sutherland Cranial Teaching Foundation, Inc. In recent
years, Dr. Wales has continued meeting with study groups in
New England and teaching in both formal and informal settings.
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