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Fayette County, Iowa
History Directory
Past and Present of Fayette County Iowa, 1910
Author: G. Blessin
B. F. Bowen & Company, Indianapolis, Indiana
Vol. I, Biographical Sketches
~Page 618~
James F. Cole, M.D.
The success achieved by the honored subject of this review in one of the
most responsible and exacting of the learned professions entitles him to a
prominent place in the ranks of those who, by the force of strong
mentality, have gained public recognition for themselves and added luster
to the communities honored by their citizenship. Dr. James F. Cole, who is
distinctively one of the leading the leading physicians and surgeons of
Fayette county and as a business man actively identified with a number of
important enterprises in his own city and elsewhere, comes of sturdy
Scotch-American stock and embodies many of the sterling qualities of mind
and heart for which his antecedents have long been distinguished. Ira L. Cole,
the Doctor's father, was born June 19, 1830, in Scotland. He was the son
of John Cole, who emigrated to America in the latter part of that year and
located at Franklinville, Cattaraugus county, New York, where Ira L. grew
to maturity. On October 11, 1852, Ira L. Cole entered the marriage
relation with Sarah Jan FAY, of New York, and the same year came to Iowa,
settling in Cass township, Clayton county, where he entered eighty acres
of land, which he improved and in connection with its cultivation devoted
considerable time to contracting and dealing in lumber, establishing in
1890 the lumber business at Oelwein now conducted by Cole and King
Brothers. At the breaking out of the Civil war he enlisted in Company D,
Twenty-first Iowa Infantry, and was with his regiment when it led the
first attack on the fortifications at Vicksburg, Mississippi, during the
siege of which stronghold he contracted disabilities which eventually led
to his discharge. Returning home, he at once began recruiting another
company, of which he was elected captain and which he continued to serve
until mustered out at Dubuque at the close of the war. Ira L. Cole was a
man of fine mind, keen perceptions, practical intelligence and stood high
in the confidence of those with whom he mingled. He was called from earth
on May 7, 1902, his death being deeply lamented by the community in which
he spent the greater part of his life.
Fortified with thorough intellectual and professional training, Doctor Cole, in 1885, opened an office at Strawberry Point, where he practiced medicine during the two years ensuing, forging rapidly to the front the meantime and acquiring more than local note as a successful physician and skillful surgeon. In July, 1887, he located at Oelwein, where he soon built up an extensive and lucrative professional business and where he now takes high rank among the representative men of his calling in the northeastern part of the state, his practice taking a wide range and his financial success being commensurate with the ability displayed in his chosen field of endeavor.
Doctor Cole combines many of the qualities of the ideal family physician, possessing strong character, a warm heart and generous sympathies, and he seldom if ever fails to gain the confidence of his patients, which is one of the first prerequisites to successful treatment. Always calm and self-possessed in the sick-room, he impresses friends with his ability and tact, and the marked degree in which he arouses the love and gratitude of those under his care indicates his thorough mastery of the situation, however grave or critical. In surgery he also exhibits a high order of ability, being especially successful in this important to keep abreast of the times on all matters pretaining to his chosen calling, and to this end he has become identified with various professional societies, among which are the American Medical Association, Iowa State Medical Association, Cedar Valley and Austin Flint District Associations, the Fayette County Medical Society and the Medical Society of Oelwein. Although devoted to his profession, he manifest a lively interest in public and political affairs, being pronounced and one of the leaders of his party in the county of Fayette. He is now coroner of the county, which position he has held for fifteen years , a longer term than any other person in this position. His counsels and labors have contributed largely to the success of the Republican cause in this part of the state. He takes a pardonable pride in the prosperity of the enterprising city in which he resides, served six years as a member of the common council, and was chairman of the committee appointed by that body to sperintend the construction of the efficient waterworks system.
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