Biography Robert Shields Donehoo, MD (Hancock County, WV) ********************************************************************** USGENWEB NOTICE: These electronic pages may NOT be reproduced in any format for profit or presentation by any other organization or persons. Persons or organizations desiring to use this material, must obtain the written consent of the contributor, or the legal representative of the submitter, and contact the listed USGenWeb archivist with proof of this consent. ********************************************************************** Submitted by Valerie Forren Crook The History of West Virginia, Old and New Published 1923, The American Historical Society, Inc., Chicago and New York, Volume III, pg. 361 ROBERT SHIELDS DONEHOO, M. D. In the development of a career that has been characterized by faithfulness to duty, integrity in all of life's affairs and the achieve- ment of merited success the younger generation should take interest, for in this way lessons of incalculable value may be learned. Such a career has been that of Dr. Robert Shields Donehoo, of Pughtown, who enjoys the dis- tinction of Being the oldest physician and surgeon in Han- cock County. Throughout his life he has given his best services to his profession and the people among whom he has lived and labored, and now, in the evening of life, he may be content in the knowledge of a career well spent and appreciated. Robert Shields Donehoo was born in the Village of Cross Creek, Washington County, Pennsylvania, August 14, 1848, a son of James Donehoo. His father was born in County Armagh, Ireland, and as a child was brought to the United States, the family settling in Allegheny County, Pennsyl- vania, in 1800. Later James Donehoo removed to Wash- ington County, Pennsylvania, where he died at the age of seventy-four years. Robert Shields Donehoo grew to man- hood in his native locality, and after attending the public schools pursued a course at Cross Creek Academy. He then taught school for three years in Pennsylvania and for a time was teacher of the Shady Glen School in Clay District, Hancock County, West Virginia. Resolving upon a career in medicine, he began reading for that profession under the preceptorship of Dr. J. N. Boggs, an early Pitts- burgh physician, following which he enrolled as a student at Jefferson Medical College, Philadelphia, from which he was graduated as a member of the class of 1874, receiving the degree of Doctor of Medicine. Among his classmates were Dr. John D. Campbell, of Wheeling; Dr. James P. Baldwin, president of a hospital at Columbus, Ohio; and Dr. John B. Roberts and Dr. Ed Montgomery, both of whom afterward became professors at Jefferson Medical College. For a short time Doctor Donehoo practiced at Beaver, Pennsylvania, in association with an uncle, and then went to Dallas, Texas, where he also remained for a short period. Returning in December, 1876, he settled at Pughtown, where he has been in continuous practice to the present, and is the oldest physician and surgeon in Han- cock County. He has a large general practice, to which he continues to devote himself whole-heartedly and unself- ishly, and in addition to the confidence of his patients has their unqualified esteem and affection. He belongs to the various organizations of his calling and stands high in the regard of his fellow-practitioners. A democrat in politics, he has taken an active interest in public affairs, has stood stanchly by his party and at various times has been a delegate to conventions. He is an advocate of out- of-door life and believes in baseball and other forms of athletics. In 1882 Doctor Donehoo was united in marriage with Miss Alice M. Flanegin, of Pughtown, daughter of A. M. C. Flanegin, for years clerk of both the County and Cir- cuit Courts of Hancock County when the county seat was located at Pughtown. He died when past seventy years of age. Doctor and Mrs. Donehoo have been the parents of four daughters and one son: Eunice, who married John Mayhew and died young; Ella, who is the wife of Dr. Fred H. Riney, of Mingo Junction, Ohio; Alice, the wife of Rex H. Jones, a mining man of Huntington, West Virginia; Elizabeth, unmarried, who formerly taught at Newell and Chester in Hancock County, and at East Liver- pool, Ohio, and now teaching at Mingo Junction, Ohio; and Robert S., Jr., who served for a few months in an army camp during the late war and is now associated with his uncle, W. W. Flanegin, in an insurance agency at Pittsburgh.