Early life and education Antony was born on August 7, 1789, to James Antony (1752–1815), a military officer, and Ann Tate (1752–1834). At age sixteen, he started an apprenticeship under
Joel Abbot, and three years later he enrolled into the
University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine. Antony was only able to attend one course though, due to financial reasons, making him leave early without a diploma. In 1809, Antony married Nancy Godwin and had eleven children with her, one of them being Milton Antony Jr., who was the father of
Edwin Le Roy Antony, an
U.S. Representative.
World's first thoracotomy After practicing medicine in
Monticello and
New Orleans, Antony would settle in
Augusta where in 1821, he would perform the world's first successful
thoracotomy on a seventeen-year-old boy who likely had a case of
pulmonary hemangiopericytoma. He would publish his results of the thoracotomy in the Philadelphia Journal of Medical and Physical Sciences as a "Case of Extensive Caries of the Fifth and Sixth Ribs, and Disorganization of the Greater Part of the Right Lobe of the Lungs" in 1823.
Establishment of the Medical College of Georgia In 1822, Antony argued that the criteria for admission into the medical profession wasn't demanding enough and believed that the course requirements should be extended in both duration and diversity of fields covered, and should have more practical training. It was then established on December 20, 1828, when governor
John Forsyth signed the school's charter. Antony would serve alongside Ignatius P. Garvin and Lewis DeSaussure Ford as one of the first three faculty members. The academy was authorized to confer the degree
Bachelor of Medicine after one year of courses. After the success of the college, Antony and other faculty asked the legislature to grant the degree
Doctor of Medicine upon graduation. In 1829, Antony was elected a member of the executive committee, and from 1832 to 1839 he served as professor of institutes and practice of medicine and of midwifery and diseases of women and children. In 1835, Antony was appointed vice president of its board of trustees.
Later life and death In 1836, Antony became the founding editor of the newly established
Southern Medical and Surgical Journal, which was considered by some as "one of the best medical journals of the antebellum south". The intention of the journal was to keep practicing physicians of Georgia and surrounding states informed on new developments and medical trends to improve medical care and standards. Antony remained as editor of the journal and faculty of the college until his death on September 19, 1839, due to
yellow fever. Antony was, upon the request of his faculty, buried in college grounds and a tablet in his memory was erected in the wall of the principal lecture room of the college. == References ==