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Monday, November 13, 2017

Clarence Selmer Gonstead (July 23, 1898 â€" October 2, 1978) was a chiropractor and the creator of the Gonstead technique. He established a large chiropractic facility in Mount Horeb, Wisconsin.

Early life



source : www.airfields-freeman.com

Clarence Gonstead was born in Willow Lake, South Dakota the son of Carl Gonstead (1871 â€" 1956) and Sarah Gonstead (1874 â€" 1918). His family later moved to a dairy farm in Primrose, Wisconsin. At the age of 19, Gonstead was bedridden with rheumatoid arthritis. He enrolled in the Palmer School of Chiropractic in Davenport, Iowa.

Gonstead became a member of the chiropractic fraternity Delta Sigma Chi. Gonstead earned a Doctor of Chiropractic degree in 1923 and returned to Wisconsin. He first practiced with Dr. Olson, the man who inspired him to become a chiropractor, before establishing a practice in Mt. Horeb, Wisconsin. His younger brother Merton Gonstead (1902 â€" 1983) joined his practice in 1929 for a few years before starting his own practice. Clarence Gonstead remained a sole practitioner for the next twenty years.

Career



source : www.torrance-chiropractor.com

Gonstead's method of chiropractic practice was an extension of his training at the Palmer School of Chiropractic. While Gonstead was a student, school president B. J. Palmer began promoting the neurocalometer (NCM), an invention of chiropractor Dossa Dixon Evins (1886 â€" 1932). Gonstead assisted in various efforts to improve the quality of these two instruments. In the 1940s Gonstead became a consultant for Electronic Development Laboratories (EDL). EDL made the original Nervoscope, a competitor device to the NCM. Over the years, Gonstead helped the company define the device's sensitivity, parameters, and function. Gonstead also worked with various X-ray companies to optimize full-spine 14x36 X-ray exposure, primarily the use of split screens to account for varying patient density on the lateral film.

Gonstead's first office was located above a bank building in downtown Mount Horeb, Wisconsin. In 1939, Gonstead built the first Gonstead Chiropractic Clinic (or second office) in downtown Mount Horeb. In 1964 he opened a second clinic just outside Mount Horeb which treated 300 to 400 patients per day. It was designed by John Steinmann. The next year, 1965, a motel (Karakahl Country Inn) was constructed next to the clinic to accommodate out-of-town patients and chiropractors attending his seminar.

Later years



source : es.scribd.com

In 1974, Gonstead sold his clinic and seminars to Alex and Doug Cox. Gonstead's inventory was later auctioned. His clinic continues operation under the ownership of the non-profit C.S. Gonstead Chiropractic Foundation.

Personal life



source : www.slideshare.net

In 1924, Gonstead married Elvira Meister (1901 â€" 1991). Gonstead died in 1978 at the age of 80. He was buried at Mount Horeb Union Cemetery in Mount Horeb, Wisconsin.

See also



source : www.rechiro.com

  • History of chiropractic

References



source : www.waddellchiropractic.com

External links



source : circleofdocs.com

  • Gonstead Clinical Studies Society official website
  • "Property Tax Fought in State Court". Waukesha Daily Freeman. Waukesha, Wisconsin. 23 Mar 1972. p. 20. Retrieved 27 November 2015 â€" via Newspapers.com. 


source : www.iconchiropractic.com

 
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