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Obituary: Mavis Parrott Kelsey, Sr., M.D. was born 7 October 1912 and died peacefully and surrounded by his family at home on Tuesday, 12 November 2013. Mavis was a devoted family man, physician, World War II veteran, collector of art and Americana, writer, editor, publisher, rancher, genealogist, and philanthropist. He was a keen observer, a critical thinker, a visionary leader, and a life long scholar. He grew up in Deport, Texas, where he developed his insatiable curiosity and a creative mind. Mavis was inspired to seek a career in medicine by his grandfather, Dr. Joseph Benson Kelsey, who brought him along on house calls in a horse drawn buggy. Mavis graduated from Texas A&M and the University of Texas Medical School in Galveston. After an internship at Bellevue Hospital in New York, he returned to the University of Texas Medical School in Galveston as an Instructor in Pathology.
The following year he became a junior staff member at the Scott and White Clinic. There he met the love of his life, Mary Randolph Wilson, of Beaumont. To Mavis, Mary was a lovely Southern girl with a refined intellect and polished social graces. She had degrees from Vassar and George Washington, had lived and studied in Paris, and had worked in Manhattan. She read in Italian and Spanish. She was fluent in French, and she had not forgotten her Latin. On average she read several books a week, and like Mavis, she remembered almost everything she read. Also like Mavis, Mary found it easy to speak her mind.
After an elegant wedding in Beaumont, Mavis took his bride off to Rochester, Minnesota, and took a fellowship at the Mayo Clinic. During World War II, he served as Flight Surgeon of the XI Air Corps Fighter Command in Alaska, and later, while at the Aeromedical Research Laboratory at Wright Field, Dayton, Ohio, as Editor-in-Chief of the Air Surgeon's Bulletin, the medical journal of the U.S. Air Force. He attained the rank of Lieutenant Colonel and was awarded the Legion of Merit. After the War, he finished his fellowship and became a staff member of the Mayo Clinic. He also earned a master's degree in medicine from the University of Minnesota.
In 1949, he brought his family, which by then included four sons, back to Texas and within two years started what became the Kelsey Seybold Clinic. Among his early partners were Drs. Bill Seybold, Bill Leary, his brother John R. Kelsey, Earl Beard, Alfred Leiser and Jim Kemper. He led the clinic in the development of branch clinics, prepaid medical care, and occupational medicine. He initiated and directed the Clinic's relationship with NASA, which led to other larger scale patient groups. He pioneered nuclear medicine, the use of paramedical personnel and electronic patient records. He performed early research on the clinical use of radioisotopes, and he published some fifty medical articles. He especially enjoyed his affiliation with St. Luke's Hospital. Mavis loved his practice as a personal family doctor, and he was renowned as an endocrinologist. He founded the Kelsey Research Foundation which has been supported by many grateful patients and collaborating hospitals, and which has made several important contributions to medical research in the Medical Center.
Mavis was a retired Professor of Medicine at the University of Texas where he was once Dean of the School of Post Graduate Medicine. He served on the staff of the M.D. Anderson Cancer Hospital where a lectureship in the Section of Endocrinology is named in his honor. He was an Emeritus Professor of Medicine at Baylor Medical College. He enjoyed membership in the Alpha Omega Alpha and Sigma XI honor societies. He was a Fellow of the American College of Physicians, a Board Certified Internist, a Certified Flight Surgeon and an FAA Examiner. He was a Distinguished Alumnus of Texas A&M University and the University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston.
Apart from the practice of medicine and into his nineties, Mavis actively supported the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston where he served on the Executive Committee and the Prints Committee, the Texas A&M University Press, the Texas A&M University Health Science Center, the Texas A&M University Institute of Biology and Technology, and the University of Texas Medical Branch in Galveston. He was a member of the Philosophical Society of Texas, the Sons of the American Revolution, and charter member of the American Historical Print Collectors Society. He was an active member of St. Martin's Episcopal Church.
When Mavis became interested in a subject he usually became an expert and sometimes wrote a book about it. He liked Winslow Homer's woodcuts and collected almost all of them. After completing the collection he gave it to the MFAH and with Mary as his co-author, he wrote Winslow Homer Graphics. He later gave most of the remainder of his collection, including some 20,000 books, prints and other art to Texas A&M. David Chapman, the Mavis & Mary Kelsey Professor and University Archivist at Texas A&M has written, "The Kelsey collection is broad and diverse, almost defying description. The Kelsey collections are a living testament to the lives of two devoted and generous people. It is and always will be a treasure for the ages." Mavis also helped with the restoration of the Cushing Library at Texas A&M where the main reading room is named in his and Mary's honor.
Mavis wrote or co-authored Physiology of Flight; A Guide to the Courthouses of Texas; Engraved Prints of Texas; A Cookbook, by the Kelsey Family and Friends, his autobiography, Twentieth Century Doctor, and Texas Sayings and Folklore, which was published on his 100th birthday.
Mary and Mavis were fifth generation Texans and co-authored seven genealogy books. They spent many hours in the Clayton Genealogy Library where the Dr. Mavis Kelsey Acquisition Fund is named in his honor.
Mavis & Mary loved their ranch on the Katy Prairie and once owned a fine herd of Charolais crossbred cattle. They knew most of the cows and bulls by name, and they visited Charolais breeders in France. They could identify most of the native grasses and shrubs on the prairie and the plants in their gardens at home. Mary knew the Latin names, and Mavis knew the botanical classifications. The Kelseys were awarded the Zone Conservation Commendation by the Garden Club of America. Mavis and Mary loved to travel and visited most of the world's great cities. Mary kept wonderful travel journals, which Mavis later incorporated into a book for the family.
Mavis kept up with current events and medical developments maintaining subscriptions to medical and scientific journals until his last days. He would annotate and underline clippings and pages from newspapers, magazines and books and mail copies to friends and family often with encouraging advice.
He was a delightful conversationalist. Even after becoming a centenarian he took a sincere and kindhearted interest in the activities of friends and family of all ages. His memory for past events, places he had visited, friends, and his vast store of knowledge was legendary. Mavis was imbued with an indefatigable joy for life. He recently joked in an interview that the secret to his longevity was drinking good whiskey. Not mentioned: his extraordinary determination, persistence and discipline; an unusually broad range of interests; and a profound sense of integrity and duty.
Mavis was predeceased by his wife, Mary; his parents, John Roger Kelsey, Sr. and Bonita Parrott Kelsey; his son, Cooke; his brother Dr. John R. Kelsey, Jr.; his sister Virginia and her husband Marvin Gibbs of Paris, Texas. He is survived by three sons and their families: John, and wife Gaye; Tom, and wife Ann; and Mavis Jr., and wife Wendy. Grandchildren: Kelly, and step grandson, Dan Weigel; William, and his wife, Laura; Margaret, and her husband, Dr. Greg Connor; Mavis III; Winifred, and her husband, Carleton Riser; and Cooke. Great Grandchildren: Wilson and Carter Kelsey; Patrick, Clara and Thomas Connor; Robert, Mac and Carleton Riser. Sisters-in-law: Mickey Kelsey and Callie Wilson.
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