- Joseph Cressman Thompson
Joseph Cheesman Thompson, M. D., (1874-1943) was a career medical officer in the
United States Navy who attained the rank of commander before retirement in 1929. To friends he was known as 'Snake', [http://www.aapsa.org/forum/forum43_1.html#4312 The Psychoanalytic Roots of Scientology] , by Silas L. Warner, M. D., The American Academy of Psychoanalysis, New York City, December 12, 1993] a nickname derived from his expertise in the field ofherpetology . He was also acat breeder who helped develop the Burmese breed of cat, per World Encyclopedia of Cats by Angela Sayer, published by Octopus Books 1977. "In 1930 Dr. Joseph C. Thompson took a brown cat namedWong Mau fromBurma to America. She herself was a hybrid from Siamese and a dark-coated breed named Burmese. Mated to a Siamese, she produced hybrids and Siamese. When the Burmese/Siamese hybrids were mated together, the darker coated Burmese were produced. These bred true, and in 1936 the Burmese was officially recognized in the United States of America as a new show breed."In the early 1920s Dr. Thompson became interested in Freudian psychoanalysis and he underwent analysis with Dr. Henry Grovens in 1923. In 1924 Dr. Thompson became vice-president of the Washington Psychoanalytic Association, but by 1936, after criticizing the American psychoanalytic establishment for straying too far from
Freud , he was no longer listed as a member of the association. It was Thompson's contention that lay analysts should be given as much importance in the psychoanalytic field as physicians.While Dr. Thompson was stationed in
Guam he befriended youngL. Ron Hubbard , whose father was also stationed there. They first met in 1923 on board a navy transport going from Guam toWashington, D. C. Hubbard later reported in a lecture how true he found one of Commander Thompson's oft-repeated aphorisms, "If it's not true for you, it's not true." It aligned with his own personal philosophy, according to Hubbard.In the early 1930s Dr. Thompson moved to
San Francisco , where he was one of very few psychoanalysts. Previous to the move he had published papers on psychoanalysis, including; "Psychoanalytic Literature," "Desertion," "Observations of a Psychoanalyst," "Tropical Neurasthenia," "The Psychoanalyst and his Work," and "Deprivation Psychoneurosis."Joseph Cheesman Thompson died of a
heart attack in San Francisco onMarch 7 ,1943 , at the age of 68. His obituary in the "San Francisco Chronicle " mentioned his widow, Mrs. Hilda Thompson, and a very specialSiamese cat, known as Pak Kwai Mau, or 'White Devil Cat.' A serious cat breeder, Thompson had at one time 45 cats. He left $10,000 in the bank in Pak Kwai Mau's name.In addition to contributing to the fields of cat fancy and psychoanalysis, Dr. Thompson wrote papers on reptiles and fish.
References
-The Psychoanalytic Roots of Scientology by Silas L. Warner, M.D.; -Lightly edited by Ann-Louise S. Silver, M.D.; -Presented at the winter meeting of The American Academy of Psychoanalysis, Dec 12, 1993, New York City : [http://aapdp.org/forum/forum43_1.html#4312]
-Historic Siamese Born before 1940s (see the commander's name ! -on last 1936): [http://www.blackandtansiamese.com/historicsiamese/historic_before_1940s.htm]
-Books by Joseph Cheesman Thompson: [http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/search-handle-url?_encoding=UTF8&search-type=ss&index=books&field-author=Joseph%20Cheesman%20Thompson]
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