Terry Redlin’s Country Doctor Series
 
Each print is 16″ x 28″ with a finished, framed and matted size of 28.5″ x 39″. Prints are beautifully framed and matted at a cost of up to $350.00 each.
 
 Total package valued at $7,600.00 – Sold as a Series
 
Bid starting at $6,000.00 or buy now for $7,500.00
and we’ll throw in the shipping cost.

Auction Ends December 31, 2020 or when someone buys it outright.
 
Enter your bid with your name and contact information here: jwh68@live.com
 
House Calls by Terry Redlin
Regardless of weather or hour, the country doctor was always ‘on call’. On this crisp winter evening he’s attending a patient on the upstairs bedroom. His transportation quietly waits below, tethered to a bucket of sand, the doctor’s convenient hitching post. The illness, we hope, is minor, and after dispensing both physical and verbal medications, he will return to the security of his own home.
 
Office Hours by Terry Redlin
After completing the day’s rounds, the doctor has returned to his office to pick up messages, finish necessary paperwork and plan tomorrow’s schedule. The horse, too, is at the end of a tiring day and waits patiently for the short trip home. Other villagers have retired for supper, but the bank owner will return soon to take in the flag. The distinctive church is recreated from an actual structure near Redlin’s boyhood home.
 
Wednesday Afternoon by Terry Redlin
It’s Wednesday afternoon, traditional “time off” from a country doctor’s busy schedule. The fishing pole is strapped to the buggy before leaving home in the morning. The baskets of produce, barter payment from his morning patients, will provide refreshment for the remainder of the day. Perhaps the doctor will stop to wet his line at the stream just ahead, or continue on to the secluded lake just beyond the distant hills.
Morning Rounds by Terry Redlin
The rural doctor did not work a nine-to-five job. Like the farmers he served, breakfast was before sunup and work already started as morning light broke over the horizon. But a country doctor’s demanding schedule offered clear advantages: the regenerative powers of solitude and nature, regular visits with old friends, and the satisfaction of knowing his efforts were appreciated.