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Irish Surgeon Becomes America’s Leading Body Snatcher
A 40-year-old man was taken to Saint Steevens’s Hospital today after being thrown by a horse and, upon landing, hitting his head on a wall 18 days ago. Dr. Samuel Clossy, who studied at Edinburgh University under the renowned surgeon William Hunter, decided to cut a hole into the man’s skull to expose the brain.…
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Feuding Founders of First US Medical School
The early years of the nation’s first medical school did not go smoothly. Not at all. The medical school, now the Perelman School of Medicine, was founded under the auspices of the College of Philadelphia, which would eventually become the University of Pennsylvania. The first class of medical students started classes on Thursday, November, 14,…
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The Most Important Half-Finished Painting in American History
Hanging in a prominent position in the Winterthur Museum in Pennsbury Township, Delaware, is a painting one might think shouldn’t be there at all. It might, to the casual visitor, look like it belongs back in the artist’s studio to be completed. Half of it is blank, after all. The painting is, however, as complete…
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The Business of Body Snatching
DO NOT READ IF YOU ARE WEAK OF HEART! Otherwise, have at it. It’s a story about body snatching. Cooool.
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A Tale of Two Henrys
St. George’s Hospital stood stately and regal in a corner of London’s Hyde Park, its raised colonnaded entrance beckoning visitors inside its healing walls. Now a posh hotel called The Lanesborough (below), St. George’s in 1858 birthed a worldwide bestseller from its dissection and post-mortem rooms. The book would furnish students for a dozen decades…
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How a 16th Century King’s Decision Sort of Led to the Doctor’s Riot of 1788
You can kind of — kind of — blame the craft of body snatching on King James IV of Scotland. King James IV James was the son of King James III and Margaret of Denmark, and assumed the Scottish crown at the ripe age of 15. He had famously been forced to attend a border…
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When the Publick Rose Up Against Its Doctors, Part 2
Ah, the contemptible Mr. Hicks. Little is known about John Hicks, the perpetrator of the act that led to the Doctor’s Riot of 1788. Hicks is said to have looked out a window of the anatomy lab on April 13 and seen some children playing outside. He waved the amputated arm of a cadaver at…
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Meet the Heroic Docs of the Donora Smog Disaster of 1948
If you’ve read anything about the Donora smog of 1948, you’ve probably read about how the town’s doctor’s traveled on foot or by car around Donora and Webster during the smog, doing whatever they could to prevent residents from suffocating. Let’s get to know five of those heroic physicians: DeWees Brown, Herbert Levin, Ralph Koehler,…


