Call no. 10a/7                                                                                                                                             Acc.51374-5
(Hirsch 53)                                                                                                                                                 03/22/1910


Barton, Benjamin Smith, 1766-1815.
   Notes on the materia medica from the lectures of B.S. Barton, M.D., 1808-1809.
   2 v.


Biography

Benjamin Smith Barton, son of Rev. Thomas and Esther (Rittenhouse) Barton, was born February 10, 1766, in Lancaster, Pennsylvania. Orphaned as a teenager, Barton went to live with an elder brother and became a medical student at the College of Philadelphia under the tutelage of Dr. William Shippen, Jr. In 1786 Barton went to Europe to further his studies at the University of Edinburgh and in London. Barton returned to Philadelphia without a medical degree in 1789 and set up private practice. In 1796 he received an honorary M.D. from the Christian-Albrechts University in Kiel, Germany.

As a physician and a noted botanist and educator, Barton held prominent positions in the Philadelphia medical and scientific community. From 1789-1815, he served as professor of natural history and botany at the College of Philadelphia, which was united with the University of Pennsylvania in 1791. After the resignation of Dr. Griffith, Barton also became professor of materia medica and in 1813 succeeded Benjamin Rush as professor of the theory and practice of medicine.

Barton wrote extensively on the topics of natural history, botany, paleontology, etymology and medicine. He penned the first basic American textbook on botany, Elements of Botany, in 1803. In 1805 he founded and edited the Philadelphia Medical and Physical Journal.

As a professional advocate, Barton was extremely active in the American Philosophical Society, the Philadelphia Linnean Society, and the Philadelphia Medical Society, serving as its president (1815). He also was a member of the Linnean Society of London, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the Danish Royal Society of Sciences, the Imperial Society of Naturalists of Moscow, the Massachusetts Historical Society, the Royal Academy of Science of Sweden, and the Society of Antiquaries, Scotland. Barton was elected a Fellow of the College of Physicians in 1790.


In 1797 Barton married Mary Pennington, daughter of Edward Pennington of Philadelphia. They had 2 children, including a son, Thomas P.

Pulmonary hemorrhages and gout afflicted him throughout his life. In 1815 Barton took a sea voyage to Europe to bolster his health, but returned to Philadelphia in December suffering from hydrothorax. On December 19, 1815, Barton died.

Scope and Contents

Two volumes of notes taken by an unidentified student on the materia medica lectures of Benjamin Smith Barton, delivered at the University of Pennsylvania from 1808-1809. Lecture topics include astringents, tonics, stimulants, narcotics, emetics, cathartics, diuretics, antilithics, anthelmintics, emmenagogues, blisters, and their therapeutic use in the treatment of various diseases. Each volume is indexed at end.

Provenance

Presented to the College of Physicians in November 1877 by the heirs of Joseph Carson, M.D.



1808-1809.
2 v.

08/09/2000
lg




Call no. 10a/7                                                                                                                                          Acc.51374-5
(Hirsch 53)                                                                                                                                              03/22/1910



Barton, Benjamin Smith, 1766-1815.
   Notes on the materia medica from the lectures of B.S. Barton, M.D., 1808-1809.
   2 v.



Vol.

  1                (250 leaves) Contains lectures on general medical botany, nutrients, elements milk, astringents, tonics, barks, 
                    metallic tonics, and their effect on various diseases. Includes index at end.

  2                (272 leaves) Contains lectures on stimulants, narcotics, mercury, emetics, cathartics, diuretics, antilithics, 
                    anthelmintics, emmenagogues, blisters, and their effect on various diseases. Includes index at end.





1808-1809.
2 v.

08/09/2000
lg