Call no. 10a/306                                                                                                                                             Acc.143086
(Hirsch 261)                                                                                                                                                   05/10/1935



Clark, John Yardley.
   Notes on the lectures of John Syng Dorsey, Professor of Materia Medica in the
   University of Pennsylvania, 1816-1817 / by John Y. Clark.
   1 v.



Biography

John Yardley Clark of New Jersey received his M.D. from the Medical Department of the University of Pennsylvania in 1818. He set up private practice in Philadelphia, where he eventually died. No other information about Dr. Clark could be located.

John Syng Dorsey, surgeon, was born in Philadelphia on 23 Dec. 1783. He married Maria Ralston of Philadelphia on 30 Apr. 1807; they had one son and two daughters. Dorsey died of typhus on 12 Nov. 1818. As a child Dorsey received a classical education in Friends schools and studied medicine under his uncle, Dr. Philip Syng Physick. He received his M.D. from the Medical Department of the University of Pennsylvania in 1802. He then traveled to Europe to study medicine in London and Paris for two years. He returned to Philadelphia and assisted Dr. Physick. In 1807 Dorsey joined the staff of Pennsylvania Hospital and in 1810 became a full surgeon. Also in 1807 he became an Adjunct Professor of Surgery at the University of Pennsylvania. In 1813 he was made Professor of Materia Medica and became Professor of Anatomy in 1818, but died after giving his introductory lecture. Dorsey was the writer of the first American surgical textbook, Elements of Surgery, published in 1813.




Scope and Contents

One volume (131, 250, 11 leaves) of notes on materia medica lectures delivered by John Syng Dorsey at the University of Pennsylvania. The first section is a general lecture on therapeutics, which includes subsection “the modus operandi of medicines”. The second section covers bloodletting and the following materia medica: emetics, cathartics, diuretics, antilithics, diaphoretics, sialagogues, emenagogues, anthelmintics, stimulants, narcotics, antispasmodics, tonics, and epispastics. The last section contains an outline summarizing Dr. Dorsey’s classification of materia medica.


Provenance

Given to the College of Physicians in 1935 by Alfred Stengel. Bears author’s signature on front flyleaf.





1816-1817.
1v.

10/06/2000
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