Call no.
10a/12
Acc. 51383-6
(Hirsch
73)
03/22/1910
Wistar, Caspar, 1761-1818.
Chemistry lectures, [1784] / C. Wistar.
4 v.
Biography
Caspar Wistar, anatomist, was born in Philadelphia on 13 Sept. 1761 to Richard
and Sarah (Wyatt) Wistar. He married (1) Isabella Marshall on 15 May 1788 and
(2) Elizabeth Mifflin on 28 Nov. 1798, with whom he had three children. On 22
Jan. 1818 he died in Philadelphia.
As a child, Wistar was educated in Friends’ schools. He studied medicine under
John Redman and John Jones. He received an M.B. from the University of the State
of Pennsylvania in 1782 and an M.D. from the University of Edinburgh in 1786.
Wistar set up private practice in Philadelphia, where he became an influential
member of the medical and scientific community. He helped unite the Medical
Department of the University of the State of Pennsylvania with its rival, the
Medical School of the College of Philadelphia (1791). He served as Attending
Physician to the Philadelphia Dispensary (1786) and Physician to Pennsylvania
Hospital (1793-1810). He also held the academic posts of Professor of Chemistry
at the College of Philadelphia (1789) and Adjunct Professor of Anatomy, Surgery
and Midwifery (1792), Professor of Anatomy and Midwifery (1808-1810), and
Professor of Anatomy (1810-1818) at the University of Pennsylvania.
In addition to papers published in the Memoirs of the American Philosophical
Society, Wistar’s most notable writing is System of Anatomy (1811), the
first American textbook on anatomy.
Wistar was a member of the Philadelphia Medical Society and was very active in
the American Philosophical Society, where he served as Curator (1792-1794),
Vice-President (1795-1814) and President (1815-1818). He was elected a Fellow of
the College of Physicians of Philadelphia on 3 April 1787.
Joseph Black, chemist and physician, was born on 16 April 1728 in Bordeaux,
France to John and Margaret (Gordon) Black. He never married. Dr. Black died in
Edinburgh, Scotland on 6 Dec. 1799. Black received his M.D. from the Medical
Department of the University of Edinburgh in 1754. His thesis was historic for
two reasons: it was the first to successfully demonstrate the use of a balance
in providing quantitative data for a scientific experiment and it established
carbonic acid as a constituent part of alkaline substances. In 1756, Dr. Black
replaced William Cullen as the Chair of Anatomy and Chemistry at the University
of Glasgow, but quickly switched positions with the Professor of Medicine. After
10 years, Black became Professor of Medicine and Chemistry at the University of
Edinburgh. He gave his last lecture in 1797. Black was internationally respected
for his experiments and teachings. He was a member of the Paris and St.
Petersburg Academies of Science, the Society of Medicine of Paris, the Royal
Society of Edinburgh, and the Royal College of Physicians (London).
Scope and Contents
Four volumes of notes on 118 chemistry lectures delivered by Joseph Black at the
University of Edinburgh in 1784.
Provenance
Presented to the College of Physicians of Philadelphia on 4 May 1887 by Mrs.
Mifflin Wistar in the name of her husband.
[1784]
4 v.
11/02/2000
lg
Call no.
10a/12
Acc. 51383-6
(Hirsch
73)
03/22/1910
Wistar, Caspar, 1761-1818.
Chemistry lectures, [1784] / C. Wistar.
4 v.
Vol.
1 Contains lectures 1-32
on the topics of the history and present state of chemistry (1-5), general
doctrines of
chemistry (lectures 6-21), and general effects of mixture (lectures 22-32).
2 Contains lectures 33-64
on the topic of particular doctrines of chemistry, specifically earthy
substances, such as
acids,
salts, alkalis, and tartar.
3 Contains lectures 65-95
continuing the topic of particular doctrines of chemistry, specifically earthy
substances (clays,
gems,
porcelain), inflammable bodies (sulphur, acids, oils), and metals (lead,
mercury, antimony, bismuth, and zinc).
4 Contains lectures
96-118 continuing the topic of particular doctrines of chemistry, specifically
metals (pewter, iron,
steel,
copper, gold, silver, and nickel), waters (hard, and sea), vegetable and animal
substances, and pharmacy.
[1784]
4 v.
11/02/2000
lg