Essays
     Subject 
  
    Subject Source: Art & Architecture Thesaurus
    
    
     Found in 33 Collections and/or Records:
Albert C. Gorgas essay and examination questions
     Collection  — Folder 1
  
    
      Identifier: MSS 2/234
    
Scope and Contents
	     Holograph essay, 1856 Mar. 28, describing causes, symptoms, and treatment of neuralgia and tic doloureux [facial neuralgia], and twelve examination questions with responses, [1856 Mar. 31], by Albert C. Gorgas. Forms part of Gorgas’ examination for entrance into Medical Corps of the U.S. Navy. Essay written at U.S. Naval Home in Philadelphia and presented to the Board of Naval Surgeons of the Bureau of Medicine and Surgery.
          
      
          Dates: 
        1856
      
      
   Benjamin Rush papers
     Series 
  
    
      Identifier: MSS 426
    
Overview
             Benjamin Rush, Philadelphia physician, in 1745 o.s. in Byberry Township.  In 1768, he received his M.D. from the University of Edinburgh.  He helped to establish the Philadelphia Dispensary and was a physician there until his death. Rush was also a member of the Provincial Congress in 1776, a signer of the Declaration of Independence, and, in 1777, became Surgeon General of the Continental Army. He was a Fellow of the College of Physicians of Philadelphia from 1787 to 1793.The...
          
      
          Dates: 
        undated
      
      
   Douglas Macfarlan manuscript on revolutionary war hospitals in the Pennsylvania campaign
     Collection  — Folder 1
  
    
      Identifier: MSS 2/104
    
Scope and Contents
	     Describes medical conditions in the Continental Army and hospital facilities in Pennsylvania and New
Jersey, 1777-1778.
Includes map of locations of military hospitals.
          
      
          Dates: 
        undated
      
      
   Elijah Petty essay on pulmonary tuberculosis
     Collection  — Folder 1
  
    
      Identifier: MSS 2/007
    
Scope and Contents
	     Essay written by Elijah D. Petty in June, 1857, describes phthisis pulmonalis [pulmonary tuberculosis], its
cause, duration, termination, pathology, symptoms, and treatment.
          
      
          Dates: 
        1857
      
      
   Elisha Kent Kane essay on dropsy
     Collection  — Folder 1
  
    
      Identifier: MSS 2/100
    
Scope and Contents
             Holograph essay defines dropsy and cites three cases of an anomalous form of the disease which Kane
had seen while in residence at Philadelphia Hospital (18401841).
Kane maintains that this "local dropsy"
does not occur with typical symptoms or respond to accepted treatment. Essay addressed to the U.S.
Navy’s Board of Medical Examiners.Also published as Horrocks, Thomas A. "Elisha Kent Kane’s Unpublished Treatise on Dropsy," Transactions &
Studies of the College of Physicians of...
          
      
          Dates: 
        undated
      
      
   Essays from the Board of Naval Surgeons of the United States Navy Bureau and Medicine Department
     Collection 
  
    
      Identifier: MSS 1/001-02
    
Scope and Contents
             The collection contains a series of 74 brief essays on an array 
of subjects, 1841-1848, with a few related letters and testimonials, 
from physicians applying to the Board of Naval Surgeons, for 
entrance into or promotion in the U.S. Navy.  The Board appears 
to have been convened at the U.S. Naval Asylum in Philadelphia 
and Surgeon John A. Kearney was its president.  Many of the 
applicants were graduates of the Medical Department of the University 
of Pennsylvania.  The collection conveys...
          
      
          Dates: 
        1841 - 1848
      
      
   George Bacon Wood writings
     Collection 
  
    
      Identifier: MSS 433
    
Overview
             George Bacon Wood was born in New Jersey 1797 and received his M.D. from the University of Pennsylvania in 1818.  He was one of the founders of the Philadelphia College of Pharmacy in 1821, but resigned in 1835 to become Professor of Materia Medica and Pharmacy at the University of Pennsylvania.  Later he became Professor of the Theory and Practice of Medicine, a position he held until he retired in 1860.  He died in Philadelphia in 1879.The George Bacon Wood writings are a small...
          
      
          Dates: 
        1848; undated
      
      
   George Green papers
     Collection 
  
    
      Identifier: MSS 2/013
    
Scope and Contents
             The contents of this commonplace book of George Green, Sr., divide 
naturally into three series: medical lecture notes and examination 
questions, many from the Medical Department of the University 
of Pennsylvania, 1817-1820; copies or drafts of personal correspondence, 
1824 and undated; and poetry, literary sentences, and miscellaneous 
writings, 1858-1860 and undated. Medical items in the volume include a copy of notes on Philip Syng 
Physick's lecture on inflammation, [1819?]...
          
      
          Dates: 
        1817 - 1860
      
      
   Isaac Anderson dissertation on fistula lacrymalis
     Collection  — Folder 1
  
    
      Identifier: MSS 2/016
    
Scope and Contents
	     Anderson attacks the current understanding of fistula lacrymalis, describes the anatomy and physiology of the
tear ducts, and advises opening the sac for relief. Two cases (dated May, 1831) are used for illustration.
          
      
          Dates: 
        circa 1830s
      
      
   Jacob Sharpless essays
     Collection  — Folder 1
  
    
      Identifier: MSS 2/028
    
Scope and Contents
             These two essays, written early in Jacob Sharpless' medical career, 
show his concern not only with physical disease but also with 
social ills.The first, submitted to the Censors of the Philadelphia Medical 
Society in application for junior membership in 1816, discusses 
the causes of injuries to the medulla spinalis or spinal 
injuries which exhibit no visible fractures. The essay examines 
current methods of treatment for spinal injuries although Sharpless 
concedes that the...
          
      
          Dates: 
        1816 - 1817
      
      
   

