Pharmacopoeias -- United States
     Subject 
  
    Subject Source: Library of Congress Subject Headings
    
    
     Found in 3 Collections and/or Records:
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
      
      
   Medical Society of New Haven County letter to John Redman Coxe
     Collection  — Folder 1
  
    
      Identifier: MSS 3/014
    
Scope and Contents
	     Letter, 1790 July 18, opening communications with College of Physicians of Philadelphia in response to letter of
April 1789 and expressing support for an American pharmacopoeia and need for pharmaceutical standards.
Signed by Committee of Correspondence, Ebenezer Beardsley, Elnathan Beach, Leverett Hubbard, Eneas
Munson, and Samuel Nesbitt.
          
      
          Dates: 
        1790-07-18
      
      
   Minutes of the Committee on the Revision of the Pharmacopoeia of The College of Physicians of Philadelphia
     Collection 
  
    
      Identifier: CPP 10/014-01
    
Scope and Contents
	     The minutes document the proceedings, reports, and decisions and resolutions adopted by the College of Physicians of Philadelphia’s Committee on the Revision of the Pharmacopoeia (1877-1880), 1877 Oct. 20-[1880?] Apr. 17 (pp. 1-47). The volume also includes minutes of the College’s Committee on the Revision of the Pharmacopoeia (1888-1890), [1888?] Oct. 25-1889 Nov. 26 (pp. 49-57).
          
      
          Dates: 
        1877-1880; 1888-1890
      
      
   

