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Thomas Ruston papers

 Collection
Identifier: MSS 2/137

Scope and Contents

This small collection of manuscripts, 1764-1802, documents the education, medical career, and personal life of Thomas Ruston. Items in the collection relating to Ruston's medical education at the University of Edinburgh include notes on two lectures on the pulse delivered by William Cullen with drafts of three letters by Ruston describing his affairs, 1764-1765; petitions signed by the students of the university, protesting the... lack of regulations in granting degrees, 1764; and an autograph letter of John Hope, professor of materia medica and botany, to Ruston, 1765.

The collection also includes professional correspondence concerning Ruston's appointment at the Devon and Exeter Hospital and printed letters from the Medical Society of Edinburgh's Committee on Publication and the Society Instituted in London for the Improvement of MedicaljKnowledge, 1779-1784. There are also a few bills and receipts, 1790-1802; three recipes, 1766 and 1784; a poem composed by Sir William Browne to celebrate the marriage of Ruston with Mary Fisher, 1771; and Ruston's commonplace book, 1799-1801, containing financial information, poems, observations on the weather, and a few diary notes.
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Dates

  • 1764 - 1802

Creator

Biographical / Historical

Thomas Ruston, Pennsylvania physician and businessman, was born at Fagg's Manor, Chester County, Pennsylvania, in 1742. He was the son of Job and Mary Ruston. Ruston married Mary Fisher (d. 1797) in 1771; they had three children, Thomas, Mary, and Charlotte. Ruston died in 1811, in Philadelphia.

Ruston attended the College of New Jersey [Princeton University] and received a B.A. in 1762. He served a medical apprenticeship in Philadelphia, then traveled to Edinburgh. He received an M.D. from the University of Edinburgh in 1765. In the 1770s, Ruston was practicing medicine in Exeter and writing on financial matters.

With his family, Ruston returned to Philadelphia in 1785 and was involved in many business transactions. He was imprisoned for debt along with Robert Morris circa 1786. Although a friend of Benjamin Rush, Ruston broke with Rush over the yellow fever treatment controversy.

Ruston became a member of the American Philosophical Society in 1787. He published several monographs, including An essay on inoculation for the smallpox (1767) and A collection of facts on yellow fever (1804).

Extent

1 Box (27 items)

Language of Materials

English

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