Ohio History Journal

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OHIO MEDICAL HISTORY OF THE PERIOD,

OHIO MEDICAL HISTORY OF THE PERIOD,

1835-1858*

 

SOME BIBLIOGRAPHICAL AND RESEARCH AIDS TO

AMERICAN MEDICAL HISTORY

 

By PHILIP D. JORDAN, PH.D.

 

The history of medicine in the United States is a relatively

recent field of investigation.1 Historians and scientists too long

ignored the fertile field of the progress of medical and surgical

practice in this Nation.     If the scholar concerned himself at all

with the advance of medicine and its auxiliary disciplines, he

usually turned his attention to a study of technique as applied to

a specific disease, or to a definite, and sometimes baffling problem

in diagnosis. The nineteenth century, however, saw the historians

become interested in the history of medicine as an aid to an under-

standing of the social environment. At the same time many prac-

tising physicians became aware of the lure of this type of research

not only as an avocation, but also as a highly important contribu-

tion to scientific knowledge.

Both the professional historian and physician, in too many

instances, are unaware of the variety of bibliographical and re-

search aids serving as tools for the guidance of those interested

in preparing an academic monograph or a popular paper in the

general field of American medical history. In addition, many

scholars are unaware of the vast amount of source materials

available.

Aids to research in medical history may be divided into eight

 

* The eight papers under this heading were read before the third annual meeting

of the Committee on Archives and Medical History of the Ohio State Archaeological

and Historical Society, at the Ohio History Conference, 1941, in the Society's Library,

Ohio State Museum, Columbus, April 4, 1941, Jonathan Forman, M. D., chairman.

This is the second group of papers to appear covering this period, the first having

been issued in this periodical a year ago (XLIX, 315-397). See volume XLVIII (1939),

pages 181-256, for the first group of papers in this general series, covering Ohio

medical history for the period, 1788-1835.

1 I am indebted to the following for many suggestions and aids: Professor E. W.

King, Miami University Library; Professor C. R. Hall, Adelphi College, Garden City,

New York; and Miss Lillian Kessler, State director, Ohio Historical Records Survey,

Columbus.

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