Important Medical |
American Medical Imprints, 1820-1910
A Checklist of Publications Illustrating the History and Progress of Medical Science, Medical Education, and the Healing Arts in the United States: A Preliminary Contribution
Foreword by James Tait Goodrich, M.D., Ph.D.
"The two massive folio volumes of Francesco Cordasco's American Medical
Imprints, 1820-1910 may well represent the 20th century's most important
contribution to the historical bibliography of American medical literature"
-Bulletin of the Medical Library Association
This is a major reference work covering a crucial and uncharted period
in the annals of American medical science and American publishing history.
American Medical Imprints is a systematic and enumerative bibliography,
intended as a checklist of publications illustrating the history and progress
of medical science, medical education and the healing arts in the United
States. Professor Cordasco records more than 36,000 titles and provides
complete bibliographical data with selected library locations. In two
volumes (sm. folio), 1654 pages, fully indexed.
The nucleus of the medical titles described in American Medical Imprints,
1820-1910 . . . is Professor Cordasco's collection of 19th century American
medical textbooks, the largest collection in private hands.
In all, American Medical Imprints, 1820-1910 . . . includes over
36,000 entries, with coverage interpreted "in its wider sense to include
nursing, pharmacy, dentistry, child care, hygiene, first aid, education and
psychology."
Professor Cordasco has also provided "A Handlist of Selected Bibliographies,
Catalogues and Related Reference Materials," which constitutes those works
(most, not all) which were consulted during the compilation of American
Medical Imprints 1820-1910. He has also included "19th Century American
Medical Literature: A Gallery of Lea Titles," originally written for the
bicentennial of the Philadelphia publishers, in which he was able to sketch
(using the Lea imprint as a point of continuing reference) the evolution of
an indigenous American medical literature. For quik reference, he has appended
"Wood's Library of Standard Medical Authors: A Checklist" in which the
individual volumes in the series are arranged in the order in which they were
published, with originally assigned volume numbers.
ISBN 0-8476-7338-3 | Books In Print List: $275.00 Our Price: $120.00 + $10 P&H |
Homoeopathy in the United States
A Bibliography of Homoeopathic Medical Imprints, 1825-1925
Homoeopathy, the system of healing originated by the German physician Samuel Hahnemann
(1755-1843), was based on a system of therapuetics whose first principle was Similia
Similibus Curantur, or like cures like. Introduced into the United States in 1825,
Homoeopathy kew a spectacular growth in 19th century America. By the turn of the century,
Homoeopaths had established a network of some 112 hospitals, 59 dispensaries, 143
homoeopathic medical societies, and scores of medical journals; homoeopathic physicians
numbered near 15,000, many of whom were woman, all served by some two-score homoeopathic
medical colleges. This immense homoeopathic universe, however, was largely to disappear
by the 1920's, and it is an important part of American medicine whose history remains to
be written.
In Homoeopathy in the United States, Professor Cordasco provides a basic
bibliographical register of homoeopathic medical imprints from 1825 to 1925, a period
which covers homoeopathy's beginnings, growth, and decline in the United States. Arranged
in three chronological segments [I: Homoeopathic Medical Imprints, 1825-1859; II:
Homoeopathic Medical Imprints, 1860-1889; III: Homoeopathic Medical Imprints, 1890-1925],
it interprets homoeopathy very broadly "to permit the inclusion of many related titles not
strictly medical: included are historical and biographical works, with a representatively
large sample of the huge polemical literature which definces the homoeopathic controversy;
catalogues of homoeopathic publishers, as well as the ephemera which attest the
vitality of any social movement." Homoeopathy in the United States is a basic
bibliographical guide to the literature of homoeopathy, a thriving, vital and energetic
force in the healing arts of 19th century America.
ISBN 0-940198-07-X | Books In Print List: $54.00 Our Price: $34.50 + P&H |
Medical Publishing in 19th Century America
Lea of Philadelphia;
William Wood & Company of New York City;
and F.E. Boericke of Philadelphia
Including A Checklist of Wood's Library of Standard Medical Authors & Specimen Lea, Wood & Boericke Catalogues
From the Preface: Medical Publishing in 19th Century America is intended to achieve a
number of objectives: primarily, it serves as a vehicle for the re-issue of representative
catalogues of 19th century American medical publishers. The catalogues reissued include
"William Wood & Company's Medical Publications, 1879-1880" which announces the
beginnings of Wood's Library of Standard Medical Authors; "Lea Brothers & Company
Classified Catalogue of Medical & Surgical Publications, [1893]," which captures, in time,
the eminent Lea firm of Philadelphia at its zenith; and F.E. Boericke's "New Catalogue of
Standard Homoeopathic Publications" (1886) which provides an overview of homoeopathic
therapeutic modalities at the height of their influence.
In the many years in which I was at work on my American Medical Imprints, 1820-
1910 . . . such medical catalogues constituted a major archival source; they were, even in those years, infrequently encountered, and their preservation is clearly important to American medical history. Their preservation in this volume is a modest effort in that direction. This volume also affords an opportunity to publish out of the vastness of American Medical Imprints, 1820-1910 my "19th Century Medical Literature: A Gallery of Lea Titles," and "Wood's Library of Standard Medical Authors: A Checklist and Bibliographical Guide," allowing these pieces an independent status and, hopefully a greater accessibility. Genevieve Miller's "The Nineteenth Century Medical Press," drawn from the Centenary of Index Medicus provides a focal point of reference. Included as well is "A Handlist of Selected Bibliographies, Catalogues & Related Reference Materials," and I have provided a comprehensively dimensional Index drawing its entries, in the main, from the verisimilitude of the catalogues. The frontispiece is a facsimile of the title-page of Henry H[ollingsworth] Smith (1815-1890), Anatomical Atlas which Lea first published in 1844. (Cordasco, No. 40-1198)
1910 . . . such medical catalogues constituted a major archival source; they were, even in those years, infrequently encountered, and their preservation is clearly important to American medical history. Their preservation in this volume is a modest effort in that direction. This volume also affords an opportunity to publish out of the vastness of American Medical Imprints, 1820-1910 my "19th Century Medical Literature: A Gallery of Lea Titles," and "Wood's Library of Standard Medical Authors: A Checklist and Bibliographical Guide," allowing these pieces an independent status and, hopefully a greater accessibility. Genevieve Miller's "The Nineteenth Century Medical Press," drawn from the Centenary of Index Medicus provides a focal point of reference. Included as well is "A Handlist of Selected Bibliographies, Catalogues & Related Reference Materials," and I have provided a comprehensively dimensional Index drawing its entries, in the main, from the verisimilitude of the catalogues. The frontispiece is a facsimile of the title-page of Henry H[ollingsworth] Smith (1815-1890), Anatomical Atlas which Lea first published in 1844. (Cordasco, No. 40-1198)
ISBN 0940198-06-1 | Books In Print List: $47.50 Our Price: $34.50 + P&H |