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         Mitchell S Weir:     more books (100)
  1. The autobiography of a quack and the case of George Dedlow by S Weir 1829-1914 Mitchell, De Vinne Press. bkp CU-BANC, 2010-08-09
  2. Characteristics by S Weir 1829-1914 Mitchell, 2010-09-03
  3. Far in the forest, a story by S Weir 1829-1914 Mitchell, 2010-09-01
  4. The adventures of Francois: foundling, thief, juggler, and fencing master, during the French revolution by S Weir 1829-1914 Mitchell, 2010-09-09
  5. Wear and tear; or, Hints for the overworked by S Weir 1829-1914 Mitchell, 2010-07-30
  6. The hill of stones and other poems by S Weir 1829-1914 Mitchell, 2010-08-02
  7. Mr. Kris Kringle; a Christmas tale by S Weir 1829-1914 Mitchell, 2010-09-08
  8. Dr. North and his friends by S Weir 1829-1914 Mitchell, 2010-08-01
  9. Characteristics by S Weir 1829-1914 Mitchell, 2010-08-01
  10. The youth of Washington: told in the form of an autobiography by S Weir 1829-1914 Mitchell, De Vinne Press. prt, 2010-08-18
  11. Hugh Wynne: free Quaker, sometime brevet Lieutenant-Colonel on the staff of His Excellency General Washington by S Weir 1829-1914 Mitchell, Howard Pyle, 2010-08-02
  12. Fat and blood: an essay on the treatment of certain forms of neurasthenia and hysteria by S Weir 1829-1914 Mitchell, 2010-08-19
  13. Hugh Wynne, free Quaker, sometime brevet lieutenant-colonel on the staff of His Excellency General Washington by S Weir 1829-1914 Mitchell, Howard Pyle, 2010-08-02
  14. Characteristics: a novel by S Weir 1829-1914 Mitchell, 2010-09-09

21. This Is Project Gutenberg This List Has Been Downloaded From The
Edna St. Vincent, 18921950 Miller, Gustavus Hindman, 1857- Milton, John,1608-1674 Mims, Edwin Mitchell, S. Weir Silar Weir, 1829-1914 Montgomery,
http://www.informika.ru/text/books/gutenb/gutind/TEMP/authors9809a1.txt

22. PainOnline
S. Weir Mitchell (18291914) earned a reputation as an eminent neurosurgeon duringthe era of the American Civil War. His 1872 book, Injuries of Nerves and
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Silas Weir Mitchell:
Nerve Pain Pioneer
S. Weir Mitchell (1829-1914) earned a reputation as an eminent neurosurgeon during the era of the American Civil War. His 1872 book, Injuries of Nerves and Their Consequences (J.P. Lippencott, Philadelphia), still contains many valid and informative points, including comments on the ability of severe nerve pain to turn the bravest soldier into a trembling coward. In 1872, 34 years before Dejerine and Roussy published their landmark study on central pain, Mitchell made the following observations on nerve injury pain.
  • In contrast to ordinary pain, which tends to be worse in the evening, the person with nerve injury pain awakes with it and it "pursues him with increasing torture throughout the day" Weir was contrasting it with toothache pain, which doesn't get going until there has been time for circulation to occur during the day. The "remote" cause of nerve injury pain is in the wound, while the "immediate" cause is in the site of origin of the nerve; a very astute observation and ahead of Dr. Mitchell's time. Spontaneous and evoked pain would be consistent with this theoretical arrangement wherein immediate causation results in spontaneous continuous pain while stimulation of an area of the body elicits greater pain as the "remote" augmenting location.

23. Entrez PubMed
S. Weir Mitchell (18291914) physician and poet. Schneck JM. Publication TypesBiography Historical Article Letter MeSH Terms
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&list_uids=8

24. Entrez PubMed
The contributions of S. Weir Mitchell (18291914) the 100th anniversary of his1894 address to American psychiatry. Barton WE. Publication Types Biography
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&list_uids=7

25. MCCRAE - SMITCHELL
SILAS Weir Mitchell. 18291914. Mitchell, the son of John Kearsley Mitchell,earned his MD degree in 1850 from Jefferson Medical College.
http://members.aol.com/dbryantmd/Page28.html
JOHN MCCRAE McCrae earned an M.B. degree at the University of Toronto in 1898, and did further training there and at Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore (as one of William Osler 's housestaff). After service in the South African War, he began medical practice in Montreal along with lecturing at McGill University, and medical writing, including A Textbook of Pathology for Students of Medicine (1912). During the first world war he served in Flanders as brigade surgeon of the 1st Brigade, Canadian Field Artillery. On May 3, 1915, during a lull in the fighting, and shortly after one of his comrades was mortally wounded, McCrae wrote out the rondeau, "In Flanders Fields." It was published, anonymously, in the December 8 issue of Punch , and has of course been reprinted and recited countless times since. He was subsequently stationed with the McGill unit at No.3 Canadian General Hospital at Boulogne. On January 23, 1918, he fell ill, and on the 28th died of lobar pneumonia complicated by suppurative meningitis.

BACKGROUND -
Prescott JF. In Flanders Fields - The Story of John McCrae. Erin, Ontario: The Boston Mills Press; 1985.

26. S. Weir Mitchell
S. Weir Mitchell. Life 18291914. Titles. The Autobiography of a Quack - The Caseof George Dedlow. Fat and Blood - An Essay on the Treatment of Certain
http://manybooks.net/authors/mitchellsw.html
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S. Weir Mitchell
Life Titles The Autobiography of a Quack The Case of George Dedlow Fat and Blood An Essay on the Treatment of Certain Forms of Neurasthenia and Hysteria Hugh Wynne, Free Quaker Sometime Brevet Lieutenant-Colonel on the Staff of his Excellency General Washington.
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27. Art And Medicine Bibliography, Mitchell
Otis, George A. (George Alexander), 18301881. Huntington, David Lowe,1834-1899. Contributors Mitchell, S. Weir (Silas Weir), 1829-1914.
http://www.artandmedicine.com/biblio/authors/Mitchell.html
Chapter XII: Wounds and Complications.
THE MEDICAL AND SURGICAL HISTORY OF THE WAR OF THE REBELLION.
Part III.
Volume II.
Prepared, under the direction of Joseph K. Barnes, Surgeon General United States Army.
By George A. Otis, Surgeon United States Army,
and D. L. Huntington, Surgeon United States Army.
Otis, George A. (George Alexander), 1830-1881.
Huntington, David Lowe, 1834-1899.
Contributors:
Mitchell, S. Weir (Silas Weir), 1829-1914.
Keen, William W. (William Williams), b. 1837
Morehouse, George R. (George Read), 1829-1905
Washington: Government Printing Office, 1883.
Description: xii., 986 pp., xxix., 44 plates, 507 figures, 30cm.
Second printing: same year, 1883. Photographs: 1 composite woodburytype. Subject: Civil War, 1861-1865, war medicine. Photographer: William Bell. Notes: "The following two cases of a shot wound of the portio dura nerve, seventh pair, is copied from Mitchell, Morehouse, and Keen, pp. 47, 51:" "An illustration of paralysis of the facial nerve with distortion of the face is given in Plate XXXVIII, opposite. The patient suffered from loss of sight in the left eye and of hearing in the left ear." At the outbreak of the war between the states, the medical corp of the U. S. Army was a skeletal ministry left over from the last major conflict, the Mexican War. That war was fought in the territories by a predominantly volunteer army, but because of the popularity of the adventure, conscription increased the number of federal troops to 78,700. Of this number, 1,733 men were killed in action, 11,550 troops died from disease and another 4,152 were wounded and survived. By comparison, the Civil War would take the lives of over 600,000 men and wound another 412,175 survivors. At Bull Run the mechanical sledge of war pounded out stump and stubble acreage of the wounded, the many thousands of soldiers dying for want of expeditious triage and ambulance volant on the battlefield. By the end of 1861, the urgent need for medical talent to care for the Union soldiers was starkly apparent.

28. MSS 2/0146-02 Acc. 1992-027 ABBE, ROBERT, (1851-1928) Collector
Mitchell, S. Weir, 18291914. Autograph letter signed Philadelphia Pa., toUnnamed correspondent, np, 1913 May 22 (1 item) 92 43.
http://www.collphyphil.org/FIND_AID/hist/histra2.htm
MSS 2/0146-02 Acc. 1992-027 ABBE, ROBERT, (1851-1928) Collector Memoranda of Dr. Benjamin Rush, 1781-1927 Biographical Robert Waldo Abbe, New York surgeon, was born on 13 April 1851. He married Catherine Amory Palmer in 1891. Abbe died of anemia, probably related to his work with radium, on 7 March 1928. Abbe received an A.B. from the College of the City of New York in 1870 and an M.D. from the College of Physicians and surgeons in New York in 1874. He then served an internship at St. Luke's Hospital, New York. From 1877 to 1884, Abbe was Attending Surgeon in the outpatient Department of New York Hospital. He was also surgeon at St. Luke's Hospital and the Cancer Hospital and attending Surgeon at New York Babies' Hospital. Abbe held positions as Professor of Didactic Surgery at the woman's medical College of New York, 1878-1880, and Professor of surgery at the New York Post Graduate Medical School, 18881897. In 1898, he became Lecturer in Surgery at the College of Physicians and Surgeons. Robert Abbe was known for his pioneering work in intestinal anastomosis, spinal surgery, and the use of radium to treat cancer. He was a member of the American surgical association, the International Surgical Society, and the New York Surgical Society. In 1911, he became an associate fellow of the College of Physicians of Philadelphia. Scope and contents This scrapbook contains Benjamin Rush memorabilia collected by Robert Abbe. It includes biographical information, copies of portraits, engravings, photo prints, and correspondence. Also included are photo prints and correspondence documenting the establishment and the evolution of the Abbe Custodianship at the College of physicians of Philadelphia. The scrapbook contains numerous pictures of Rush, including reproductions of portraits painted by Thomas Sully and Charles Wilson Pealed, as well as original engravings by St. Memin, R. W. Dodson, W. R. Jones, and David Edwin. Also present are pictures of Rush's residences in Philadelphia, "Shippen Mansion" and "Sydenham". In addition, the scrapbook contains several items signed by Rush, including an 1781 autograph letter excusing an ill soldier from militia duty. Perhaps the most important item in the collection is a letter written by Rush in 1793 to Nicholas Belleville (1753-1831). In the letter, Rush describes a new treatment he has been using to combat Yellow fever. According to Rush, the ingredient calomel (mercurous chloride), "saved 9 out of 10 when applied in [the] early stage [of the illness]". Rush also explains that many Philadelphia physicians did not approve of this treatment. In addition to Rush memorabilia, the collection includes photographs and correspondence documenting the establishment of the "Custodianship of the Watch of Dr. Rush", later referred to as the Abbe Custodianship. Included are photographs of Rush's great granddaughter, Mary Theresa deBeelen Rush and her husband, the Rev. Richard L. Howell. Also present is a photograph and a letter from Gwendolen Whistler Howell, Rev. Howell's second wife, who presented Rush's watch to Abbe in return for his services in attending to her ailing husband. Abbe then donated the watch to the college of Physicians and set up a custodianship for it. The collection includes photo prints and correspondence from. Weir Mitchell, Simon Flexner, William H. Welch, and William W. Keen, all of whom served as Abbe Custodians between 1910 and 1927. Provenance This scrapbook of Benjamin Rush memorabilia and records of the Abbe Custodianship was donated to the College of physicians of Philadelphia by Robert Abbe on 1 February 1911. It is possible to trace the provenance of the some of the items in the collection; for example, the photo print of the Benjamin Rush portrait medal (item 13) was presented to Abbe for inclusion in the scrapbook by George M. Torney, Surgeon General of the United States, in 1910. Rush's 1793 letter on Yellow fever (item 24) was presented to John K.Mitchell by John William Wallace in a letter dated 13 November 1855 (item 25). John K. Mitchell's son, S. Weir Mitchell, presented both of these letters to Abbe in a letter dated 16 December 1910 (item 26). After Abbe donated the scrapbook to the College, additional letters and photo prints were added as new Abbe Custodians were selected. The scrapbook was transferred from the care of the Mutter Museum to the Historical Collections of the library on 4 January 1983. It was processed and catalogued in 1992. 1781-1927 1 volume 3/13/92 wvg MSS 2/0146-02 Acc. 1992-027 ABBE, ROBERT, (1851-1928) Collector Memoranda of Dr. Benjamin Rush, 1781-1927 Page 1 1. Abbe, Robert, 1851-1928. Biographical notes of Dr. Benjamin Rush, [n.d.] (1 item) 12 2. Savage, E[dward], 1761-1817. Portrait of Benjamin Rush [copy], [n.d.] (1 item) 15 3. Characteristic phrases from the writings of Dr. Rush : selected by Dr. Weir Mitchell, [n.d.] (1 item) 17 4. Portrait of Benjamin Rush [copy of portrait in Independence Hall], [n.d.] (1 item) 19 5. Reprint of biographical piece on Benjamin Rush, [n.d.] (1 item) 21 6. Engraving of Benjamin Rush from the Thomas Sully portrait, [n.d.] (1 item) 25 7. St. Memin. Engraving of Benjamin Rush, [n.d.] (1 item) 27 8. Portrait of Benjamin Rush [copy of portrait in Independence Hall], [n.d.] (1 item) 29 9. Pealed, Charles Wilson, 1741-1827. Portrait of Benjamin Rush [copy], [n.d.] (1 item) 31 10. Sully, Thomas, 1783-1872. Portrait of Benjamin Rush [copy], [n.d.] (1 item) 33 11. Dodson, R. W. Engraving of Benjamin Rush from the Thomas Sully portrait, [n.d.] (1 item) 35 12. Jones, W. R. Engraving of Benjamin Rush from the drawing by W. Haines, [n.d.] (1 item) 37 13. Photograph of Benjamin Rush portrait medal, [ca. 1910] (1 item) 39 14. Photograph of the Benjamin Rush Portrait from the Council Room of Princeton University, [n.d.] (1 item) 41 15. Edwin, [David?], 1776-1841. Engraving of Benjamin Rush from the Thomas Sully portrait, 1813 (1 item) 43 16. Pealed, Charles Wilson, 1741-1827. Portrait of Benjamin Rush [copy], [n.d.] (1 item) 44 17. Pealed, Charles Wilson, 1741-1827. Portrait of Julia Stockton [copy], [n.d.] (1 item) 45 18. Engraving of Benjamin Rush [copy], from the American Universal Magazine, [n.d.] (1 item) 48 19. Poulson, C. A. Engraving of "Shippen Mansion" [copy], [n.d.] (1 item) 49 20. Photograph of "Sydenham", [n.d.] (1 item) 51 21. Rush, Benj[ami]n, 1746-1813. Autograph letter signed : [n.p.], to Capt[ai]n Jer[e]miah Fisher, [n.p.], 1781 Mar. 10 With Fisher, Jere[miah]. Autograph letter signed : [n.p.], to W[illia]m Henry Esq., Philadelphia [Pa.], [n.d.] (1 item) 52 22. Rush, Benj[ami]n, 1746-1813. Bill : [n.p.], to Mrs. Ann Potts, [n.p.], 1804 (1 item) 53 23. Rush, Benj[ami]n, 1746-1813. Death certificate for Joseph Clark's child, 1807 Sept. 4 (1 item) 55 24. Rush, Benj[ami]n, 1746-1813. Autograph letter signed : Philadelphia [Pa.], to [Nicholas] Belleville, [n.p.], 1793 Sept. 3 (1 item) 57 25. Wallace, John W[illia]m, 1815-1884. Autograph letter signed : [Philadelphia, Pa.], to John K. Mitchell, [Philadelphia, Pa.], 1855 Nov. 13 (1 item) 59 26. Mitchell, [S.] Weir, 1829-1914. Autograph letter signed : Philadelphia [Pa.], to [Robert] Abbe, [n.p.], 1910 Dec. 16 (1 item) 60 27. Reprint of Richard Rush biography, [n.d.] (1 item) 61 28. Pease, J[oseph] I[ves], 1809-1883. Engraving of Richard Rush [copy], from U. S. Magazine and Democratic Review, [n.d.] (1 item) 63 29. Rosenthal, Max, 1833-1918. Engraving of Richard Rush, 1899 (1 item) 67 30. Photograph of Mary Theresa de Beelen Rush Howell, [n.d.] (1 item) 69 31. Photograph of Rev. Richard L. Howell, [n.d.] (1 item) 71 32. Photograph of Gwendolen Whistler Howell, [n.d.] (1 item) 73 33. Howell, Gwendolen Whistler. Autograph letter signed : Newport [R.I.], to [Robert] Abbe, [n.p.], 1910 Sept. (1 item) 75 34. Photograph of Robert Abbe, [n.d.] (1 item) 76 35. "Description of the Watch", [n.d.] (1 item) 77 36. Five photographs of the watch, [n.d.] (5 items) 81 37. Abbe, Robert, 1851-1928. Autograph letter signed : New York [N.Y.], to [George] De Schweinitz, [n.p.], 1910 Sept. (1 item) 82 38. "Conditions of the Custodianship of the Watch of Dr. Benjamin Rush", [n.d.] (1 item) 85 39. Abbe, Robert, 1851-1928. Autograph letter signed : Bar Harbour [Me.], to [S. Weir] Mitchell, [n.p.], 1910 Sept. 18 (1 item) 87 40. Mitchell, S. Weir, 1829-1914. Autograph letter signed : [n.p.], to Robert Abbe, [n.p.], 1910 Sept. 23 (1 item) 89 41. Photograph of S. Weir Mitchell, [n.d.] (1 item) 91 42. Mitchell, S. Weir, 1829-1914. Autograph letter signed : Philadelphia [Pa.], to Unnamed correspondent, [n.p.], 1913 May 22 (1 item) 92 43. Flexner, Simon, 1863-1946. Typescript letter signed : New York [N.Y.], to Thomas R. Neilson, Philadelphia, Pa., 1914 May 7 (1 item) 93 44. Photograph of Simon Flexner, [n.d.] (1 item) 95 45. Flexner, Simon, 1863-1946. Typescript letter signed : New York [N.Y.], to President and Fellows of the College of Physicians, Philadelphia, Pa., 1920 Jan. 12 (1 item) 97 46. Photograph of William H. Welch, [n.d.] (1 item) 97 47. Welch, William H., 1850-1934. Typescript letter signed : Baltimore, Md., to [William J.] Taylor, [n.p.], 1921 Feb. 24 (1 item) 99 48. Photograph of Abbe Cabinet, [n.d.] (1 item) 101 49. Abbe, Robert, 1851-1928. Typescript letter : New York [N.Y.], to [William J.] Taylor, [n.p.], 1921 May 18 (1 item) 103 50. Welch, William H., 1850-1934. Autograph letter signed : Baltimore, Md., to Thomas R. Neilson, [n.p.], 1924 June 4 (1 item) 109 51. Keen, W[illiam] W., 1837-1932. Autograph letter signed : Philadelphia [Pa.], to [William H.] Welch, [n.p.], 1924 June 4 (1 item) 111 52. Photograph of William W. Keen, 1927 Jan. 19 (1 item) 112 53. Abbe, Robert, 1851-1928. Autograph letter signed : [New York, N.Y.], to [William W. Keen, n.p.], 1927 Apr. 14 (1 item) 54. Engraving of Alexander James Dallas [copy], [n.d.] (1 item) 1781-1927 1 volume 3/13/92 wvg

29. Swm
Mitchell, S. Weir (SILAS Weir), 18291914. Papers, 1788 (1850-1928) 1949 S.Weir Mitchell entered the University of Pennsylvania at the age of fifteen
http://www.collphyphil.org/FIND_AID/hist/histswm1.htm
MITCHELL, S. WEIR (SILAS WEIR), 1829-1914
Papers, 1788 (1850-1928) 1949
MSS 2/0241-03
Acc. 1990-146
To sections of the S. Weir Mitchell Collection:
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Genealogical Information, 1788-1912
Family Papers, 1806-1949

Correspondence, 1851-1928

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Biographical Project, 1914-1931
Biographical
S. Weir Mitchell, physician, novelist, and poet, was born in Philadelphia on 15 February 1829. Mitchell was the son of John Kearsley Mitchell (1798-1858), a physician and lecturer at Jefferson Medical College, and Matilda Henry Mitchell (1800-1872). S. Weir Mitchell entered the University of Pennsylvania at the age of fifteen but withdrew during his senior year when he became ill. In 1848, he enrolled in Jefferson Medical College, and by March 1850, at the age of twenty- one, Mitchell had completed his medical degree. In the fall of 1850, S. Weir Mitchell departed for Europe with his sister, Elizabeth. Elizabeth stayed with her younger sister in England, and Mitchell settled in Paris to study medicine. During this influential year, Mitchell dined with Sir James Paget and Edward Jenner, studied with Claude Bernard, and purchased his own microscope. After a year in Paris, he travelled with his sister in Italy and Switzerland. At the request of their ailing father, Mitchell and Elizabeth returned home in the fall of 1851. Upon returning to Philadelphia, Mitchell set up a demanding schedule for himself; he assisted his father during the day and worked in the laboratory in the evenings. It was during this time that Mitchell conducted experiments with snake venom and first became interested in neurology. By 1855, John Kearsley Mitchell had retired, and Mitchell became responsible for the support of his parents and siblings. A few years later, Mitchell started a family of his own. He married Mary Middleton Elwyn in 1858, and the couple had two children, John K. Mitchell (1859-1917) and Langdon Elwyn Mitchell (1862-1935). In 1862, Mitchell's wife died of diphtheria.

30. Bernard-Horner Syndrome (Claude Bernard) (www.whonamedit.com)
the throat was rendered in 1864 by the three American army physicians SilasWeir Mitchell (18291914), S. Weir Mitchell, W. Keen Jr., GR Morehouse
http://www.whonamedit.com/synd.cfm/1056.html

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Bernard-Horner syndrome (Claude Bernard) Also known as: Bernard’s syndrome Claude Bernard syndrome Claude Bernard-Horner syndrome Horner’s oculopupillary syndrome Horner’s sign Horner's symptom complex Horner's syndrome Horner’s trias Horner's triad Hutchinson’s syndrome Mitchell’s syndrome III von Passow’s syndrome Synonyms: Cervical sympathetic paralysis syndrome, oculopupillary syndrome, oculosympathetic syndrome, sympathetic ophthalmoplegia syndrome, cervical sympathetic paralysis syndrome. Associated persons: Claude Bernard Johann Friedrich Horner Sir Jonathan Hutchinson Silas Weir Mitchell ... Ernst Arnold Passow Description: A syndrome mainly characterised by a trias of miosis, ptosis, and enophthalmos. There is unilateral narrowing (partial ptosis) of the palpebral fissure, contraction of the pupil, enophthalmos and reduction of sweating on the ipsilateral side of the face and neck, transitory rise in facial temperature, lacrimation increased or decreased; facial hemiatrophy, and occasionally the development of cataracts; hemifacial anhidrosis (lesion below bifurcation of common carotic artery); depigmentation of iris (when syndrome occurs in children). Due to a lesion of the cervical sympathetic nerve trunk. Inheritance of congenital, primary form is autosomal dominant.

31. Founder's Exhibit: Clements C. Fry (Medical Historical Library, Yale University)
S. Weir Mitchell, 18291914. A Psalm of Deaths and Other Poems Boston and NewYork Houghton, Mifflin, 1890. Author’s presentation copy.
http://www.med.yale.edu/library/historical/founders/fry.html
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Clements C. Fry
Clements Collard Fry, M.D., 1892-1955
Five Hundred Years of Medicine in Art: An Illustrated Catalogue of Prints and Drawings in the Clements C. Fry Collection in the Harvey Cushing/John Hay Whitney Medical Library at Yale University. Aldershot, England Burlington, VT: Ashgate, 2001. The catalog of the Fry Print Collection contains descriptions and black and white images of over 1600 prints.
Susan Wheeler
Five Hundred Years of Medicine in Art: An Illustrated Catalogue of Prints and Drawings in the Clements C. Fry Collection in the Harvey Cushing/John Hay Whitney Medical Library at Yale University.
Aldershot, England Burlington, VT: Ashgate, 2001. [See Orbis record]
S. Weir Mitchell, 1829-1914.
A Psalm of Deaths and Other Poems
Boston and New York: Houghton, Mifflin, 1890. Author’s presentation copy. Gift of Clements C. Fry. While continuing to practice and teach, Mitchell wrote novels and poems.  A Psalm of Deaths contains some of Mitchell’s most important early poems that long remained unpublished.  This volume was acquired with a letter of presentation in Mitchell’s very recognizable hand.  Mitchell manuscripts in the Library’s collection include drafts of a play and novel and case reports. Having a keen sense of humor, Fry enjoyed the cartoons in the New Yorker.  On several occasions, Fry purchased from the artists the original drawings.  This print is an example of Fry’s earlier collecting.

32. © The American Physiological Society - Founders
Silas Weir Mitchell (18291914). S. Weir Mitchell, the eldest and most distinguishedat the time of the three signers of the letters of invitation to join
http://www.the-aps.org/about/founders.htm
the-aps.org about aps aps founders

The Five Founders of The American Physiological Society
The American Physiological Society was formed over a century ago at a time when there existed only a handful of physiological laboratories in America and few investigators. The organizational meeting of the Society was held on December 30, 1887, in New York in the Physiological Laboratory of the College of Physicians and Surgeons, Columbia University. Seventeen men attended and twenty-eight were named charter members. The first regular meeting of APS at which papers and demonstrations were presented was held in Washington, DC, in September 1888 in conjunction with the newly formed Congress of American Physicians and Surgeons. In anticipation of the Centennial of APS in 1987, a cover was designed for The Physiologist (volume 28, no. 6, December 1985) honoring five men who have long been considered the founders of APS. It was they who were responsible for organizing the Society and guiding it through its early and critical years. Three of them, Henry Pickering Bowditch, S. Weir Mitchell, and Henry Newell Martin, were signers of the original letter of invitation to attend the organizational meeting. Two others, Russell H. Chittenden and John Green Curtis, played such prominent roles in the founding and early history of the Society that they too have been honored as founders. A medal was designed for the Centennial of the APS which commemorates all five founders.

33. Browse Top Level Texts Project Gutenberg Subject Subject
Author Mitchell, S. Weir (Silar Weir), 18291914 Keywords Authors M Mitchell,S. Weir (Silar Weir), 1829-1914; Titles A ; Subject subject unknown.
http://www.archive.org/texts/textslisting-browse.php?collection=gutenberg&cat=Su

34. Browse Top Level Texts Project Gutenberg Authors M
Miss Jane Porter; Miss Leslie; Mitchell, S. Weir (Silar Weir), 18291914;Mitford, Mary Russell, 1787-1855; Moldeven, Meyer; Molière
http://www.archive.org/texts/textslisting-browse.php?collection=gutenberg&cat=Au

35. Phantom Limb And Causalgia: The Tragic Enigmas
Silas Weir Mitchell (18291914). Portrait of Silas Weir Mitchell. Silas WeirMitchell. In 1872, American neurologist S. Weir Mitchell described a bizarre
http://www.library.ucla.edu/libraries/biomed/his/painexhibit/panel4.htm
Relief of Pain and Suffering Phantom limb pain and causalgia were two clinical pain syndromes that could not be explained in terms of specific nerve pathways Amputees experienced phantom limbs: the distinct sensation that the missing arm or leg was still attached, often held in a distorted, intensely painful, position. Causalgia, first described by the American physician, Silas Weir Mitchell , was even more puzzling. After an injury had healed, the patient experienced intense, burning pain and sensitivity to the slightest vibration or touch, usually in the hand or foot, but at a site some distance removed from the original wound. Both disorders sometimes persisted for years. Anesthesiologists used localized nerve blocks to relieve the pain and neurosurgeons developed techniques for severing the nerve pathways involved; but neither treatment was consistently successful. In the great wars, these relatively rare conditions afflicted many soldiers and baffled and disturbed their doctors: Mitchell in the American Civil War , the French surgeon in World War I , William Livingston in World War II . How could phantom limb and causalgia be explained in terms of the specific neural pathways that conducted pain sensation directly from the site of tissue damage?

36. Sir John - OmniMedicalSearch.com - Sir John
18781916 1946 Hays, I. Minis (Isaac Minis), 1847-1925 LeConte, John L. (JohnLawrence), 1825-1883 Mitchell, S. Weir (Silas Weir), 1829-1914 Paget, James
http://www.omnimedicalsearch.com/query.php?pge=sir john

37. GO
S. Weir Mitchell, one of the great figures of American medicine, Mitchell,Silas Weir, 18291914, The medical department in the Civil War
http://www.uab.edu/reynolds/CivilWarBib/bibG_O.htm
Reynolds Historical Library Collection in Civil War Medicine Holdings G-O Entries in the table are sorted alphabetically by author or, where no author is given, by title. Go To: A-F P-Z Collection Home AUTHOR TITLE PUBL INFO NOTES Geddings, Eli, 1799-1878 Outlines of a course of lectures on the principles and practice of surgery First edition. Geddings received the first degree in the first commencement of the Medical College of South Caroline in 1825. He later served as a surgeon for the Confederacy. Gillett, Mary C. The Army Medical Department 1865-1917 Washington, D.C.: Center of Military History, 1995 Glazier, Willard W. The capture, the prison pen, and the escape, giving a complete history of prison life in the South... Hartford, CT: H. E. Goodwin, 1869 [c1865] Goffres, Joseph Marie, 1808-1867 An illustrated system of bandaging (selected from Goffres' Précis de Bandages) by order of the Surgeon-General Bohemian Brigade Bookshop and Publisher, 1998 Goldsmith, Middleton, 1818-1887 A report on hospital gangrene, erysipelas and pyaemia, as observed in the departments of Ohio and the Cumberland, with cases appended ...

38. S. Weir Mitchell - Author - Muzi Library - Muzi.com
Muzi.com Muzi (English) Muzi Library Author S. Weir Mitchell. ClassicLiterature About Author. S. Weir Mitchell, MD, LLD (18291914)
http://library.muzi.com/au/english/101315.shtml
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  • The Autobiography Of A Quack And The Case Of George Dedlow (Article) Archive* About Author S. Weir Mitchell, MD, LLD (1829-1914) Muzi Sites M-News M-Search M-Gallery M-Library Beststar M-Movies Chinastar Community My Muzi Join Community Our Home HomePages M-Forum M-Salon M-Love M-Poll Join My Muzi eHome eBox eBuddy eWeb eBuilder eNews eStar Join Muzi.com About Sitemap Friendsite ... Contact
  • 39. Letters And Documents Collection - M | Special Collections | Bryn Mawr College L
    Poughkeepsie, thoughts on education of women. Adelman Fund Mitchell, S. Weir(Silas Weir), 18291914 2 ANsS, 1907 Mar. 30, to Dear Sir, ny
    http://webtest.brynmawr.edu/library/speccoll/guides/letterboxm.shtml
    Bryn Mawr College Library Special Collections
    Guide to the Letters and Documents Collection
    Part II: Box and Folder List, M
    Special Collections Department, Bryn Mawr College Library
    February 2000
    Last Updated: May 16, 2003
    A
    B C D ... Z
    Maas, Henry, 1929-
    TLS 1971 Sept. 5, to John Carter Removed from The Letters of A. E. Housman Library Purchase
    Mabie, Hamilton Wright, 1846-1916
    TLS, 1899 Mar. 17, to Sylvie Scudder Removed from the scrapbook of Sylvie Scudder
    McCarthy, Justin, 1830-1912
    ALS, 1886 Dec. 13, to "My Dear Sir"
    McCarthy, Mary, 1912-
    TLS 1987 May 2 to Mabel L. Lang Agrees that "Mrs. Keator" in her book How I Grew was probably the student who Lang knew at Bryn Mawr College. Gift of Mabel L. Lang
    McClellan, George Brinton, 1826-1885
    ALS, 1870 Jan. 17, to William Redmond
    McClure, Alexander K. (Alexander Kelly), 1828-1909
    TLS, 1894 Dec. 19, to Samuel W. Pennypacker Recollects events in the Pennsylvania's Legislature in 1861, and quotes his speech of 1865, concerning the inability to have Democrats vote to support the defense of Fort Sumter, but despite this opposition, having Pennsylvania become the first state to appropriate funds for "defense of the Government ". "Slavery reckoned but too truly on the powers of the Democracy in this fearful conflict." as he wrote in his support of a constitutional amendment abolishing slavery.
    Macfall, Haldane, 1860-1928

    40. Becker Medical Library Books
    A=Mitchell, S. Weir (Silas Weir), 18291914. N=W 62 M682d 1909 (BACS 683653). A=Mitchell,S. Weir (Silas Weir), 1829-1914. N=xxWL 100 M682L 1885 (BACS 693134).
    http://128.252.223.45/miniecat/BAM152.html
    Becker Medical Library Books Authors beginning with:M (page 52) T=Arterial disease by J. R. A. Mitchell and C. J. Schwartz. Foreword by Sir George Pickering.
    A=Mitchell, John Richard Anthony. Schwartz, Colin John, 1931-

    N=WG 510 M681a 1965 (BACS#467859)

    A=Mitchell, John S.
    ...
    N=WU 90 C489e 1997 (BACS#342284)

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