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DEP/ANO/9

Volume of paintings of patients at the Royal Edinburgh Hospital

Volume with the title 'Bruised Reeds 1882' on the front cover. Contains twelve water colour paintings of patients at the Royal Edinburgh Hospital. Each small painting is captioned with the patient's name and details of his case (all are male). There is also a painting on the first page of a pond in moonlight with reeds and a crow in a tree. The original manuscripts catalogue states that this is a copy of a volume held by the Lothian Health Services Archive amongst the Thomas Clouston papers. That volume is by John Myles (also known as Miles).


The additional information provided below about this volume and the portraits it contains was provided by Allan Beveridge in January 2020, based on his research in the Royal Edinburgh Asylum records held by the Lothian Health Services Archive (LHSA).


The LHSA has in its collections seven coloured drawings which are signed ‘JM’, and which give the patient’s name, their diagnosis, their patient number and their case book reference. The clinical information is written in pen, most probably by a clinician, and quite possibly by the Medical Superintendent of the Royal Edinburgh Asylum, Dr Thomas Clouston.


This volume which the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh holds contains twelve painted portraits, six of the same patients as those in the LHSA series and six further patients. These paintings are unsigned and are much cruder in their execution, suggesting they were done by another artist. They have an accompanying hand-written text, which gives the patient’s name and provides a brief clinical vignette. The hand-writing is different from that of the LHSA series though they may have also been written by a clinician. They would appear to be copies of the original John Miles’s portraits as they are much less detailed and they are less refined in rendering the patient’s facial features and clothing.


John Miles was admitted to the Royal Edinburgh Asylum on the 21 May 1881. He was 59 years old, married and described as a ‘Portrait Painter’. He was a pauper patient from Saint Cuthbert’s and he had been admitted via the Royal Infirmary. On 16 October 16 he was discharged ‘Recovered’.


The portraits:


Andrew Simpson was admitted to the Royal Edinburgh Asylum on 5 March, 1880. He was a 55 year-old married baker. He lived at 53 Bristo Street, Edinburgh and was a pauper patient from St Cuthbert’s. He was diagnosed with melancholia. He died in the asylum on 7 July 1883. His cause of death was given as: ‘Phthisis Pulmonalis’, ‘Kidney Disease’ and ‘Brain Disease’.


George Lumsden was admitted to the Royal Edinburgh Asylum on 22 July 22 1867. He was single and of no occupation. No age was given. His diagnosis was ‘Epileptic Imbecility’. He died in 1893 of ‘Epilepsy – 34 years. Pneumonia 3 days’. The accompanying text appears to be inaccurate, at least in terms of what the case notes state. He is called ‘James’, rather than ‘George’ and is said to have been blind since birth. This was not mentioned in the case notes and surely would have been if true. He was described as playing the violin not particularly well and to have a bad temper, though the case notes described him as good-natured.


George Dickson was admitted to the Royal Edinburgh Asylum on the 6 May 1870. He was 60 years old, and had been admitted previously in 1852. He was widowed and a joiner. He lived at 3 North Saint James Street, Edinburgh. The existing attack had lasted 6 months. He was not epileptic, suicidal or dangerous.


James Laurie was admitted to the Royal Edinburgh Asylum on 20 January 1877. He was 13 years old. He had no education and was a pauper patient who was transferred from St Cuthbert’s Poorhouse. The predisposing factor was ‘Congenital’. On physical examination, James was found to be paralysed on the left side and his left foot was clubbed. He was epileptic. The diagnosis was ‘Idiocy’. On 7 November 1884, James died. The Cause of Death was Brain Disease and Phthisis Pulmonalis, duration one year. He was 20 years old.


William Archibald was admitted to the Royal Edinburgh Asylum on 1 January 1880. He was 28 years old, married and a cook. He lived at 25 East London Street, Edinburgh and was a pauper patient from St Cuthbert’s. The diagnosis was ‘General Paralysis’. On 24 January 1890, he died of Bronchopneumonia. The text says he was about 40 years old, though according to the case notes he was 30.


William Beattie was admitted to the Royal Edinburgh Asylum on the 17 April 1880. He was 45 years old, single, and a tailor. He was a pauper patient from St Cuthbert’s and had been transferred from Dundee Royal Asylum. His Transfer Certificate recorded: ‘He is deaf, dumb, and in a frail state of bodily health’. The diagnosis was ‘Melancholia’.


William Walls was admitted to the Royal Edinburgh Asylum on 4 April 1879. He was 48 years old and was described as a married shopkeeper or merchant. He was a private patient and lived at 148 Links, Kirkcaldy. The diagnosis was ‘Melancholia’. In the text that accompanies his portrait, William Walls’s surname is misspelt as ‘Wells’. It also states that he was ‘ill through loose living’, though there is no mention of this in the case notes.


Thomas Shuster was admitted to the Royal Edinburgh Asylum on 20 September 1878. He was 23 years old, single and described as a labourer. He lived at 5 St John’s Hill, Edinburgh and was a pauper patient from St Cuthbert’s. The diagnosis was ‘Mania’. On 23 October 1878, Shuster was discharged recovered. Between 1879 and 1885 Shuster had four further admissions, all with the diagnosis of ‘Mania’. Shuster was eventually discharged relieved on 20 October 1890. His name is spelt wrongly and he is said to have suffered a shock through disappointment in love, whereas the case notes stated that the cause of insanity was ‘fright’.


David Thomson was admitted to the Royal Edinburgh Asylum on 1 April 1882. He was 24 years old, single and described as a mason. He was from St Cuthbert’s Parish. He was said to have a hereditary predisposition and was considered to be suicidal and dangerous. In November 1899, he was transferred to Craiglockhart, ‘Not Improved’.


Charles Young was admitted to the Royal Edinburgh Asylum on 8 March 1880. He was 36 years old, single and described as a journeyman and upholsterer. He lived at 204 Rose Street and was a pauper patient from the City Parish. The diagnosis was ‘General Paralysis’ and he died of ‘General Paralysis of the Insane’ on 3 December 1882.


James McNeil was admitted to the Royal Edinburgh Asylum on 1 June 1882. He was 66 years old, single and described as a labourer. He was a pauper patient from Inveresk Combination Poorhouse. The diagnosis was ‘Melancholia’. On 12 December, he died of heart disease and softening of the brain.


1882

DEP/AWP/5/1/195

Untitled essay on hearing and sound by William Pulteney Alison

Includes ventriloquism, music, deafness and sympathetic sensation. Fair copy.

1820s - 1850s

DEP/BRE/5/9

Illustration by J Williamson for Byrom Bramwell's book 'Atlas of Clinical Medicine'

Illustration is framed in a modern (late 20th century) frame. On the back of the frame a note which appears to be contemporary with the illustration states 'Margaret Kettle, aged 89. Craiglockhart Workhouse, 1890. Is Sharp (though rather deaf) Violent temper, very blue eyes & remarkably wrinkled face. J. Williamson, port.'.

1890

DEP/BRE/5/10

Illustration by J Williamson for Byrom Bramwell's book 'Atlas of Clinical Medicine'

Illustration is framed in a modern (late 20th century) frame. On the back of the frame a note which appears to be contemporary with the illustration states 'Thomas Farmer, aged 82 Craiglockhart Workhouse, 1890. In a condition of senile dementia very deaf, sight little or nothing, expresses very little, eats well & general health is good. J. Williamson, port.'.

1890

DEP/COP/1

Child and infant health leaflet collection of Jane Copland

This collection was found inside a book deposited with the College library in 2019 (Bl 4.80) by Dorothy F Egan, 'Developmental Screening, 0-5 years'. It is accompanied by an envelope with Jane Copland's address on it.


The file contains:

Template letter from City of Edinburgh Health Department regarding steps to combat nits amongst schoolchildren

Edinburgh Health Department blank immunisation record form

Edinburgh Health Department blank vaccination record form

List of Edinburgh child health centres, with opening times and contact information

City of Edinburgh Health Department - defective vision form

Leaflet titled 'You and Your New Baby'

Leaflet titled 'Principles of Weaning'

City of Edinburgh Health Department - tonsils / adenoids / running ears / deafness form

St George's School for Girls 1966 rules as to infectious diseases

City of Edinburgh Health Department - doctor form

Leaflet titled 'Children who are immunised against diphtheria, tetanus, polio, whooping cough and measles are protected. Mothers whose children have been immunised are happy'

City of Edinburgh Health Department - German measles leaflet

City of Edinburgh Health Department - tuberculosis leaflet

Vaccine triple antigen leaflet (x2)

Child immunisation assessment schedule (x2)

BCG vaccination of children approaching school-leaving age, note of procedure

[1960s-1980s]

DEP/CUL/1/2/1355

Letter from John Heysham, Carlisle, England to William Cullen

Case of Master Leveck, a boy, deaf since scarlet fever on whom Heysham would also like Monro's opinion. He also writes that he encloses the Bills of Mortality (not included); asks for Cullen's comments on the case of Ann Liddle; and reports on his diabetes case.

9 Aug 1783

DEP/CUL/1/2/2143

Letter from Charles Brown, Newcastle to William Cullen

Case of General Beckwith. Letter delivered by Mr Ingle whom Brown introduces to Cullen but he also asks about his deafness.

21 Oct 1787

DEP/DOJ/1

Sir John Pringle's Manuscript Medical Annotations by Jessie Dobson

In the first section, under each heading, Dobson gives examples of what Pringle had written on the subject and the folio numbers for the first three volumes only. She has not retained the original spellings. The subjects included are: dysentery; fevers; phthisis pulmonalis and haemoptoe; hectic heats, hectic and slow fevers; ulcerous sort throat; rheumatism; smallpox; sprains, luxations and contusions; diseases of the stomach and intestines; diarrhoea and lienteria; the use of mercury and mercurials; stone and gravel; haemorrhages; deafness and other diseases of the ear; ophthalmia; burns; of the nature of fire and in particular the heat of the human body; apoplexy and palsy; epilepsy; volatile and foetid antispasmodics; mania melancholia; diseases of the heart and circulation; erysipelas; cholera; tetanus, opisthotonos, emprosthotonos, locking of the jaws; lepra [leprosy], scurf, tetters and other foulnesses of the skin; dropsy; hydrocephalus; worms; ani morbi; hepatitis, jaundice, gallstones; diseases of breeding and lying-in women; diseases of infants and children; scrofula; remedies [in which she summarises a number of Pringle's sections on treatments]; and diseases of different climates.


In the second section she includes all the notes Pringle included by William and John Hunter from all ten volumes. At the end she includes biographical notes on John Freind, Richard Huck Saunders, Sir Edward Hulse, John Senac, Sir Robert Walpole and Robert Whytt.


There is a letter at the front of the file from Jessie Dobson to the Honorary Librarian of the College dated 25th April 1969. In it she explains the work she did on the first three volumes of Pringle's Medical Annotations with a further selection of any comments made by William and John Hunter from the later volumes. She also donates a copy of her notes to the library. A reply from the College Librarian is also included.

1969

DEP/GUT/2/9

[Historical miscellanea notes by Douglas Guthrie]

Includes newspaper cutting on Walter Mercer's appointment as the first professor of orthopaedic surgery at University of Edinburgh; newspaper cutting on the opening of the new hospital for sick children in Toronto; worship of Isis; excerpts from Ruhrah's 'Pediatrics of the Past' including 'The Boke of Children', Francis Glisson, Robert Pemell, Francis Sylvius, Richard Wiseman, J S J Starsmere, John Mayow, William Cadogan, pediatric poems, Claude Quillet, Sainte-Marthe, Hugh Downman, William Heberden and 'A Full View of All Diseases Incident to Children' by Ernest Caulfield; note on the first school for the deaf and dumb founded in Edinburgh by Thomas Braidwood; Scottish Paediatric Society; notes from 'Mortality of Children in the Principal States of Europe' by William Farr; death of Dr William Campbell; obituary of Dr William Beilby; article on 'The Countesse of Lincolnes Nurserie' by Ernest Caulfield; notes on the history of paediatrics in Scotland; 'Calcium and Tetany in Folk Medicine' by David Helling; notes on birth and infancy from 'County Folk-Lore - Fife, Clackmannan and Kinross'; Charles-Michel Billard; Francis Home; 'A Talmudic Contribution to the History of Diphtheria' by Abraham Bernstein; 'The Practice of Inoculation Recommended in a Sermon by the Reverend William Dodd'; 'Medallions and Plaques of Interest to Pediatricians' by Abraham Levinson; 'Shakespeare and Pediatrics' by Alton Goldbloom; 'An Early Case of Pyloric Stenosis' by Ernest Caulfield; 'John Locke Pediatrican' by George H Jackson; 'William Wadd' by Arthur Abt; 'Infant Feeding in England and France 1750-1800' by T G H Drake; 'History of Infant Feeding' by Arthur Bates Lyon; 'Evidence of Rickets prior to 1650' by John Foote; and 'John Jones Phisition - the second writer on pediatrics in English' by Samuel Radbill.

c1951

DEP/KWS/1/9/36

Patient case notes and records

From the collection of Samuel Kinnier Wilson. Includes a letter from Frank Pullen to a relative, 30th January 1916; notes on Frank Dennett, 1917; a case at Bethlem, 1907; test results for a patient named Crews; postcard from patient Ada Walker with example of her writing; examples of writing of A F Clerk and George Eversone; list of patients in different wards; and results of a test for 'mind deafness'.

1907-1916

DEP/MOR/4/26

Illustration captioned 'Back - a dumb woman mania puerperal Bethlem Oct 1842'

Illustration from the collection of Alexander Morison. Signed Chas [Charles] Gow. Reproduced in Morison’s 'Outlines of Lectures' (1848) plate 5.


'Anne P: Aged thirty-eight, married, the wife of a book-binder, with three children, was admitted into Bethlehem Hospital on the 14th Oct., 1842, labouring under Mania from childbearing. The disorder commenced about a week previously to her admission, with dancing and excited conduct. A singular circumstance in this case is, that she is deaf and dumb, and is the wife of a deaf and dumb person. During the prevalence of the disorder, her sister was unable to understand the signs she made use of. After a residence in the hospital of about two months and a half, she was discharged cured.'

1842

DEP/MOR/4/204

Illustration captioned 'Maltby idiot Springfield June 1847'

Illustration from the collection of Alexander Morison. Signed C [Charles] Gow. Reproduced in Morison’s 'Outlines of Lectures' (1848) plate 17.


'John M: Aged twelve, idiotic from birth, is dumb, and disposed to mischief; the dumbness, however, is not dependent on deafness, but appears solely to be the result of want of power of attention to the sounds of the voice. This patient is incapable of attending to the calls of nature, or of feeding himself; and if not watched, will put pebbles and straw, &c., into his mouth, and swallow them. His head and body are well formed, and he is able to walk; but holds his body and hands in an awkward manner.'

1847

DEP/PRJ/1/3

Medical Annotations Volume 3 by Sir John Pringle

The volume is divided into short chapters including the headings: diseases of different climates, modes of living etc; tetanus, opisthotonos, emprosthotonos, locking of the jaws; testacea and other absorbents, aqua calcis excepted; of the nature of fire and in particular of the heat of the human body; sarsaparilla; asthma; chlorosis, obstruction and ceasing of the menses; struma and other glandular tumours; catarrh, coughs and colds; volatile and fetid antispasmodics; angina ulcerosa, sive maligna; mineral waters; nervous disorders; diseases of the heart, palpitation, polypus etc; ophthalmia; of the blood, blood vessels, pulse and circulation; aneurisms; diseases of infants and children; deafness and other diseases of the ear; tympanite; mania, melancholia; formation, growth and diseases of the bones; bitters; pruritus, scabies; camphire; neutral salts; purgatives and laxatives; and thermae, warm baths and vapour baths.


There is no index by proper name and places. Dated by entry on p345.

c1770

DEP/PRJ/3/1

Notebook of Sir John Pringle

These are notes and references to his 'Medical Annotations'. Some entries are just references to the relevant volume and page of 'Medical Annotations' but others give additional information. Arranged into sections headed: General Rules for Health; ague; ancylosis; asthma; apoplexy and recent palsy; belly hard in children; blood (spitting of); burns; breath offensive; a bruise; cachexy; cancer; childblains and kibes; chincough or hooping cough; colds; cholera morbus; chopt lips; colic in children; colic bilious; colic habitual; colic (painter's); clyster; consumption; contusions, luxations; convulsions; corns; costiveness; cough from a cold; cough with inflammation of the lungs; violent coughing; cramp of the legs; a cut; deafness; diabetes; diarrhoea; dropsy; dysentery; ear ach; ears itching; eyes (inflammed); eruptions in children; eyes (specks); expectoration to promote in pulmonary inflammations; excoriation to prevent when threatened by constant lying in bed; face foul; falling sickness or epilepsy; fevers in general; flatulence with low spirits; fits hysteric or convulsive; flux white; fundament, itching of; ganglion; gout; gravel; gums spungy and bleeding; head-ach; heat of the blood and thirst; hiccup; hoarseness; jaundice; hypochondriasis; ileus; inquietude, restlesssness or fidgets; itch; leprosy; lameness; leanness; weakness of the legs in children; leprosy or impetigo; lecucophley matia; lethargy; lock jaw; looseness; lumbago; lunacy; menses obstructed; measles; menstruation; coagulated milk; mouth sore or excoriated; nerve wounded; nerves, weakness of; pain (inflammatory); palms of the hand hot; palpitations nervous; palsy of the arms; piles or haemorrhoids; pleurisy and peripneumony; quinsy; rupture; scald head; sciatica; scirrhouse glands; scurvy (marine); sea sickness; shin rubbed off; small pox; sores; sprains; stomach pain from an acid; stone in the bladder; strictures; swelled legs;swelled face from a rheum upon the teeth; swelling (white); toothach; thirst; tenesmus; thrush; torpor or numbness of the limbs; vertigo; ulcer; vomica; vomiting; urine (bloody); warts; watery gripes (in infants); whites; worms; contused worms; and wounds of the tendons. There is a supplement in the rear with additional headings and continuations from elsewhere in the book: stiff joynt or ancylosis; rheumatism; breeding sickness; fundament falling down; hysterics and female spasmodics; scrophula; sprains; and wax emulsion. There are also a number of other headings throughout for which no notes were entered.

c1773

DEP/RIT

Collection of W [William] T Ritchie

 

1932-1937

DEP/SMC/2/1/14

File of the Scottish Medical Service Emergency Committee: Andrews, Dr J Alford, Corran, Lochgilphead

Correspondence between Dr Andrews and the Committee. Correspondence concerns Andrews' call up but his ineligibility for foreign service due to deafness; whether his brother-in-law in China should return to join the RAMC; and whether his practice could support a locum's fees.

25 May 1917-21 Sep 1918

DEP/SMC/3/4/1/3/48

Scottish Medical Service Emergency Committee form: Chalmers, John Gerald

Form completed by doctors at the request of the SMSEC, which was set up by the Scottish Committee of the British Medical Association in order to manage shortages of doctors in wartime.


This form contains the following information:

Not Commissioned (Registration)

Qualifications: MB, CM

Address: 46 Desswood Place

City/Town: Aberdeen

Present work: Masseur in 1st Scot Gen Hospital, Not praciticing medicine owing to extreme deafness

Age in 1916: 41

Additional information: [Note written next to Present Work:] 'Dr. Chalmers had to give up medicine on account of his deafness. FK Smith'

1915-1916





DEP/SMC/3/4/1/10/58

Scottish Medical Service Emergency Committee form: Osborn, Sidney

Form completed by doctors at the request of the SMSEC, which was set up by the Scottish Committee of the British Medical Association in order to manage shortages of doctors in wartime.


This form contains the following information: Not Commissioned (Registration)

Qualifications: MB ChB Ed

Address: 39 Cowgate

City/Town: Edinburgh

Present work: Medical officer in charge of Native Hospital Kivenda[?] Rhodesia (under BSAW)

Age in 1916: 26

Additional information: Letter attached on his deafness

1915-1916





DEP/TAJ/1

[Jane Taylor Pharmacopoeia]

A volume of medicinal preparations. The first eighty-six pages are in the same handwriting and format with some amendments and attributions, such as the green ointment of Lord of Norwich (p78). From page eighty-six the handwriting becomes less standardised and the preparations include wine and food recipes. On pp135-142 is an index. From the rear are two pages of food recipes, the first page initialled IT and ET who may be Taylor family members. The vellum cover is loose but may never have been attached.


The recipes are:

A salue all manner of wounds broken Boanes + all soares'. Page 1

For the bloudy menster'. Page 1

For Iron or thorne pricking. Page 1

For a pyn and web in the eyes'. Page 1

For swellinge of knees'. Page 1

For him that hath dronck venym'. Page 1

For a sauceleame' face'. Page 2

For swellinges'. Page 2

For all mannor of evills'. Page 2

For hardness of the Woombe [womb]. Page 2

For strong Jaundise'. Page 2

For the Dropsey'. Page 2

For to sley woormes in the eyes'. Page 2

For swelling in a mans throate'. Page 2

Otherwise evill in the throate'. Page 2

To unclose a wounde'. Page 3

To cast out bloud within a man by broosinges or otherwise'. Page 3

For stincking teeth coming of the stomacke'. Page 3

For stinking tethe'. Page 3

For akeing of kees and other ioyntes'. Page 3

A speciall drincke for all feauers'. Page 3

For the Axes'. Page 4

For all aches of Woundes or strokes'. Page 4

For swelling of a Wounde'. Page 4

For the stopping of the stomacke'. Page 4

To take awaye a wenn'. Page 5

For all manner of Woundes festers akeing swellings & other soares'. Page 5

For bolings or brusinges broken bones or other mannor'. Page 5

A speciall oyntment against dead flesh in Wowndes and to cherish the good'. Page 5

An intreat to cast out bones or Impostunes in Woundes'. Page 5

To heale in :V: dayes all scabbs'. Page 6

For the stone'. Page 6

For the Poxe'. Page 6

To take away Pockholes'. Page 7

To make a: n: w: &r:'. Page 7

Yf to sharpe'. Page 8

For a scald hedd'. Page 8

A: Water: fo: th: fa: to: m: it s: of 25: y:'. Page 8

To help a redd face'. Page 8

An: other'. Page 9

To make heare fall of:'. Page 9

A: x: r: f: th: f:'. Page 9

An: other'. Page 10

Against the stone in the bladder'. Page 10

An other'. Page 11

To heale the Emerods or pills'. Page 11

An other'. Page 11

For one that cannot keepe his meate but vomiteth allwayes'. Page 12

Against all paynes in the head'. Page 12

An other'. Page 12

An other'. Page 12

For payne in the eares'. Page 12

To make teeth fall out'. Page 13

To make black teeth White'. Page 13

Against kernells'. Page 13

For a sweet ball:'. Page 13

For the lyuer and milte'. Page 14

Against ache in the gutts'. Page 14

Yf a Woman haue not hir termes to cause them com'. Page 14

For the riseing of the Ma'. Page 14

To make a sweet breath'. Page 14

For horseness'. Page 15

To make heare to growe and not to fall'. Page 15

To cause heare to fall off'. Page 15

For a sausleam face'. Page 15

For drythe in the handes'. Page 16

For the Morphew'. Page 16

For scabbes'. Page 16

For dry scabbs'. Page 16

An other'. Page 16

Against vomitts'. Page 17

Ignis Saluaticus or sacer ignis'. Page 17

To make teeth White'. Page 17

For a woman that is shrank and that shee weer wth: Childe'. Page 17

Whi: f: o: a: W:'. Page 18

A restorat for hir that hath lost hir Nature'. Page 18

For the dropsie in the Woomb in feet and for Constiuens in the stomack for Wormes in ye stomack and for bad sto:'. Page 18

For the Megrim in the hedd Postum in the head Dropsy in the head & for all akeing in the head'. Page 19

For swelling through bloud letting'. Page 19

For one that is deafe'. Page 19

For the Quincye'. Page 19-20

To break Apostumes'. Page 20

To draw out Apostumes'. Page 20

For Closed Woundes not Well healed'. Page 20

For Noli me tangere'. Page 20-21

For a soare yarde'. Page 21

For a fayre face'. Page 21

For ache in the Woomb'. Page 21

For Euill in the back'. Page 21-22

For swelling in the stomack'. Page 22

To draw out broken bones of woundes'. Page 22

For the Fundament goeing out'. Page 22

For him that spitts bloud'. Page 22-23

A purgation'. Page 23

To breake the Stone'. Page 23

Oyle of Exeter'. Page 23-24

For a stincking breath be it in the braynes mouth or stomack'. Page 24-25

To make a good stomack'. Page 25

To make Camph:'. Page 25

To make the beard or head ot grow that yt fall not of:'. Page 25-26

To make hayre black'. Page 26-27

An other'. Page 27

An Excellent Secret'. Page 27

To make hayre growe'. Page 27

For the same'. Page 27-28

c1685

DEP/WHR/4/10

Case notes of Robert Whytt: Of the rash and military eruptions

General notes on the disease. On the last page is an index to lectures: 1 different fevers; 2 observations on fevers; 3 continued fever John Forbes' case (WHR/4/6); 4 rash or military fever; 5 continued fever Janet Watson's case (WHR/4/6); 6 dysentery; 7 [?] and hectic fevers; 8 small pox (WHR/4/9); 9 Of the disorders of the stomach; 10 tympany; 11 Of the mumps and of inflammation (WHR/4/5); 12 epilepsy (WHR/4/4); 13 ague; 14 measles; 15 dropsy; 16 cough pain of the side and fever Mary Harley (WHR/4/3?); 17 itch; 18 leprosy (WHR/4/3); 19 and 20 obstructed menses and immoderate menses; 21 dysuria and gonorrhoea virulenta; 22 angina and croup; 23 swelled or schirrous liver; 24 deafness and cough; 25 jaundice; 26 cause of fever; 27 ophthalmia; 28 asthma (WHR/4/8); 29 palsy; 30 of the use and action of the bark; 31 hyrdocephalus.

Jan 1760 - 1762