Related Results

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DEP/ABJ/4/2/10

Letter from G F D Evans, 21 Lothian Street, Scotland to John Abercrombie

He sends Abercrombie two stories of 'spectral illusions' from America and India. Originally addressed to Dr [William Pulteney] Alison with a note introducing Evans which may also be by Alison.

13 Dec 1831

DEP/ABJ/4/2/28

Letter from L Cumming, Hope Street, addressed to Reverend Dr Cormack

From the collection of John Abercrombie. He recounts a story from 100 years ago of a ghost appearing to a man on a ship. No year given but 1836 part of the watermark.

30 May [1836]

DEP/AWP/5/2/69

[S] - [On spectral illusions by William Pulteney Alison]

Includes extract from Sir B Brodie. Dated from p1 of a second section.

1859

DEP/AWP/5/2/71

[S] - [Notes on various subjects by William Pulteney Alison]

Includes astronomy, consciousness, nervous system, animal economy, physiology and spectral illusions.

1850s

DEP/AWP/5/2/76

[T] - [Notes on various subjects by William Pulteney Alison]

Includes clairvoyance, sensation, indications of divine intentions and animal economy.

1850s

DEP/LAT/1/50

Lecture file of Thomas Laycock: Melancholias - Dysphoria - Hypochon [Hyponchondria?]

Contains 'Phrenalgia [?] or Melancholia' including hereditary predisposition, 1863; 'Special Forms of Lypethymia' with extract from a textbook on the subject and also including hypochondria, 1863; and 'Family and Domestic Melancholia' with pasted cuttings on relevant murder cases, 1864. Also includes case notes on delusions, delirium tremens, melancholia 1864-1875; letters from J Crown [?], Edinburgh, B Richardson, Shrewsbury, James Murray, Galashiels, M A R, Montrose and P C Stuart, Edinburgh on masturbation and nocturnal emissions, 1858-1876; letters from William Standing, Stirling on his whole family having rabies, 1866; unsigned letter from someone inhabited by evil spirits, 1869; 'Capsicum in Delirium Tremens' by Dr Lyons, 1866; 'Melancholia and Tumours cured by removing a tumour, 1856; and small cuttings on Mr Speke's disappearance and similar cases.

1858-1876

DEP/MOR/4/111

Illustration captioned 'M S P aged 22 Erotomania Bethlem 2 months insane'

Illustration from the collection of Alexander Morison. Plate 29 of Morison’s 'The Physiognomy of Mental Diseases' (1840). Unsigned [Alexander Johnston].


'M. S. P. aged 22, an unmarried female, educated as a governess — had an hereditary tendency to insanity.


She was naturally of a very chaste and modest disposition; her Catamenia had been obstructed for six months, about three years ago, and she became insane. Her insanity assumed a religious character, she conceived herself to be 'the Virgin Mary; that she had received spiritual birth on a certain day, for she then felt joy by the Holy Ghost,' she was quite cured after the disease had existed about a year, and she remained well for two years and a half.


She now labours under a second attack, and has been two months insane ; she expresses her love for the clergyman whom she has attended ; her eyes are red and brilliant, her face is flushed and her ideas are amatory, for she expresses a wish to be kissed — talks of being pregnant with something holy, and of marriage; but she does not farther transgress the bounds of decency in looks or discourse.'

c1840

DEP/SMS/2/45

Subject file of Sydney Smith: Suggestion and Paranormal Healing

Includes 'Some Aspects of Paranormal Healing' by Louis Rose, British Medical Journal, 1954; 'A Difficult Wart Treated by Suggestion', British Medical Journal, 1952; 'Hypnotism', British Medical Journal, 1955; and 'Medical Use of Hypnotism', British Medical Journal, 1955.

1952-1955

DEP/TAH/4/5

Subject file of Haldane Tait: Doctors in other Spheres of Activity

Some of these papers were in an envelope with this title and the rest were loose in the box but are on the same subject. In envelope: article on Henry Lamb, war artist and doctor; John Locke; Heinrich Olbers; Mohamed Forna; Henry Tonks; doctors as diarists; Thomas Beach; Dr Francis Buckland; Robert Bridges, poet laureate and doctor; John Wolcot; Dr Michael Bialoguski, conductor; Dr John Paris; Claude Bernard; George Crabbe; Dr Alfred Smee; Sir James Murray.


Loose in box: Professor Aslan's wonder drug; Bodkin Adams; Jonas Salk; 'Three Scots in the Service of the Czars' by John Wilson; Dr Gideon Mantell and palaeontology; Gerard de Nerval; case of Adelaide Bartlett; Dr Guillotin; Ambroise Paré; Louis XVI's lazy thyroid; affect of religion on doctors; Rodrigo Lopez; Timothy Bright; Buchan's Domestic Medicine; David Marsh doctor and golfer; doctors in fiction; singing doctors; death of Charles II; W G Grace, doctor and cricketer; the Apothecaries; John Keats' medical career; medical antiquities of Heinz Norden; Sir Charles Scarburgh; P G Wodehouse and medicine; doctors and poetry; Malthus; George James Guthrie; Oliver St John Gogarty; medical director of Pinewood Studios; Dr Janvier Black; Dr John Henry Salter; Dr Robert Whytt; Georges Clemenceau; Thomas Hardy's doctor; article on Clemenceau, Sun Yat Sen and Banda and their politics; A Medical Tourist's Guide; James Bridie; Burke and Hare; doctors as prime ministers; medical stamps; doctors as writers; Dr Leonard Hussey; Dr Henry Stephens; doctors in law; C B Heald; doctors as murderers; Sir Roger Ormrod; doctors as politicians - Dr Dickson Mabon, Dr Alan Glyn, John Cronin, Gerard Vaughan, David Owen; imprisoned doctors - Dr Lumu, Raymond Hoffenberg, Howard Levy; Francois Rabelais; Peter Roget; Professor Murdo Elder, Hammersmith Hospital; John Moore surgeon; doctors in the House of Lords; David Ennals; Dr Maurice Miller; Bayer Philharmonic Orchestra; 16th century in dermatology; London Medical Orchestra; music and medicine; Jean-Paul Marat; Tobias Smollet; motoring medicine; Jonathan Miller; doctors in the church; medical aspects of the death of Christ; doctors on the stage; Richard Gordon; railway doctor; medical ghost writers; Dr Alexander Bourne; Walter Hawden; operatic doctors; John Tinney's Compendium Anatomicum and its Publishers by K F Russell.

1966-1979