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26.
Haller,
People's Doctor
, 20â21; Thomson,
A New Guide to Health
, 40â48.
27.
Thomson,
A New Guide to Health
, 40â42, 48â52.
28.
Haller,
People's Doctor
, 20â26; ibid., 62, 57.
29.
Haller,
Medical Protestants
, 42â44; Thomson,
New Guide to Health
, 62â65.
30.
Samuel Thomson, “Three Crafts,” in Thomson,
Learned Quackery Exposed
, 12â15.
31.
D. L. Terry, “The Botanic's Song of Liberty,”
Botanico-Medical Recorder
XII (September 21, 1844): 364â65.
32.
Flannery, “Early Botanical Medical Movement”; John S. Haller, “The Thomsonian System,” Lloyd Library and Museum,
http://www.lloydlibrary.org/Haller/hallerpoetrychtwo.html
.
33.
Samuel Thomson, “General Introduction,”
The Thomsonian Materia Medica or Botanic Family Physician
(Albany: J. Munsell, 1841), 8; Alex Berman, “The Thomsonian Movement and its Relation to American Pharmacy and Medicine,”
Bulletin of the History of Medicine
25 (1951): 405, 406.
34.
Whorton,
Nature Cures
, 30â31.
35.
W. A. A., “Thomsonism,”
Boston Medical and Surgical Journal
(January 16, 1839): 19, 24, American Periodicals, accessed September 5, 2012; Whorton,
Nature Cures
, 32.
36.
Whorton,
Nature Cures
, 35â40.
37.
Haller,
People's Doctor
, 16, 23.
38.
Ibid., 33.
39.
Samuel Thomson, “Calomel,” in Thomson,
Learned Quackery Exposed
, 10.
40.
Thomson,
Narrative of the Life
, 17.
41.
Holmes,
Medical Essays
, 379.
42.
J. Dickson Smith,
Rational Medicine and Thomsonism: An Essay
(Macon, GA: Telegraph Steam Printing House, 1859), 31â32.
43.
Lebergott, “Wage Trends,” 462.
44.
Haller,
People's Doctor
, 33; Whorton,
Nature Cures
, 41â42.
45.
Haller,
Medical Protestants
, 41.
46.
Quoted in James Harvey Young, “American Medical Quackery in the Age of the Common Man,”
Mississippi Valley Historical Review
47, no. 4 (March 1961): 582â83.
47.
Haller,
People's Doctor
, 146â47, 154â55.
48.
“Thomsonian Dinner,”
Hagerstown (MD) Mail
, May 24, 1839.
49.
Whorton,
Nature Cures
, 38; Rothstein, “Botanical Movements and Orthodox Medicine,” 46; Thomson,
New Guide to Health
, 134.
50.
An Observer [Samuel Thomson], “Doggerel Verses; A Paraphrase on a Chapter in the HistoryâOr, a Compend of the History of Mr. Aaron Dow,”
Thomsonian Manual
2 (September 15, 1837): 175.
51.
Haller,
People's Doctor
, 37â38; Thomas Sewall, “On the Use of Arsenic in Cancerous Complaints,”
New England Journal of Medicine and Surgery
4 (April 1815): 111.
52.
Haller,
People's Doctor
, 39.
53.
Haller,
Medical Protestants
, 40.
54.
“Public Notice,”
Columbian Centinel and American Federalist
(Boston), August 6, 1825.
55.
Rothstein, “Botanical Movements and Orthodox Medicine,” 45.
56.
Haller,
Medical Protestants
, 40.
57.
Samuel Thomson, “To the Public,”
Thomsonian Recorder
2 (1833): 10; “Proceedings of the Convention of the Friendly Botanic Societies of the United States, Held at Baltimore,”
Thomsonian Recorder
3 (October 1834): 72â73.
58.
Haller,
People's Doctor
, 148.
59.
Haller,
Medical Protestants
, 52.
60.
Thomson,
New Guide To Health
, 73â74.
61.
Haller,
Medical Protestants
, 45.
62.
Haller,
People's Doctor
, 52.
63.
Ibid., 251.
64.
Flannery, “Early Botanical Medical Movement.”
65.
Ibid.
66.
Haller,
People's Doctor
, 46.
67.
Thomson,
New Guide to Health
, 132.
68.
Haller,
People's Doctor
, 83.
69.
T. Hersey,
The Thomsonian Recorder
2, no. 9 (February 1, 1834): 133.
70.
Whorton,
Nature Cures
, 39; US Census,
Abstract of the Fifth Census of the United States, 1830
http://www.census.gov/prod/www/abs/decennial/1830.html
.
71.
Thomson,
New Guide To Health
, 130â31.
72.
Ibid.; M. Simpson et al., “Raspberry Leaf in Pregnancy: Its Safety and Efficacy in Labor,”
Journal of Midwifery and Women's Health
46 (MarchâApril 2001): 51â59.
73.
Stephen Lyng,
Holistic Health and Biomedical Medicine: A Countersystem Analysis
(Albany: SUNY Press, 1990), 182â87; Janet Farrell Brodie,
Contraception and Abortion in Nineteenth-Century America
(Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1997), 149â50.
74.
Haller,
People's Doctor
, 125â27.
75.
Ibid., 126.
76.
“More Quack Murder,”
New York Courier
, reprinted in
Daily National Intelligencer
(Washington, DC), June 2, 1885.
77.
Daniel Drake,
The People's Doctors
(Cincinnati: The People, 1830), 59â60.
78.
“Influence of Quackery on Health, Morals, &c,”
Boston Medical and Surgical Journal
39 (January 10, 1849): 471â80, American Periodicals, accessed September 5, 2012.
79.
Thomson,
New Guide to Health
, 72; Haller,
People's Doctor
, 127; William G. Rothstein,
American Physicians in the Nineteenth Century: From Sects to Science
(Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1992), 146â49.
80.
Thomson,
Narrative of the Life
, 87â105; Whorton,
Nature Cures
, 43; Haller,
People's Doctor
, 129.
81.
Benjamin Waterhouse and Robert D. Montgomery, “Communications,”
Daily National Intelligencer
(Washington, DC), June 2, 1835.
82.
Haller,
People's Doctor
, 123â24.
83.
Berman, “The Thomsonian Movement,” 405â28.
84.
Rothstein, “Botanical Movements and Orthodox Medicine,” 46.
85.
J. P. Shepherd, “Communication,”
Botanico-Medical Recorder
6 (1838): 129â30.
86.
Haller,
People's Doctor
, 159.
87.
Whorton,
Nature Cures
, 45; John S. Haller,
Kindly Medicine: Physio-Medicalism in America, 1836â1911
(Kent, OH: Kent State University Press, 1997), 27â28.
88.
Whorton,
Nature Cures
, 45.
89.
Haller,
People's Doctor
, 90â93.
90.
Alva Curtis, “Notes,”
Thomsonian Recorder
4 (1836): 188.
91.
Samuel Thomson, “Please to Take Notice,”
Thomsonian Manual
1 (1836):140.
92.
Whorton,
Nature Cures
, 46â47; Haller,
People's Doctor
, 84â111.
93.
Whorton,
Nature Cures
, 47.
94.
Haller,
Medical Protestants
, 92.
95.
Quoted in Alex Berman and Michael Flannery,
America's Botanico-Medical Movements: Vox Populi
(New York: Informa Healthcare, 2001), 120.
96.
Whorton,
Nature Cures
, 46â48; Haller,
People's Doctor
, 103â5.
97.
John S. Haller,
A Profile in Alternative Medicine: The Eclectic Medical College of Cincinnati, 1845â1942
(Kent, OH: Kent State University Press, 1999), 15â20.
98.
Whorton,
Nature Cures
, 39.
99.
Thomson,
New Guide to Health
, 7â8, 12â16.
100.
Haller,
People's Doctor
, 1â4; O. S. Fowler, “Phrenological Developments of Dr. Samuel Thomson,”
Phrenological Almanac
13 (1845): 359â60.
1.
Stern,
Heads and Headlines
, 55.
2.
Ibid., 55â56; Ruth Clifford Engs,
Clean Living Movements: American Cycles of Health Reform
(Westport, CT: Greenwood Publishing Group, 2001), 71â72.
3.
Untitled article,
Phrenological Journal
68, no. 6 (June 1879): 288â92; Stern,
Heads and Headlines
, 55â57.
4.
Fenster,
Mavericks, Miracles and Medicine
, 189â90.
5.
Ibid., 190.
6.
Ibid., 192.
7.
Finger,
Minds Behind the Brain
, 122; Simpson, “Phrenology and the Neurosciences,” 475â76.
8.
Finger,
Minds Behind the Brain
, 123â24.
9.
Simpson, “Phrenology and the Neurosciences,” 476.
10.
Finger,
Minds Behind the Brain
, 28â30.
11.
George P. Landow, “Emanuel Swedenborg's Vision of Christ,” Victorian Web,
http://www.victorianweb.org/religion/swedenborg2.html;
Finger,
Minds Behind the Brain
, 119â121; Finger,
Origins of Neuroscience
, 29â31.
12.
Finger,
Minds Behind the Brain
, 126â27.
13.
Simpson, “Phrenology and the Neurosciences,” 477.
14.
Finger,
Minds Behind the Brain
, 130.
15.
Ibid., 126â27.
16.
Ibid., 126â30.
17.
Greenblatt, “Phrenology,” 793â94.
18.
Paul,
Cult of Personality Testing
, 7.
19.
Robert E. Riegel, “The Introduction of Phrenology to the United States,”
American Historical Review
39, no. 1 (October 1933): 74.
20.
Greenblatt, “Phrenology,” 794.
21.
Thurs,
Science Talk
, 25â26.
22.
J. Collins Warren, “The Collection of the Boston Phrenological Society: A Retrospect,”
Annals of Medical History
3 (Spring 1921): 6; Dominic Hall, “James Roberton Returns,”
CHoM (Center for the History of Medicine) News
, Harvard Medical School,
https://cms.www.countway.harvard.edu/wp/?p=2439
.
23.
Nelson Sizer, “Remarks” in “The Semi-Centennial of Spurzheim,”
Phrenological Journal
76 (January 1883): 27â30.
24.
Wrobel, “Introduction,” in Wrobel,
Pseudoscience and Science
, 13.
25.
Young, “Orson Squire Fowler,” 121.
26.
John van Wyhe, “George Combe (1788â1858): Phrenologist and Natural Philosopher,” Victorian Web,
http://www.victorianweb.org/science/phrenology/combe.html
.
27.
Tomlinson, “Phrenology, Education, and the Politics of Human Nature,” 12â15.
28.
Finger,
Minds Behind the Brain
, 131; Emerson quoted in Robert D. Richardson Jr. and Barry Moser,
Emerson: The Mind on Fire
(Berkeley: University of California Press, 1995), 100.
29.
“Phrenology,”
Ladies' Magazine
6 (1833): 11.
30.
Derek Hodson and Bob Prophet, “A Bumpy Start to Science Education,”
New Scientist
(August 14, 1986): 26â27.
31.
Young, “Orson Squire Fowler,” 121.
32.
Paul,
Cult of Personality
, 8.
33.
Thurs,
Science Talk
, 29â31; O. S. Fowler, L. N. Fowler, and Samuel Kirkham,
Phrenology Proved, Illustrated and Applied
(Philadelphia: Fowler and Brevoort, 1839), 46â47, 56â59.
34.
Young, “Orson Squire Fowler,” 122.
35.
Paul,
Cult of Personality
, 8.
36.
Alice Dixon, “A Lesser-Known Daughter of Nantucket: Lydia,”
Historic Nantucket
41 (Winter 1993â94): 60â62; John B. Blake, “Lydia Folger Fowler,” Notable American Women: A Biographical Dictionary (Cambridge, MA: Radcliffe College, 1971), 654â55.
37.
Stern,
Heads and Headlines
, 166â68.
38.
“How to Take Plaster Casts,”
American Phrenological Journal
(1838â69): 87, American Periodicals, accessed January 10, 2012; Colbert,
Measure of Perfection
, 21â24.
39.
Stern,
Heads and Headlines
, 29â31, 52.
40.
Young, “Orson Squire Fowler,” 122.
41.
Thomas F. Gossett,
Race: The History of an Idea in America
(New York:
Oxford University Press, 1997), 72â76; Colbert,
Measure of Perfection
, 24â29; Stern,
Heads and Headlines
, 55â58.
42.
Young, “Orson Squire Fowler,” 122.
43.
Thurs,
Science Talk
, 29; Tomlinson, “Phrenology, Education, and the Politics of Human Nature,” 2.
44.
Young, “Orson Squire Fowler,” 122; Stern,
Heads and Headlines
, 36â37.