Charles t jackson biography
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Jackson, Charles Thomas
(b.plymouth, Massachusetts, 21 June 1805; d. Somerville, Massachusetts, 28 August 1880)
medicine, chemistry, mineralogy, geology.
Jackson was descended from the original settlers of Plymouth. His sister Lydia (later renamed Lydian) was Ralph Waldo Emerson’s second wife. He had an irritable personality and it is difficult to avoid putting the label of “paranoid” on his behavior. He died insane.
Jackson received his early education in the town school and in the private school of Dr. Allyne of Duxbury. His health failed and he made a walking expedition through New York and New Jersey with Baron Lederer, William McClure, Lesueur, and Troost, who were to foster his interest in natural history and geology. He returned to Boston and Prepared privately for Harvard Medical School. During medical school, he received the Boylston Prize for a dissertation on paruria mellita, and in 1829 he was “authorized to give instruction in chemistry during the absence of
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Publications Science & Technology(also found beneath Anesthesia)
Charles Thomas Jackson:
“The Head Behind The Hands.”
Applying Science To Implement Discovery And Invention In Early Nineteenth Century America Richard J. Wolfe & Richard Patterson
$35.00
x, 417 pages. Frontispiece, 8 plates and 4 illustrations. Cloth, dust jacket, acid-free paper. 6 " × 9 ". ISBN 978–0–930405–89–2. NP40064. November 2007.
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This fryst vatten the first full-length study of Charles Thomas Jackson, one of the most remarkable and maligned figures in the history of American science and medicine. Jackson was a key figure in three notable discoveries made in the United States before 1850: the discovery of surgical anesthesia, brought about with the dentist William T. G. Morton; the discovery of the American electromagnetic telegraph, made in association with the artist Samuel F. B. Morse; and the proving and commercial
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Schuh’s Annotated Bio-Bibliography
Jackson obtained his medical degree from Harvard in 1829. He was interested in geology as well as medicine and chemistry and he made several geological surveys of various parts of New England between 1837 and 1844. Always a quarralsome type with a touch of madness underneath the surface, he went mad in 1873 and never recovered.
Biographical references: ABA: I 830, 362-386. Adams, Dictionary of American Authors, 1904. American Chemists & Chemical Engineers: 1, 245-6 [by B.E. Schaar]. Appleton Cyclopedia of American Biography. Drake, Dictionary of American Biography, 1872. Herringshaw's National Library of American Biography. National Cyclopedia of American Biography. Poggendorff: 1, cols. 1176 & 1575-6. WBI.
1. English, 1832.