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The People's Doctor
Samuel Thomson and the American Botanical Movement 1790-1860
1st Edition
John S. Haller Jr.
$49.95
Out of Print
Cloth
0-8093-2339-7
978-0-8093-2339-5
392 pages, 6 x 9
3/30/2001

About the Book

Samuel Thomson, born in New Hampshire in 1769 to an illiterate farming family, had no formal education, but he learned the elements of botanical medicine from a "root doctor," who he met in his youth. Thomson sought to release patients from the harsh bleeding or purging regimens of regular physicians by offering inexpensive and gentle medicines from their own fields and gardens. He melded his followers into a militant corps of dedicated believers, using them to successfully lobby state legislatures to pass medical acts favorable to their cause.

            

John S. Haller Jr. points out that Thomson began his studies by ministering to his own family. He started his professional career as an itinerant healer traveling a circuit among the small towns and villages of Maine, New Hampshire, and Massachusetts. Eventually, he transformed his medical practice into a successful business enterprise with agents selling several hundred thousand rights or franchises to his system. His popular New Guide to Health (1822) went through thirteen editions, including one in German, and countless thousands were reprinted without permission.

            

Told here for the first time, Haller's history of Thomsonism recounts the division within this American medical sect in the last century. While many Thomsonians displayed a powerful, vested interest in anti-intellectualism, a growing number found respectability through the establishment of medical colleges and a certified profession of botanical doctors.

            

The People's Doctors covers seventy years, from 1790, when Thomson began his practice on his own family, until 1860, when much of Thomson's medical domain had been captured by the more liberal Eclectics. Eighteen halftones illustrate this volume.


Authors/Editors

John S. Haller Jr. is a professor of history at Southern Illinois University Carbondale and the author of American Medicines in Transition, 1840–1910; Kindly Medicine: The Physio-Medicalism in America, 1836–1911; and A Profile in Alternative Medicine: The Eclectic Medical College of Cincinnati, 1846–1942.


Reviews

The People's Doctors is a well-researched and eminently readable account of the Thomsonian movement and its innovative and at times exasperating leader. Discussion of the early botanic schools and details of the botanic schisms forms a truly important contribution to our understanding of American sectarian medicine and of the colorful men and women who shaped it.”—Michael Flannery, author of John Uri Lloyd: The Great American Eclectic


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