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Volumn 48, Issue 1, 2004, Pages 69-94

A Pauper Dead-House: The Expansion of the Cambridge Anatomical Teaching School under the late-Victorian Poor Law, 1870-1914

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EID: 1642540230     PISSN: 00257273     EISSN: None     Source Type: Journal    
DOI: 10.1017/S0025727300007067     Document Type: Review
Times cited : (34)

References (128)
  • 1
    • 85039582492 scopus 로고
    • Alleged traffic in pauper corpses - How the medical schools are supplied - The shadow of a scandal
    • Editorial, 11 May
    • Editorial, 'Alleged traffic in pauper corpses -How the medical schools are supplied - The shadow of a scandal', Yarmouth Advertiser and Gazette, 11 May 1901, p. 7.
    • (1901) Yarmouth Advertiser and Gazette , pp. 7
  • 2
    • 85039582346 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Cambridge Record Office (hereafter CRO), P25/1/22, St Benedict's parish burial register, 1894-1906
    • Cambridge Record Office (hereafter CRO), P25/1/22, St Benedict's parish burial register, 1894-1906.
  • 3
    • 85039581350 scopus 로고
    • June. This was a journal of national significance
    • Councillor and Guardian, June 1901, p. 12. This was a journal of national significance.
    • (1901) Councillor and Guardian , pp. 12
  • 4
    • 0004238336 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • London, Phoenix Press, (first published 1988). The second ediion contains an afterword on the Alder Hey controversy
    • R Richardson, Death, dissection and the destitute, 2nd ed., London, Phoenix Press, 2001 (first published 1988). The second edition contains an afterword on the Alder Hey controversy.
    • (1988) Death, Dissection and the Destitute, 2nd Ed.
    • Richardson, R.1
  • 5
    • 0004238336 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Ibid., pp. 3-30; Richardson explains that popular culture held that human remains and the fate of the personality of the soul were one. The soul was guaranteed an after-life if the body was interred whole with some form of basic religious rite, usually Christian. The dissection or dismemberment of a corpse for anatomical teaching purposes, therefore, advertised social and religious failure to the wider community. Despite the concerns of the poor to preserve their popular death customs so as to avoid being condemned in this life and the next, the Anatomy Act gave legal precedence to anatomists' work. The statute permitted Poor Law and asylum authorities to recover welfare costs by selling any pauper cadavers "unclaimed" by relatives or friends up to six weeks after death for burial, to anatomical schools to be used for teaching purposes.
    • Death, Dissection and the Destitute, 2nd Ed. , pp. 3-30
  • 6
    • 0004238336 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Several renowned cases of grave-robbing for profit that supplied Cambridge came to light at Great Yarmouth in 1809, contributing to pressure for the new anatomical law, see Richardson, op. cit., see note 5 above, pp. 83, 85-9. Since the issue of consent remained controversial in the area vis-à-vis Cambridge after 1832 it makes an ideal case-study for examining the issue of continuity.
    • Death, Dissection and the Destitute, 2nd Ed. , pp. 83
    • Richardson1
  • 7
    • 1642569481 scopus 로고
    • Cambridge University Press
    • Four trends reflecting this proclivity are discernible in the current literature. First, some medical historians have examined university-based curriculum developments, see, for example, J A Fairfax Fozzard, Professors of anatomy in the University of Cambridge:. . . 1707-1968, Cambridge University Press,1 983; MR Jackson, 'The teaching of anatomy in London as seen through the Lancet, 1823-1848', BSc dissertation, London, Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine, 2000; M W Weatherall, Gentlemen, scientists and doctors: medicine at Cambridge, 1800-1940, Cambridge University Press, 2000. Second, others have explored the growth in laboratory technology: J V Pickstone, Medicine and industrial society: a history of hospital development in Manchester and its regions, 1752-1946, Manchester University Press, 1985; K Waddington, 'Unsuitable cases: the debate over out-patient admissions: the medical profession and late-Victorian London hospitals', Med. Hist., 1998, 42: 26-46; idem, Charity and the London hospitals, 1850-1898, London and New York, Boydell Press, 2000; M W Weatherall, Scientific medicine and the medical sciences in Cambridge, 1851-1939, Cambridge University Press, 1994. A third trend is to examine the impact of the Medical Act (1858): A Digby, Making a medical living: doctors and patients in the English market for medicine, 1720-1911, Cambridge University Press, 1994; I S L Loudon, Medical care and the general practitioner, 1750-1850, Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1986; R and D Porter, In sickness and in health: the English experience, 1650-1850, London, Fourth Estate, 1988; R Porter, Quacks, fakers and charlatans in English medicine, Stroud, Tempus Publishing, 2000. Finally, others have begun to explore the training experience of anatomy students: S V F Butler, 'A transformation in training: the formation of university medical faculties in Manchester, Leeds and Liverpool', Med. Hist. 1986, 30: 115-32; C Dyhouse, 'Women students and the London medical schools, 1914-39: the anatomy of a masculine culture', Gender and Hist., 1998, 10: 110-32; D Gareth Jones, Speaking for the dead: cadavers in biology and medicine, Aldershot, Ashgate, 2000; E Knox, 'The body politic: body snatching, the Anatomy Act and the poor on Tyneside', North East Labour History Bulletin, 1990, 24:19-35; R C Maulitz, Morbid appearances: the anatomy of pathology in the early nineteenth century, Cambridge University Press, 1987; P M H Mazumdar, 'Anatomical physiology and the reform of medical education: London, 1825-35', Bull. Hist. Med. 1983,57: 230-46; A Morgan, '"A beautiful, but seductive science" or "strange and revolting work"?: medical student's experiences of dissection between 1830 and 1880', BSc dissertation, London, Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine, 2001.
    • (1983) Professors of Anatomy in the University of Cambridge:. . . 1707-1968
    • Fairfax Fozzard, J.A.1
  • 8
    • 85039579612 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • BSc dissertation, London, Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine
    • Four trends reflecting this proclivity are discernible in the current literature. First, some medical historians have examined university-based curriculum developments, see, for example, J A Fairfax Fozzard, Professors of anatomy in the University of Cambridge:. . . 1707-1968, Cambridge University Press,1 983; MR Jackson, 'The teaching of anatomy in London as seen through the Lancet, 1823-1848', BSc dissertation, London, Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine, 2000; M W Weatherall, Gentlemen, scientists and doctors: medicine at Cambridge, 1800-1940, Cambridge University Press, 2000. Second, others have explored the growth in laboratory technology: J V Pickstone, Medicine and industrial society: a history of hospital development in Manchester and its regions, 1752-1946, Manchester University Press, 1985; K Waddington, 'Unsuitable cases: the debate over out-patient admissions: the medical profession and late-Victorian London hospitals', Med. Hist., 1998, 42: 26-46; idem, Charity and the London hospitals, 1850-1898, London and New York, Boydell Press, 2000; M W Weatherall, Scientific medicine and the medical sciences in Cambridge, 1851-1939, Cambridge University Press, 1994. A third trend is to examine the impact of the Medical Act (1858): A Digby, Making a medical living: doctors and patients in the English market for medicine, 1720-1911, Cambridge University Press, 1994; I S L Loudon, Medical care and the general practitioner, 1750-1850, Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1986; R and D Porter, In sickness and in health: the English experience, 1650-1850, London, Fourth Estate, 1988; R Porter, Quacks, fakers and charlatans in English medicine, Stroud, Tempus Publishing, 2000. Finally, others have begun to explore the training experience of anatomy students: S V F Butler, 'A transformation in training: the formation of university medical faculties in Manchester, Leeds and Liverpool', Med. Hist. 1986, 30: 115-32; C Dyhouse, 'Women students and the London medical schools, 1914-39: the anatomy of a masculine culture', Gender and Hist., 1998, 10: 110-32; D Gareth Jones, Speaking for the dead: cadavers in biology and medicine, Aldershot, Ashgate, 2000; E Knox, 'The body politic: body snatching, the Anatomy Act and the poor on Tyneside', North East Labour History Bulletin, 1990, 24:19-35; R C Maulitz, Morbid appearances: the anatomy of pathology in the early nineteenth century, Cambridge University Press, 1987; P M H Mazumdar, 'Anatomical physiology and the reform of medical education: London, 1825-35', Bull. Hist. Med. 1983,57: 230-46; A Morgan, '"A beautiful, but seductive science" or "strange and revolting work"?: medical student's experiences of dissection between 1830 and 1880', BSc dissertation, London, Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine, 2001.
    • (2000) The Teaching of Anatomy in London as Seen Through the Lancet, 1823-1848
    • Jackson, M.R.1
  • 9
    • 0037514889 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Cambridge University Press
    • Four trends reflecting this proclivity are discernible in the current literature. First, some medical historians have examined university-based curriculum developments, see, for example, J A Fairfax Fozzard, Professors of anatomy in the University of Cambridge:. . . 1707-1968, Cambridge University Press,1 983; MR Jackson, 'The teaching of anatomy in London as seen through the Lancet, 1823-1848', BSc dissertation, London, Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine, 2000; M W Weatherall, Gentlemen, scientists and doctors: medicine at Cambridge, 1800-1940, Cambridge University Press, 2000. Second, others have explored the growth in laboratory technology: J V Pickstone, Medicine and industrial society: a history of hospital development in Manchester and its regions, 1752-1946, Manchester University Press, 1985; K Waddington, 'Unsuitable cases: the debate over out-patient admissions: the medical profession and late-Victorian London hospitals', Med. Hist., 1998, 42: 26-46; idem, Charity and the London hospitals, 1850-1898, London and New York, Boydell Press, 2000; M W Weatherall, Scientific medicine and the medical sciences in Cambridge, 1851-1939, Cambridge University Press, 1994. A third trend is to examine the impact of the Medical Act (1858): A Digby, Making a medical living: doctors and patients in the English market for medicine, 1720-1911, Cambridge University Press, 1994; I S L Loudon, Medical care and the general practitioner, 1750-1850, Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1986; R and D Porter, In sickness and in health: the English experience, 1650-1850, London, Fourth Estate, 1988; R Porter, Quacks, fakers and charlatans in English medicine, Stroud, Tempus Publishing, 2000. Finally, others have begun to explore the training experience of anatomy students: S V F Butler, 'A transformation in training: the formation of university medical faculties in Manchester, Leeds and Liverpool', Med. Hist. 1986, 30: 115-32; C Dyhouse, 'Women students and the London medical schools, 1914-39: the anatomy of a masculine culture', Gender and Hist., 1998, 10: 110-32; D Gareth Jones, Speaking for the dead: cadavers in biology and medicine, Aldershot, Ashgate, 2000; E Knox, 'The body politic: body snatching, the Anatomy Act and the poor on Tyneside', North East Labour History Bulletin, 1990, 24:19-35; R C Maulitz, Morbid appearances: the anatomy of pathology in the early nineteenth century, Cambridge University Press, 1987; P M H Mazumdar, 'Anatomical physiology and the reform of medical education: London, 1825-35', Bull. Hist. Med. 1983,57: 230-46; A Morgan, '"A beautiful, but seductive science" or "strange and revolting work"?: medical student's experiences of dissection between 1830 and 1880', BSc dissertation, London, Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine, 2001.
    • (2000) Gentlemen, Scientists and Doctors: Medicine at Cambridge, 1800-1940
    • Weatherall, M.W.1
  • 10
    • 0004014141 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Manchester University Press
    • Four trends reflecting this proclivity are discernible in the current literature. First, some medical historians have examined university-based curriculum developments, see, for example, J A Fairfax Fozzard, Professors of anatomy in the University of Cambridge:. . . 1707-1968, Cambridge University Press,1 983; MR Jackson, 'The teaching of anatomy in London as seen through the Lancet, 1823-1848', BSc dissertation, London, Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine, 2000; M W Weatherall, Gentlemen, scientists and doctors: medicine at Cambridge, 1800-1940, Cambridge University Press, 2000. Second, others have explored the growth in laboratory technology: J V Pickstone, Medicine and industrial society: a history of hospital development in Manchester and its regions, 1752-1946, Manchester University Press, 1985; K Waddington, 'Unsuitable cases: the debate over out-patient admissions: the medical profession and late-Victorian London hospitals', Med. Hist., 1998, 42: 26-46; idem, Charity and the London hospitals, 1850-1898, London and New York, Boydell Press, 2000; M W Weatherall, Scientific medicine and the medical sciences in Cambridge, 1851-1939, Cambridge University Press, 1994. A third trend is to examine the impact of the Medical Act (1858): A Digby, Making a medical living: doctors and patients in the English market for medicine, 1720-1911, Cambridge University Press, 1994; I S L Loudon, Medical care and the general practitioner, 1750-1850, Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1986; R and D Porter, In sickness and in health: the English experience, 1650-1850, London, Fourth Estate, 1988; R Porter, Quacks, fakers and charlatans in English medicine, Stroud, Tempus Publishing, 2000. Finally, others have begun to explore the training experience of anatomy students: S V F Butler, 'A transformation in training: the formation of university medical faculties in Manchester, Leeds and Liverpool', Med. Hist. 1986, 30: 115-32; C Dyhouse, 'Women students and the London medical schools, 1914-39: the anatomy of a masculine culture', Gender and Hist., 1998, 10: 110-32; D Gareth Jones, Speaking for the dead: cadavers in biology and medicine, Aldershot, Ashgate, 2000; E Knox, 'The body politic: body snatching, the Anatomy Act and the poor on Tyneside', North East Labour History Bulletin, 1990, 24:19-35; R C Maulitz, Morbid appearances: the anatomy of pathology in the early nineteenth century, Cambridge University Press, 1987; P M H Mazumdar, 'Anatomical physiology and the reform of medical education: London, 1825-35', Bull. Hist. Med. 1983,57: 230-46; A Morgan, '"A beautiful, but seductive science" or "strange and revolting work"?: medical student's experiences of dissection between 1830 and 1880', BSc dissertation, London, Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine, 2001.
    • (1985) Medicine and Industrial Society: A History of Hospital Development in Manchester and Its Regions, 1752-1946
    • Pickstone, J.V.1
  • 11
    • 0031609275 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Unsuitable cases: The debate over out-patient admissions: The medical profession and late-Victorian London hospitals
    • Four trends reflecting this proclivity are discernible in the current literature. First, some medical historians have examined university-based curriculum developments, see, for example, J A Fairfax Fozzard, Professors of anatomy in the University of Cambridge:. . . 1707-1968, Cambridge University Press,1 983; MR Jackson, 'The teaching of anatomy in London as seen through the Lancet, 1823-1848', BSc dissertation, London, Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine, 2000; M W Weatherall, Gentlemen, scientists and doctors: medicine at Cambridge, 1800-1940, Cambridge University Press, 2000. Second, others have explored the growth in laboratory technology: J V Pickstone, Medicine and industrial society: a history of hospital development in Manchester and its regions, 1752-1946, Manchester University Press, 1985; K Waddington, 'Unsuitable cases: the debate over out-patient admissions: the medical profession and late-Victorian London hospitals', Med. Hist., 1998, 42: 26-46; idem, Charity and the London hospitals, 1850-1898, London and New York, Boydell Press, 2000; M W Weatherall, Scientific medicine and the medical sciences in Cambridge, 1851-1939, Cambridge University Press, 1994. A third trend is to examine the impact of the Medical Act (1858): A Digby, Making a medical living: doctors and patients in the English market for medicine, 1720-1911, Cambridge University Press, 1994; I S L Loudon, Medical care and the general practitioner, 1750-1850, Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1986; R and D Porter, In sickness and in health: the English experience, 1650-1850, London, Fourth Estate, 1988; R Porter, Quacks, fakers and charlatans in English medicine, Stroud, Tempus Publishing, 2000. Finally, others have begun to explore the training experience of anatomy students: S V F Butler, 'A transformation in training: the formation of university medical faculties in Manchester, Leeds and Liverpool', Med. Hist. 1986, 30: 115-32; C Dyhouse, 'Women students and the London medical schools, 1914-39: the anatomy of a masculine culture', Gender and Hist., 1998, 10: 110-32; D Gareth Jones, Speaking for the dead: cadavers in biology and medicine, Aldershot, Ashgate, 2000; E Knox, 'The body politic: body snatching, the Anatomy Act and the poor on Tyneside', North East Labour History Bulletin, 1990, 24:19-35; R C Maulitz, Morbid appearances: the anatomy of pathology in the early nineteenth century, Cambridge University Press, 1987; P M H Mazumdar, 'Anatomical physiology and the reform of medical education: London, 1825-35', Bull. Hist. Med. 1983,57: 230-46; A Morgan, '"A beautiful, but seductive science" or "strange and revolting work"?: medical student's experiences of dissection between 1830 and 1880', BSc dissertation, London, Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine, 2001.
    • (1998) Med. Hist. , vol.42 , pp. 26-46
    • Waddington, K.1
  • 12
    • 0041603559 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • London and New York, Boydell Press
    • Four trends reflecting this proclivity are discernible in the current literature. First, some medical historians have examined university-based curriculum developments, see, for example, J A Fairfax Fozzard, Professors of anatomy in the University of Cambridge:. . . 1707-1968, Cambridge University Press,1 983; MR Jackson, 'The teaching of anatomy in London as seen through the Lancet, 1823-1848', BSc dissertation, London, Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine, 2000; M W Weatherall, Gentlemen, scientists and doctors: medicine at Cambridge, 1800-1940, Cambridge University Press, 2000. Second, others have explored the growth in laboratory technology: J V Pickstone, Medicine and industrial society: a history of hospital development in Manchester and its regions, 1752-1946, Manchester University Press, 1985; K Waddington, 'Unsuitable cases: the debate over out-patient admissions: the medical profession and late-Victorian London hospitals', Med. Hist., 1998, 42: 26-46; idem, Charity and the London hospitals, 1850-1898, London and New York, Boydell Press, 2000; M W Weatherall, Scientific medicine and the medical sciences in Cambridge, 1851-1939, Cambridge University Press, 1994. A third trend is to examine the impact of the Medical Act (1858): A Digby, Making a medical living: doctors and patients in the English market for medicine, 1720-1911, Cambridge University Press, 1994; I S L Loudon, Medical care and the general practitioner, 1750-1850, Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1986; R and D Porter, In sickness and in health: the English experience, 1650-1850, London, Fourth Estate, 1988; R Porter, Quacks, fakers and charlatans in English medicine, Stroud, Tempus Publishing, 2000. Finally, others have begun to explore the training experience of anatomy students: S V F Butler, 'A transformation in training: the formation of university medical faculties in Manchester, Leeds and Liverpool', Med. Hist. 1986, 30: 115-32; C Dyhouse, 'Women students and the London medical schools, 1914-39: the anatomy of a masculine culture', Gender and Hist., 1998, 10: 110-32; D Gareth Jones, Speaking for the dead: cadavers in biology and medicine, Aldershot, Ashgate, 2000; E Knox, 'The body politic: body snatching, the Anatomy Act and the poor on Tyneside', North East Labour History Bulletin, 1990, 24:19-35; R C Maulitz, Morbid appearances: the anatomy of pathology in the early nineteenth century, Cambridge University Press, 1987; P M H Mazumdar, 'Anatomical physiology and the reform of medical education: London, 1825-35', Bull. Hist. Med. 1983,57: 230-46; A Morgan, '"A beautiful, but seductive science" or "strange and revolting work"?: medical student's experiences of dissection between 1830 and 1880', BSc dissertation, London, Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine, 2001.
    • (2000) Charity and the London Hospitals, 1850-1898
    • Waddington, K.1
  • 13
    • 0347520781 scopus 로고
    • Cambridge University Press
    • Four trends reflecting this proclivity are discernible in the current literature. First, some medical historians have examined university-based curriculum developments, see, for example, J A Fairfax Fozzard, Professors of anatomy in the University of Cambridge:. . . 1707-1968, Cambridge University Press,1 983; MR Jackson, 'The teaching of anatomy in London as seen through the Lancet, 1823-1848', BSc dissertation, London, Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine, 2000; M W Weatherall, Gentlemen, scientists and doctors: medicine at Cambridge, 1800-1940, Cambridge University Press, 2000. Second, others have explored the growth in laboratory technology: J V Pickstone, Medicine and industrial society: a history of hospital development in Manchester and its regions, 1752-1946, Manchester University Press, 1985; K Waddington, 'Unsuitable cases: the debate over out-patient admissions: the medical profession and late-Victorian London hospitals', Med. Hist., 1998, 42: 26-46; idem, Charity and the London hospitals, 1850-1898, London and New York, Boydell Press, 2000; M W Weatherall, Scientific medicine and the medical sciences in Cambridge, 1851-1939, Cambridge University Press, 1994. A third trend is to examine the impact of the Medical Act (1858): A Digby, Making a medical living: doctors and patients in the English market for medicine, 1720-1911, Cambridge University Press, 1994; I S L Loudon, Medical care and the general practitioner, 1750-1850, Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1986; R and D Porter, In sickness and in health: the English experience, 1650-1850, London, Fourth Estate, 1988; R Porter, Quacks, fakers and charlatans in English medicine, Stroud, Tempus Publishing, 2000. Finally, others have begun to explore the training experience of anatomy students: S V F Butler, 'A transformation in training: the formation of university medical faculties in Manchester, Leeds and Liverpool', Med. Hist. 1986, 30: 115-32; C Dyhouse, 'Women students and the London medical schools, 1914-39: the anatomy of a masculine culture', Gender and Hist., 1998, 10: 110-32; D Gareth Jones, Speaking for the dead: cadavers in biology and medicine, Aldershot, Ashgate, 2000; E Knox, 'The body politic: body snatching, the Anatomy Act and the poor on Tyneside', North East Labour History Bulletin, 1990, 24:19-35; R C Maulitz, Morbid appearances: the anatomy of pathology in the early nineteenth century, Cambridge University Press, 1987; P M H Mazumdar, 'Anatomical physiology and the reform of medical education: London, 1825-35', Bull. Hist. Med. 1983,57: 230-46; A Morgan, '"A beautiful, but seductive science" or "strange and revolting work"?: medical student's experiences of dissection between 1830 and 1880', BSc dissertation, London, Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine, 2001.
    • (1994) Scientific Medicine and the Medical Sciences in Cambridge, 1851-1939
    • Weatherall, M.W.1
  • 14
    • 0003709120 scopus 로고
    • Cambridge University Press
    • Four trends reflecting this proclivity are discernible in the current literature. First, some medical historians have examined university-based curriculum developments, see, for example, J A Fairfax Fozzard, Professors of anatomy in the University of Cambridge:. . . 1707-1968, Cambridge University Press,1 983; MR Jackson, 'The teaching of anatomy in London as seen through the Lancet, 1823-1848', BSc dissertation, London, Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine, 2000; M W Weatherall, Gentlemen, scientists and doctors: medicine at Cambridge, 1800-1940, Cambridge University Press, 2000. Second, others have explored the growth in laboratory technology: J V Pickstone, Medicine and industrial society: a history of hospital development in Manchester and its regions, 1752-1946, Manchester University Press, 1985; K Waddington, 'Unsuitable cases: the debate over out-patient admissions: the medical profession and late-Victorian London hospitals', Med. Hist., 1998, 42: 26-46; idem, Charity and the London hospitals, 1850-1898, London and New York, Boydell Press, 2000; M W Weatherall, Scientific medicine and the medical sciences in Cambridge, 1851-1939, Cambridge University Press, 1994. A third trend is to examine the impact of the Medical Act (1858): A Digby, Making a medical living: doctors and patients in the English market for medicine, 1720-1911, Cambridge University Press, 1994; I S L Loudon, Medical care and the general practitioner, 1750-1850, Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1986; R and D Porter, In sickness and in health: the English experience, 1650-1850, London, Fourth Estate, 1988; R Porter, Quacks, fakers and charlatans in English medicine, Stroud, Tempus Publishing, 2000. Finally, others have begun to explore the training experience of anatomy students: S V F Butler, 'A transformation in training: the formation of university medical faculties in Manchester, Leeds and Liverpool', Med. Hist. 1986, 30: 115-32; C Dyhouse, 'Women students and the London medical schools, 1914-39: the anatomy of a masculine culture', Gender and Hist., 1998, 10: 110-32; D Gareth Jones, Speaking for the dead: cadavers in biology and medicine, Aldershot, Ashgate, 2000; E Knox, 'The body politic: body snatching, the Anatomy Act and the poor on Tyneside', North East Labour History Bulletin, 1990, 24:19-35; R C Maulitz, Morbid appearances: the anatomy of pathology in the early nineteenth century, Cambridge University Press, 1987; P M H Mazumdar, 'Anatomical physiology and the reform of medical education: London, 1825-35', Bull. Hist. Med. 1983,57: 230-46; A Morgan, '"A beautiful, but seductive science" or "strange and revolting work"?: medical student's experiences of dissection between 1830 and 1880', BSc dissertation, London, Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine, 2001.
    • (1994) Making a Medical Living: Doctors and Patients in the English Market for Medicine, 1720-1911
    • Digby, A.1
  • 15
    • 0003709469 scopus 로고
    • Oxford, Clarendon Press
    • Four trends reflecting this proclivity are discernible in the current literature. First, some medical historians have examined university-based curriculum developments, see, for example, J A Fairfax Fozzard, Professors of anatomy in the University of Cambridge:. . . 1707-1968, Cambridge University Press,1 983; MR Jackson, 'The teaching of anatomy in London as seen through the Lancet, 1823-1848', BSc dissertation, London, Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine, 2000; M W Weatherall, Gentlemen, scientists and doctors: medicine at Cambridge, 1800-1940, Cambridge University Press, 2000. Second, others have explored the growth in laboratory technology: J V Pickstone, Medicine and industrial society: a history of hospital development in Manchester and its regions, 1752-1946, Manchester University Press, 1985; K Waddington, 'Unsuitable cases: the debate over out-patient admissions: the medical profession and late-Victorian London hospitals', Med. Hist., 1998, 42: 26-46; idem, Charity and the London hospitals, 1850-1898, London and New York, Boydell Press, 2000; M W Weatherall, Scientific medicine and the medical sciences in Cambridge, 1851-1939, Cambridge University Press, 1994. A third trend is to examine the impact of the Medical Act (1858): A Digby, Making a medical living: doctors and patients in the English market for medicine, 1720-1911, Cambridge University Press, 1994; I S L Loudon, Medical care and the general practitioner, 1750-1850, Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1986; R and D Porter, In sickness and in health: the English experience, 1650-1850, London, Fourth Estate, 1988; R Porter, Quacks, fakers and charlatans in English medicine, Stroud, Tempus Publishing, 2000. Finally, others have begun to explore the training experience of anatomy students: S V F Butler, 'A transformation in training: the formation of university medical faculties in Manchester, Leeds and Liverpool', Med. Hist. 1986, 30: 115-32; C Dyhouse, 'Women students and the London medical schools, 1914-39: the anatomy of a masculine culture', Gender and Hist., 1998, 10: 110-32; D Gareth Jones, Speaking for the dead: cadavers in biology and medicine, Aldershot, Ashgate, 2000; E Knox, 'The body politic: body snatching, the Anatomy Act and the poor on Tyneside', North East Labour History Bulletin, 1990, 24:19-35; R C Maulitz, Morbid appearances: the anatomy of pathology in the early nineteenth century, Cambridge University Press, 1987; P M H Mazumdar, 'Anatomical physiology and the reform of medical education: London, 1825-35', Bull. Hist. Med. 1983,57: 230-46; A Morgan, '"A beautiful, but seductive science" or "strange and revolting work"?: medical student's experiences of dissection between 1830 and 1880', BSc dissertation, London, Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine, 2001.
    • (1986) Medical Care and the General Practitioner, 1750-1850
    • Loudon, I.S.L.1
  • 16
    • 0004738398 scopus 로고
    • London, Fourth Estate
    • Four trends reflecting this proclivity are discernible in the current literature. First, some medical historians have examined university-based curriculum developments, see, for example, J A Fairfax Fozzard, Professors of anatomy in the University of Cambridge:. . . 1707-1968, Cambridge University Press,1 983; MR Jackson, 'The teaching of anatomy in London as seen through the Lancet, 1823-1848', BSc dissertation, London, Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine, 2000; M W Weatherall, Gentlemen, scientists and doctors: medicine at Cambridge, 1800-1940, Cambridge University Press, 2000. Second, others have explored the growth in laboratory technology: J V Pickstone, Medicine and industrial society: a history of hospital development in Manchester and its regions, 1752-1946, Manchester University Press, 1985; K Waddington, 'Unsuitable cases: the debate over out-patient admissions: the medical profession and late-Victorian London hospitals', Med. Hist., 1998, 42: 26-46; idem, Charity and the London hospitals, 1850-1898, London and New York, Boydell Press, 2000; M W Weatherall, Scientific medicine and the medical sciences in Cambridge, 1851-1939, Cambridge University Press, 1994. A third trend is to examine the impact of the Medical Act (1858): A Digby, Making a medical living: doctors and patients in the English market for medicine, 1720-1911, Cambridge University Press, 1994; I S L Loudon, Medical care and the general practitioner, 1750-1850, Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1986; R and D Porter, In sickness and in health: the English experience, 1650-1850, London, Fourth Estate, 1988; R Porter, Quacks, fakers and charlatans in English medicine, Stroud, Tempus Publishing, 2000. Finally, others have begun to explore the training experience of anatomy students: S V F Butler, 'A transformation in training: the formation of university medical faculties in Manchester, Leeds and Liverpool', Med. Hist. 1986, 30: 115-32; C Dyhouse, 'Women students and the London medical schools, 1914-39: the anatomy of a masculine culture', Gender and Hist., 1998, 10: 110-32; D Gareth Jones, Speaking for the dead: cadavers in biology and medicine, Aldershot, Ashgate, 2000; E Knox, 'The body politic: body snatching, the Anatomy Act and the poor on Tyneside', North East Labour History Bulletin, 1990, 24:19-35; R C Maulitz, Morbid appearances: the anatomy of pathology in the early nineteenth century, Cambridge University Press, 1987; P M H Mazumdar, 'Anatomical physiology and the reform of medical education: London, 1825-35', Bull. Hist. Med. 1983,57: 230-46; A Morgan, '"A beautiful, but seductive science" or "strange and revolting work"?: medical student's experiences of dissection between 1830 and 1880', BSc dissertation, London, Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine, 2001.
    • (1988) In Sickness and in Health: The English Experience, 1650-1850
    • Porter, D.1
  • 17
    • 0344377576 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Stroud, Tempus Publishing
    • Four trends reflecting this proclivity are discernible in the current literature. First, some medical historians have examined university-based curriculum developments, see, for example, J A Fairfax Fozzard, Professors of anatomy in the University of Cambridge:. . . 1707-1968, Cambridge University Press,1 983; MR Jackson, 'The teaching of anatomy in London as seen through the Lancet, 1823-1848', BSc dissertation, London, Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine, 2000; M W Weatherall, Gentlemen, scientists and doctors: medicine at Cambridge, 1800-1940, Cambridge University Press, 2000. Second, others have explored the growth in laboratory technology: J V Pickstone, Medicine and industrial society: a history of hospital development in Manchester and its regions, 1752-1946, Manchester University Press, 1985; K Waddington, 'Unsuitable cases: the debate over out-patient admissions: the medical profession and late-Victorian London hospitals', Med. Hist., 1998, 42: 26-46; idem, Charity and the London hospitals, 1850-1898, London and New York, Boydell Press, 2000; M W Weatherall, Scientific medicine and the medical sciences in Cambridge, 1851-1939, Cambridge University Press, 1994. A third trend is to examine the impact of the Medical Act (1858): A Digby, Making a medical living: doctors and patients in the English market for medicine, 1720-1911, Cambridge University Press, 1994; I S L Loudon, Medical care and the general practitioner, 1750-1850, Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1986; R and D Porter, In sickness and in health: the English experience, 1650-1850, London, Fourth Estate, 1988; R Porter, Quacks, fakers and charlatans in English medicine, Stroud, Tempus Publishing, 2000. Finally, others have begun to explore the training experience of anatomy students: S V F Butler, 'A transformation in training: the formation of university medical faculties in Manchester, Leeds and Liverpool', Med. Hist. 1986, 30: 115-32; C Dyhouse, 'Women students and the London medical schools, 1914-39: the anatomy of a masculine culture', Gender and Hist., 1998, 10: 110-32; D Gareth Jones, Speaking for the dead: cadavers in biology and medicine, Aldershot, Ashgate, 2000; E Knox, 'The body politic: body snatching, the Anatomy Act and the poor on Tyneside', North East Labour History Bulletin, 1990, 24:19-35; R C Maulitz, Morbid appearances: the anatomy of pathology in the early nineteenth century, Cambridge University Press, 1987; P M H Mazumdar, 'Anatomical physiology and the reform of medical education: London, 1825-35', Bull. Hist. Med. 1983,57: 230-46; A Morgan, '"A beautiful, but seductive science" or "strange and revolting work"?: medical student's experiences of dissection between 1830 and 1880', BSc dissertation, London, Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine, 2001.
    • (2000) Quacks, Fakers and Charlatans in English Medicine
    • Porter, R.1
  • 18
    • 0022620567 scopus 로고
    • A transformation in training: The formation of university medical faculties in Manchester, Leeds and Liverpool
    • Four trends reflecting this proclivity are discernible in the current literature. First, some medical historians have examined university-based curriculum developments, see, for example, J A Fairfax Fozzard, Professors of anatomy in the University of Cambridge:. . . 1707-1968, Cambridge University Press,1 983; MR Jackson, 'The teaching of anatomy in London as seen through the Lancet, 1823-1848', BSc dissertation, London, Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine, 2000; M W Weatherall, Gentlemen, scientists and doctors: medicine at Cambridge, 1800-1940, Cambridge University Press, 2000. Second, others have explored the growth in laboratory technology: J V Pickstone, Medicine and industrial society: a history of hospital development in Manchester and its regions, 1752-1946, Manchester University Press, 1985; K Waddington, 'Unsuitable cases: the debate over out-patient admissions: the medical profession and late-Victorian London hospitals', Med. Hist., 1998, 42: 26-46; idem, Charity and the London hospitals, 1850-1898, London and New York, Boydell Press, 2000; M W Weatherall, Scientific medicine and the medical sciences in Cambridge, 1851-1939, Cambridge University Press, 1994. A third trend is to examine the impact of the Medical Act (1858): A Digby, Making a medical living: doctors and patients in the English market for medicine, 1720-1911, Cambridge University Press, 1994; I S L Loudon, Medical care and the general practitioner, 1750-1850, Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1986; R and D Porter, In sickness and in health: the English experience, 1650-1850, London, Fourth Estate, 1988; R Porter, Quacks, fakers and charlatans in English medicine, Stroud, Tempus Publishing, 2000. Finally, others have begun to explore the training experience of anatomy students: S V F Butler, 'A transformation in training: the formation of university medical faculties in Manchester, Leeds and Liverpool', Med. Hist. 1986, 30: 115-32; C Dyhouse, 'Women students and the London medical schools, 1914-39: the anatomy of a masculine culture', Gender and Hist., 1998, 10: 110-32; D Gareth Jones, Speaking for the dead: cadavers in biology and medicine, Aldershot, Ashgate, 2000; E Knox, 'The body politic: body snatching, the Anatomy Act and the poor on Tyneside', North East Labour History Bulletin, 1990, 24:19-35; R C Maulitz, Morbid appearances: the anatomy of pathology in the early nineteenth century, Cambridge University Press, 1987; P M H Mazumdar, 'Anatomical physiology and the reform of medical education: London, 1825-35', Bull. Hist. Med. 1983,57: 230-46; A Morgan, '"A beautiful, but seductive science" or "strange and revolting work"?: medical student's experiences of dissection between 1830 and 1880', BSc dissertation, London, Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine, 2001.
    • (1986) Med. Hist. , vol.30 , pp. 115-132
    • Butler, S.V.F.1
  • 19
    • 0040810591 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Women students and the London medical schools, 1914-39: The anatomy of a masculine culture
    • Four trends reflecting this proclivity are discernible in the current literature. First, some medical historians have examined university-based curriculum developments, see, for example, J A Fairfax Fozzard, Professors of anatomy in the University of Cambridge:. . . 1707-1968, Cambridge University Press,1 983; MR Jackson, 'The teaching of anatomy in London as seen through the Lancet, 1823-1848', BSc dissertation, London, Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine, 2000; M W Weatherall, Gentlemen, scientists and doctors: medicine at Cambridge, 1800-1940, Cambridge University Press, 2000. Second, others have explored the growth in laboratory technology: J V Pickstone, Medicine and industrial society: a history of hospital development in Manchester and its regions, 1752-1946, Manchester University Press, 1985; K Waddington, 'Unsuitable cases: the debate over out-patient admissions: the medical profession and late-Victorian London hospitals', Med. Hist., 1998, 42: 26-46; idem, Charity and the London hospitals, 1850-1898, London and New York, Boydell Press, 2000; M W Weatherall, Scientific medicine and the medical sciences in Cambridge, 1851-1939, Cambridge University Press, 1994. A third trend is to examine the impact of the Medical Act (1858): A Digby, Making a medical living: doctors and patients in the English market for medicine, 1720-1911, Cambridge University Press, 1994; I S L Loudon, Medical care and the general practitioner, 1750-1850, Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1986; R and D Porter, In sickness and in health: the English experience, 1650-1850, London, Fourth Estate, 1988; R Porter, Quacks, fakers and charlatans in English medicine, Stroud, Tempus Publishing, 2000. Finally, others have begun to explore the training experience of anatomy students: S V F Butler, 'A transformation in training: the formation of university medical faculties in Manchester, Leeds and Liverpool', Med. Hist. 1986, 30: 115-32; C Dyhouse, 'Women students and the London medical schools, 1914-39: the anatomy of a masculine culture', Gender and Hist., 1998, 10: 110-32; D Gareth Jones, Speaking for the dead: cadavers in biology and medicine, Aldershot, Ashgate, 2000; E Knox, 'The body politic: body snatching, the Anatomy Act and the poor on Tyneside', North East Labour History Bulletin, 1990, 24:19-35; R C Maulitz, Morbid appearances: the anatomy of pathology in the early nineteenth century, Cambridge University Press, 1987; P M H Mazumdar, 'Anatomical physiology and the reform of medical education: London, 1825-35', Bull. Hist. Med. 1983,57: 230-46; A Morgan, '"A beautiful, but seductive science" or "strange and revolting work"?: medical student's experiences of dissection between 1830 and 1880', BSc dissertation, London, Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine, 2001.
    • (1998) Gender and Hist. , vol.10 , pp. 110-132
    • Dyhouse, C.1
  • 20
    • 0003418067 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Aldershot, Ashgate
    • Four trends reflecting this proclivity are discernible in the current literature. First, some medical historians have examined university-based curriculum developments, see, for example, J A Fairfax Fozzard, Professors of anatomy in the University of Cambridge:. . . 1707-1968, Cambridge University Press,1 983; MR Jackson, 'The teaching of anatomy in London as seen through the Lancet, 1823-1848', BSc dissertation, London, Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine, 2000; M W Weatherall, Gentlemen, scientists and doctors: medicine at Cambridge, 1800-1940, Cambridge University Press, 2000. Second, others have explored the growth in laboratory technology: J V Pickstone, Medicine and industrial society: a history of hospital development in Manchester and its regions, 1752-1946, Manchester University Press, 1985; K Waddington, 'Unsuitable cases: the debate over out-patient admissions: the medical profession and late-Victorian London hospitals', Med. Hist., 1998, 42: 26-46; idem, Charity and the London hospitals, 1850-1898, London and New York, Boydell Press, 2000; M W Weatherall, Scientific medicine and the medical sciences in Cambridge, 1851-1939, Cambridge University Press, 1994. A third trend is to examine the impact of the Medical Act (1858): A Digby, Making a medical living: doctors and patients in the English market for medicine, 1720-1911, Cambridge University Press, 1994; I S L Loudon, Medical care and the general practitioner, 1750-1850, Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1986; R and D Porter, In sickness and in health: the English experience, 1650-1850, London, Fourth Estate, 1988; R Porter, Quacks, fakers and charlatans in English medicine, Stroud, Tempus Publishing, 2000. Finally, others have begun to explore the training experience of anatomy students: S V F Butler, 'A transformation in training: the formation of university medical faculties in Manchester, Leeds and Liverpool', Med. Hist. 1986, 30: 115-32; C Dyhouse, 'Women students and the London medical schools, 1914-39: the anatomy of a masculine culture', Gender and Hist., 1998, 10: 110-32; D Gareth Jones, Speaking for the dead: cadavers in biology and medicine, Aldershot, Ashgate, 2000; E Knox, 'The body politic: body snatching, the Anatomy Act and the poor on Tyneside', North East Labour History Bulletin, 1990, 24:19-35; R C Maulitz, Morbid appearances: the anatomy of pathology in the early nineteenth century, Cambridge University Press, 1987; P M H Mazumdar, 'Anatomical physiology and the reform of medical education: London, 1825-35', Bull. Hist. Med. 1983,57: 230-46; A Morgan, '"A beautiful, but seductive science" or "strange and revolting work"?: medical student's experiences of dissection between 1830 and 1880', BSc dissertation, London, Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine, 2001.
    • (2000) Speaking for the Dead: Cadavers in Biology and Medicine
    • Gareth Jones, D.1
  • 21
    • 1642528736 scopus 로고
    • The body politic: Body snatching, the Anatomy Act and the poor on Tyneside
    • Four trends reflecting this proclivity are discernible in the current literature. First, some medical historians have examined university-based curriculum developments, see, for example, J A Fairfax Fozzard, Professors of anatomy in the University of Cambridge:. . . 1707-1968, Cambridge University Press,1 983; MR Jackson, 'The teaching of anatomy in London as seen through the Lancet, 1823-1848', BSc dissertation, London, Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine, 2000; M W Weatherall, Gentlemen, scientists and doctors: medicine at Cambridge, 1800-1940, Cambridge University Press, 2000. Second, others have explored the growth in laboratory technology: J V Pickstone, Medicine and industrial society: a history of hospital development in Manchester and its regions, 1752-1946, Manchester University Press, 1985; K Waddington, 'Unsuitable cases: the debate over out-patient admissions: the medical profession and late-Victorian London hospitals', Med. Hist., 1998, 42: 26-46; idem, Charity and the London hospitals, 1850-1898, London and New York, Boydell Press, 2000; M W Weatherall, Scientific medicine and the medical sciences in Cambridge, 1851-1939, Cambridge University Press, 1994. A third trend is to examine the impact of the Medical Act (1858): A Digby, Making a medical living: doctors and patients in the English market for medicine, 1720-1911, Cambridge University Press, 1994; I S L Loudon, Medical care and the general practitioner, 1750-1850, Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1986; R and D Porter, In sickness and in health: the English experience, 1650-1850, London, Fourth Estate, 1988; R Porter, Quacks, fakers and charlatans in English medicine, Stroud, Tempus Publishing, 2000. Finally, others have begun to explore the training experience of anatomy students: S V F Butler, 'A transformation in training: the formation of university medical faculties in Manchester, Leeds and Liverpool', Med. Hist. 1986, 30: 115-32; C Dyhouse, 'Women students and the London medical schools, 1914-39: the anatomy of a masculine culture', Gender and Hist., 1998, 10: 110-32; D Gareth Jones, Speaking for the dead: cadavers in biology and medicine, Aldershot, Ashgate, 2000; E Knox, 'The body politic: body snatching, the Anatomy Act and the poor on Tyneside', North East Labour History Bulletin, 1990, 24:19-35; R C Maulitz, Morbid appearances: the anatomy of pathology in the early nineteenth century, Cambridge University Press, 1987; P M H Mazumdar, 'Anatomical physiology and the reform of medical education: London, 1825-35', Bull. Hist. Med. 1983,57: 230-46; A Morgan, '"A beautiful, but seductive science" or "strange and revolting work"?: medical student's experiences of dissection between 1830 and 1880', BSc dissertation, London, Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine, 2001.
    • (1990) North East Labour History Bulletin , vol.24 , pp. 19-35
    • Knox, E.1
  • 22
    • 0041378884 scopus 로고
    • Cambridge University Press
    • Four trends reflecting this proclivity are discernible in the current literature. First, some medical historians have examined university-based curriculum developments, see, for example, J A Fairfax Fozzard, Professors of anatomy in the University of Cambridge:. . . 1707-1968, Cambridge University Press,1 983; MR Jackson, 'The teaching of anatomy in London as seen through the Lancet, 1823-1848', BSc dissertation, London, Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine, 2000; M W Weatherall, Gentlemen, scientists and doctors: medicine at Cambridge, 1800-1940, Cambridge University Press, 2000. Second, others have explored the growth in laboratory technology: J V Pickstone, Medicine and industrial society: a history of hospital development in Manchester and its regions, 1752-1946, Manchester University Press, 1985; K Waddington, 'Unsuitable cases: the debate over out-patient admissions: the medical profession and late-Victorian London hospitals', Med. Hist., 1998, 42: 26-46; idem, Charity and the London hospitals, 1850-1898, London and New York, Boydell Press, 2000; M W Weatherall, Scientific medicine and the medical sciences in Cambridge, 1851-1939, Cambridge University Press, 1994. A third trend is to examine the impact of the Medical Act (1858): A Digby, Making a medical living: doctors and patients in the English market for medicine, 1720-1911, Cambridge University Press, 1994; I S L Loudon, Medical care and the general practitioner, 1750-1850, Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1986; R and D Porter, In sickness and in health: the English experience, 1650-1850, London, Fourth Estate, 1988; R Porter, Quacks, fakers and charlatans in English medicine, Stroud, Tempus Publishing, 2000. Finally, others have begun to explore the training experience of anatomy students: S V F Butler, 'A transformation in training: the formation of university medical faculties in Manchester, Leeds and Liverpool', Med. Hist. 1986, 30: 115-32; C Dyhouse, 'Women students and the London medical schools, 1914-39: the anatomy of a masculine culture', Gender and Hist., 1998, 10: 110-32; D Gareth Jones, Speaking for the dead: cadavers in biology and medicine, Aldershot, Ashgate, 2000; E Knox, 'The body politic: body snatching, the Anatomy Act and the poor on Tyneside', North East Labour History Bulletin, 1990, 24:19-35; R C Maulitz, Morbid appearances: the anatomy of pathology in the early nineteenth century, Cambridge University Press, 1987; P M H Mazumdar, 'Anatomical physiology and the reform of medical education: London, 1825-35', Bull. Hist. Med. 1983,57: 230-46; A Morgan, '"A beautiful, but seductive science" or "strange and revolting work"?: medical student's experiences of dissection between 1830 and 1880', BSc dissertation, London, Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine, 2001.
    • (1987) Morbid Appearances: The Anatomy of Pathology in the Early Nineteenth Century
    • Maulitz, R.C.1
  • 23
    • 0020770508 scopus 로고
    • Anatomical physiology and the reform of medical education: London, 1825-35
    • Four trends reflecting this proclivity are discernible in the current literature. First, some medical historians have examined university-based curriculum developments, see, for example, J A Fairfax Fozzard, Professors of anatomy in the University of Cambridge:. . . 1707-1968, Cambridge University Press,1 983; MR Jackson, 'The teaching of anatomy in London as seen through the Lancet, 1823-1848', BSc dissertation, London, Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine, 2000; M W Weatherall, Gentlemen, scientists and doctors: medicine at Cambridge, 1800-1940, Cambridge University Press, 2000. Second, others have explored the growth in laboratory technology: J V Pickstone, Medicine and industrial society: a history of hospital development in Manchester and its regions, 1752-1946, Manchester University Press, 1985; K Waddington, 'Unsuitable cases: the debate over out-patient admissions: the medical profession and late-Victorian London hospitals', Med. Hist., 1998, 42: 26-46; idem, Charity and the London hospitals, 1850-1898, London and New York, Boydell Press, 2000; M W Weatherall, Scientific medicine and the medical sciences in Cambridge, 1851-1939, Cambridge University Press, 1994. A third trend is to examine the impact of the Medical Act (1858): A Digby, Making a medical living: doctors and patients in the English market for medicine, 1720-1911, Cambridge University Press, 1994; I S L Loudon, Medical care and the general practitioner, 1750-1850, Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1986; R and D Porter, In sickness and in health: the English experience, 1650-1850, London, Fourth Estate, 1988; R Porter, Quacks, fakers and charlatans in English medicine, Stroud, Tempus Publishing, 2000. Finally, others have begun to explore the training experience of anatomy students: S V F Butler, 'A transformation in training: the formation of university medical faculties in Manchester, Leeds and Liverpool', Med. Hist. 1986, 30: 115-32; C Dyhouse, 'Women students and the London medical schools, 1914-39: the anatomy of a masculine culture', Gender and Hist., 1998, 10: 110-32; D Gareth Jones, Speaking for the dead: cadavers in biology and medicine, Aldershot, Ashgate, 2000; E Knox, 'The body politic: body snatching, the Anatomy Act and the poor on Tyneside', North East Labour History Bulletin, 1990, 24:19-35; R C Maulitz, Morbid appearances: the anatomy of pathology in the early nineteenth century, Cambridge University Press, 1987; P M H Mazumdar, 'Anatomical physiology and the reform of medical education: London, 1825-35', Bull. Hist. Med. 1983,57: 230-46; A Morgan, '"A beautiful, but seductive science" or "strange and revolting work"?: medical student's experiences of dissection between 1830 and 1880', BSc dissertation, London, Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine, 2001.
    • (1983) Bull. Hist. Med. , vol.57 , pp. 230-246
    • Mazumdar, P.M.H.1
  • 24
    • 84862042541 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • BSc dissertation, London, Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine
    • Four trends reflecting this proclivity are discernible in the current literature. First, some medical historians have examined university-based curriculum developments, see, for example, J A Fairfax Fozzard, Professors of anatomy in the University of Cambridge:. . . 1707-1968, Cambridge University Press,1 983; MR Jackson, 'The teaching of anatomy in London as seen through the Lancet, 1823-1848', BSc dissertation, London, Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine, 2000; M W Weatherall, Gentlemen, scientists and doctors: medicine at Cambridge, 1800-1940, Cambridge University Press, 2000. Second, others have explored the growth in laboratory technology: J V Pickstone, Medicine and industrial society: a history of hospital development in Manchester and its regions, 1752-1946, Manchester University Press, 1985; K Waddington, 'Unsuitable cases: the debate over out-patient admissions: the medical profession and late-Victorian London hospitals', Med. Hist., 1998, 42: 26-46; idem, Charity and the London hospitals, 1850-1898, London and New York, Boydell Press, 2000; M W Weatherall, Scientific medicine and the medical sciences in Cambridge, 1851-1939, Cambridge University Press, 1994. A third trend is to examine the impact of the Medical Act (1858): A Digby, Making a medical living: doctors and patients in the English market for medicine, 1720-1911, Cambridge University Press, 1994; I S L Loudon, Medical care and the general practitioner, 1750-1850, Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1986; R and D Porter, In sickness and in health: the English experience, 1650-1850, London, Fourth Estate, 1988; R Porter, Quacks, fakers and charlatans in English medicine, Stroud, Tempus Publishing, 2000. Finally, others have begun to explore the training experience of anatomy students: S V F Butler, 'A transformation in training: the formation of university medical faculties in Manchester, Leeds and Liverpool', Med. Hist. 1986, 30: 115-32; C Dyhouse, 'Women students and the London medical schools, 1914-39: the anatomy of a masculine culture', Gender and Hist., 1998, 10: 110-32; D Gareth Jones, Speaking for the dead: cadavers in biology and medicine, Aldershot, Ashgate, 2000; E Knox, 'The body politic: body snatching, the Anatomy Act and the poor on Tyneside', North East Labour History Bulletin, 1990, 24:19-35; R C Maulitz, Morbid appearances: the anatomy of pathology in the early nineteenth century, Cambridge University Press, 1987; P M H Mazumdar, 'Anatomical physiology and the reform of medical education: London, 1825-35', Bull. Hist. Med. 1983,57: 230-46; A Morgan, '"A beautiful, but seductive science" or "strange and revolting work"?: medical student's experiences of dissection between 1830 and 1880', BSc dissertation, London, Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine, 2001.
    • (2001) "A Beautiful, but Seductive Science" or "Strange and Revolting Work"?: Medical Student's Experiences of Dissection between 1830 and 1880
    • Morgan, A.1
  • 25
    • 0003788524 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • London, Routledge & Kegan Paul
    • This phase of radical Poor Law administration is very neglected in current historiography. The most recent text to be published in this field is still K Williams, From pauperism to poverty, London, Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1981. Recent revisionism indicates just how radical anti-welfare measures were and highlights the sale of cadavers for anatomical purposes, see E T Hurren, 'The bury-al board: poverty, politics and poor relief in the Brixworth Union, Northamptonshire, 1870-1900', unpublished PhD thesis, University of Leicester, 2000.
    • (1981) From Pauperism to Poverty
    • Williams, K.1
  • 26
    • 1642569478 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • unpublished PhD thesis, University of Leicester
    • This phase of radical Poor Law administration is very neglected in current historiography. The most recent text to be published in this field is still K Williams, From pauperism to poverty, London, Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1981. Recent revisionism indicates just how radical anti-welfare measures were and highlights the sale of cadavers for anatomical purposes, see E T Hurren, 'The bury-al board: poverty, politics and poor relief in the Brixworth Union, Northamptonshire, 1870-1900', unpublished PhD thesis, University of Leicester, 2000.
    • (2000) The Bury-al Board: Poverty, Politics and Poor Relief in the Brixworth Union, Northamptonshire, 1870-1900
    • Hurren, E.T.1
  • 27
    • 0141919024 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Princeton University Press
    • M Sappol, A traffic of dead bodies: anatomy and embodied social identity in nineteenth-century America, Princeton University Press, 2002; see also S Baatz, "A very diffused disposition": dissecting schools in Philadelphia, 1823-25, Pennsylvania, The Historical Society of Pennsylvania, 1984; R L Blakely and J M Harrington (eds), Bones in the basement: postmortem racism in nineteenth-century medical education, Washington and London, Smithsonian Institution Press, 1997.
    • (2002) A Traffic of Dead Bodies: Anatomy and Embodied Social Identity in Nineteenth-century America
    • Sappol, M.1
  • 28
    • 84862039851 scopus 로고
    • Pennsylvania, The Historical Society of Pennsylvania
    • M Sappol, A traffic of dead bodies: anatomy and embodied social identity in nineteenth-century America, Princeton University Press, 2002; see also S Baatz, "A very diffused disposition": dissecting schools in Philadelphia, 1823-25, Pennsylvania, The Historical Society of Pennsylvania, 1984; R L Blakely and J M Harrington (eds), Bones in the basement: postmortem racism in nineteenth-century medical education, Washington and London, Smithsonian Institution Press, 1997.
    • (1984) "A Very Diffused Disposition": Dissecting Schools in Philadelphia, 1823-25
    • Baatz, S.1
  • 29
    • 1642569502 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Washington and London, Smithsonian Institution Press
    • M Sappol, A traffic of dead bodies: anatomy and embodied social identity in nineteenth-century America, Princeton University Press, 2002; see also S Baatz, "A very diffused disposition": dissecting schools in Philadelphia, 1823-25, Pennsylvania, The Historical Society of Pennsylvania, 1984; R L Blakely and J M Harrington (eds), Bones in the basement: postmortem racism in nineteenth-century medical education, Washington and London, Smithsonian Institution Press, 1997.
    • (1997) Bones in the Basement: Postmortem Racism in Nineteenth-century Medical Education
    • Blakely, R.L.1    Harrington, J.M.2
  • 30
    • 1642488056 scopus 로고
    • Dublin, Tomar
    • A Commonwealth and European perspective is also lacking in current historiography. Current work often takes a medical élite perspective and undervalues the Poor Law context, see, for instance, J Fleetwood, The Irish body snatchers: a history of body snatching in Ireland, Dublin, Tomar, 1988; M Colligan, 'Anatomical wax museums in Melbourne: 1861-1887', Aust. cult. Hist., 1994, 13: 52-64.
    • (1988) The Irish Body Snatchers: A History of Body Snatching in Ireland
    • Fleetwood, J.1
  • 31
    • 1642488052 scopus 로고
    • Anatomical wax museums in Melbourne: 1861-1887
    • A Commonwealth and European perspective is also lacking in current historiography. Current work often takes a medical élite perspective and undervalues the Poor Law context, see, for instance, J Fleetwood, The Irish body snatchers: a history of body snatching in Ireland, Dublin, Tomar, 1988; M Colligan, 'Anatomical wax museums in Melbourne: 1861-1887', Aust. cult. Hist., 1994, 13: 52-64.
    • (1994) Aust. Cult. Hist. , vol.13 , pp. 52-64
    • Colligan, M.1
  • 33
    • 1642488057 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • This tends to be explored from the perspective of working-class periodicals, see, for instance, L Hollen Lees, The solidarities of strangers: the English Poor Laws and the people, 1700-1948, Cambridge University Press, 1998, uses one source, the Poor Man's Guardian, This lack of regional research means that late-Victorian Poor Law records filled with accounts and complaints written by the poor objecting to pauper funeral treatment are neglected. See E T Hurren and Steven King, 'Begging for burial: pauper funeral provision in England, 1750-1900', forthcoming.
    • (1998) The Solidarities of Strangers: The English Poor Laws and the People, 1700-1948
    • Hollen Lees, L.1
  • 34
    • 85039570928 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • forthcoming
    • This tends to be explored from the perspective of working-class periodicals, see, for instance, L Hollen Lees, The solidarities of strangers: the English Poor Laws and the people, 1700-1948, Cambridge University Press, 1998, uses one source, the Poor Man's Guardian, This lack of regional research means that late-Victorian Poor Law records filled with accounts and complaints written by the poor objecting to pauper funeral treatment are neglected. See E T Hurren and Steven King, 'Begging for burial: pauper funeral provision in England, 1750-1900', forthcoming.
    • Begging for Burial: Pauper Funeral Provision in England, 1750-1900
    • Hurren, E.T.1    King, S.2
  • 36
    • 85039585662 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • See, for instance, Public Record Office (hereafter PRO), MH74/36, returns of pupils dissecting in schools of anatomy, winter 1877-78.
    • See, for instance, Public Record Office (hereafter PRO), MH74/36, returns of pupils dissecting in schools of anatomy, winter 1877-78.
  • 37
    • 85039579996 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • Many anatomical registers compiled by medical schools have not survived, which hampers research, and in addition, in the mid-Victorian period, Poor Law and asylum records of cadaver sales are fragmentary. Yet, these primary source problems can be overcome. Under successive Burial Acts (1866, 1888 and so on) anatomical schools were legally required to appoint an officiating clergyman who was responsible for keeping accurate interment records and conducting a basic Christian service on their behalf each time a batch of cadavers was released after dissection and dismemberment. Contrary to rumours amongst the poor, most anatomical teaching material was buried with Christian rites. Generally, medical schools used a regular burial plot located near their teaching facility. These surviving burial registers, with the caveat that they are not always accurate, can be utilized to compile a demographic survey of cadaver procurement.
  • 38
    • 1642528759 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • University of Cambridge, School of Anatomy
    • See, for example, C W M Pratt, The history of anatomy at Cambridge, University of Cambridge, School of Anatomy, 1981; Weatherall, Gentlemen, scientists and doctors, op. cit., note 7 above; R Macleod, The "creed of science" in Victorian England, Aldershot, Variorum, 2000; P Harman and S Mitton (eds), Cambridge scientific minds, Cambridge University Press, 2002.
    • (1981) The History of Anatomy at Cambridge
    • Pratt, C.W.M.1
  • 39
    • 0037514889 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • op. cit., note 7 above
    • See, for example, C W M Pratt, The history of anatomy at Cambridge, University of Cambridge, School of Anatomy, 1981; Weatherall, Gentlemen, scientists and doctors, op. cit., note 7 above; R Macleod, The "creed of science" in Victorian England, Aldershot, Variorum, 2000; P Harman and S Mitton (eds), Cambridge scientific minds, Cambridge University Press, 2002.
    • Gentlemen, Scientists and Doctors
    • Weatherall1
  • 40
    • 1642446903 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Aldershot, Variorum
    • See, for example, C W M Pratt, The history of anatomy at Cambridge, University of Cambridge, School of Anatomy, 1981; Weatherall, Gentlemen, scientists and doctors, op. cit., note 7 above; R Macleod, The "creed of science" in Victorian England, Aldershot, Variorum, 2000; P Harman and S Mitton (eds), Cambridge scientific minds, Cambridge University Press, 2002.
    • (2000) The "Creed of Science" in Victorian England
    • Macleod, R.1
  • 41
    • 1642528756 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Cambridge University Press
    • See, for example, C W M Pratt, The history of anatomy at Cambridge, University of Cambridge, School of Anatomy, 1981; Weatherall, Gentlemen, scientists and doctors, op. cit., note 7 above; R Macleod, The "creed of science" in Victorian England, Aldershot, Variorum, 2000; P Harman and S Mitton (eds), Cambridge scientific minds, Cambridge University Press, 2002.
    • (2002) Cambridge Scientific Minds
    • Harman, P.1    Mitton, S.2
  • 45
  • 48
    • 1642446906 scopus 로고
    • Lancet, 1899, ii: 1181.
    • (1899) Lancet , vol.2 , pp. 1181
  • 49
    • 0037514889 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • op. cit., note 7 above
    • An undergraduate student at Downing College first used this material in 1994. Her dissertation is titled, 'A corporeal correspondence: Professor Macalister's searches for stiffs'. The author was identified on the cover only as "Danielle"; I would be happy to give her a proper citation. The dissertation used the material to give a brief overview of Macalister's work. Extracts from her work also appear in Weatherall, Gentlemen, scientists and doctors, op. cit., note 7 above. I would like to reiterate here how grateful I am to the present provector of anatomy at Downing College, Barry Logan, for alerting me to this material and sharing his enthusiasm in such an encouraging way. I thoroughly enjoyed our body hunts around Cambridge.
    • Gentlemen, Scientists and Doctors
    • Weatherall1
  • 50
    • 85039565826 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • This collection was recently broken up when the anatomy library at Downing was dismantled and redistributed to the main central university library collection. Regrettably a lot of material was consigned to a bonfire. Barry Logan, who thankfully recognized the importance of the primary sources, rescued the Macalister Papers.
  • 51
    • 85039587754 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Macalister Papers (hereafter MP), Downing College, Cambridge, teaching notes on taking up appointment
    • Macalister Papers (hereafter MP), Downing College, Cambridge, teaching notes on taking up appointment.
  • 52
    • 1642528751 scopus 로고
    • History of anatomy in the university of Cambridge
    • H Ellis, 'History of anatomy in the university of Cambridge', Clin. Anat., 1993, 6: 188-91.
    • (1993) Clin. Anat. , vol.6 , pp. 188-191
    • Ellis, H.1
  • 54
    • 85039588290 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • PRO, MH74/36, Memo marked 'Private - To Poor Law Guardians', Cambridge, 1 March 1884, signed G E Paget MD (Regius professor of physic, Cambridge), G M Humphry MD (professor of surgery, Cambridge) and A Macalister MD (professor of anatomy, Cambridge).
    • PRO, MH74/36, Memo marked 'Private - To Poor Law Guardians', Cambridge, 1 March 1884, signed G E Paget MD (Regius professor of physic, Cambridge), G M Humphry MD (professor of surgery, Cambridge) and A Macalister MD (professor of anatomy, Cambridge).
  • 57
    • 85039566686 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • PRO, MH74/36, copy of memo by G H Humphry to Midlands Poor Law unions, 9 Oct. 1884.
    • PRO, MH74/36, copy of memo by G H Humphry to Midlands Poor Law unions, 9 Oct. 1884.
  • 60
    • 1642446905 scopus 로고
    • Cambridge
    • Poor Law and cemetery provision is discussed in C H Cooper, Memorials of Cambridge, Cambridge, 1866, vol. 3, p. 147; J P C Roach, A history of the county of Cambridge and the Isle of Ely, vol. 3, The city and university of Cambridge, London, Oxford University Press for the Institute of Historical Research, 1959, p. 274.
    • (1866) Memorials of Cambridge , vol.3 , pp. 147
    • Cooper, C.H.1
  • 62
    • 85039565258 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • I am grateful to Mr David Thomas, director of Cambridge crematorium, who gave me access to Histon Road cemetery records and outlined burial provision in the city comprehensively during a visit in July 2001.
  • 63
    • 85039584935 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • CRO, P25/1/21-23, St Benedict's burial records
    • CRO, P25/1/21-23, St Benedict's burial records.
  • 64
    • 0037514889 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • op. cit, note 7 above
    • It revised its burial arrangements in 1855 for two further reasons. First, in that year the department persuaded the Cambridge Poor Law union to supply bodies. Second, the department received only meagre supplies from the London Hulks by the mid-1850s. It was essential to sort out covert burial arrangements to protect the new asylum and Poor Law suppliers from public scrutiny, see Weatherall, Gentlemen, scientists and doctors, op. cit, note 7 above, p. 99.
    • Gentlemen, Scientists and Doctors , pp. 99
    • Weatherall1
  • 65
    • 85039573451 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • The accuracy of these figures has been checked in three ways. Church officials annotated burial registers on a regular basis with a "p", to indicate a pauper interment on behalf of the anatomical school. These were then sampled and checked against case-study material in Macalister's archive to test their reliability. Second, a database was complied that includes a record of officiating burial administrators. Generally, this involved a clergyman and a representative from the anatomy school. Where the burial register did not record an anatomy official present, the case was not included in the sample. Figures are, therefore, probably under-estimated. Third, the present provector of anatomy at Downing College agreed to release some early-twentieth-century anatomical details, provided these would be used only to check the accuracy of St Benedict's dissection interments. The anatomy registers duplicated the St Benedict's burial records.
  • 68
    • 85067641238 scopus 로고
    • The crisis of poor relief in England, 1860-1890'
    • W Mommsen and W Mock (eds), London, Croom Helm on behalf of the German Historical Institute
    • M Rose, The crisis of poor relief in England, 1860-1890', in W Mommsen and W Mock (eds), The emergence of the welfare state in Britain and Germany, 1850-1950, London, Croom Helm on behalf of the German Historical Institute, 1981, pp. 50-70.
    • (1981) The Emergence of the Welfare State in Britain and Germany, 1850-1950 , pp. 50-70
    • Rose, M.1
  • 70
    • 1642488071 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Basingstoke, Macmillan
    • These are briefly outlined in A Kidd, State, society, and the poor in nineteenth-century England, Basingstoke, Macmillan, 1999, pp. 45-64; Hollen Lees, op. cit., note 12 above, discusses Karel Williams' 1981 work on this subject (see note 8 above).
    • (1999) State, Society, and the Poor in Nineteenth-century England , pp. 45-64
    • Kidd, A.1
  • 74
    • 0034067061 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Labourers are revolting: Penalising the poor and a political reaction in the Brixworth Union, Northamptonshire, 1875-1885
    • See, for example, E T Hurren, 'Labourers are revolting: penalising the poor and a political reaction in the Brixworth Union, Northamptonshire, 1875-1885', Rural Hist., 2000, 2: 37-55; Idem, 'Agricultural trade unionism and a crusade against outdoor relief: Poor Law politics in the Brixworth Union, Northamptonshire, 1870-75', Agric. Hist. Rev., 2000, 48 (pt 2): 200-23; S A King and J Stewart, 'The history of the Poor Law in Wales: under-researched, full of potential', Archives, 2001, 105, issue 26: 134-48.
    • (2000) Rural Hist. , vol.2 , pp. 37-55
    • Hurren, E.T.1
  • 75
    • 0347315107 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Agricultural trade unionism and a crusade against outdoor relief: Poor Law politics in the Brixworth Union, Northamptonshire, 1870-75
    • See, for example, E T Hurren, 'Labourers are revolting: penalising the poor and a political reaction in the Brixworth Union, Northamptonshire, 1875-1885', Rural Hist., 2000, 2: 37-55; Idem, 'Agricultural trade unionism and a crusade against outdoor relief: Poor Law politics in the Brixworth Union, Northamptonshire, 1870-75', Agric. Hist. Rev., 2000, 48 (pt 2): 200-23; S A King and J Stewart, 'The history of the Poor Law in Wales: under-researched, full of potential', Archives, 2001, 105, issue 26: 134-48.
    • (2000) Agric. Hist. Rev. , vol.48 , Issue.PART 2 , pp. 200-223
    • Hurren, E.T.1
  • 76
    • 0034067061 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • The history of the Poor Law in Wales: Under-researched, full of potential
    • See, for example, E T Hurren, 'Labourers are revolting: penalising the poor and a political reaction in the Brixworth Union, Northamptonshire, 1875-1885', Rural Hist., 2000, 2: 37-55; Idem, 'Agricultural trade unionism and a crusade against outdoor relief: Poor Law politics in the Brixworth Union, Northamptonshire, 1870-75', Agric. Hist. Rev., 2000, 48 (pt 2): 200-23; S A King and J Stewart, 'The history of the Poor Law in Wales: under-researched, full of potential', Archives, 2001, 105, issue 26: 134-48.
    • (2001) Archives , vol.105 , Issue.26 , pp. 134-148
    • King, S.A.1    Stewart, J.2
  • 77
    • 84982074758 scopus 로고
    • The labour market and the continuity of social policy after 1834: The case of the eastern counties
    • 2nd series
    • A Digby, 'The labour market and the continuity of social policy after 1834: the case of the eastern counties', Econ. Hist. Rev., 1975, 2nd series, 28:69-83; Idem, The Poor Law in nineteenth-century England and Wales, London, Historical Association, 1982.
    • (1975) Econ. Hist. Rev. , vol.28 , pp. 69-83
    • Digby, A.1
  • 78
    • 84982074758 scopus 로고
    • London, Historical Association
    • A Digby, 'The labour market and the continuity of social policy after 1834: the case of the eastern counties', Econ. Hist. Rev., 1975, 2nd series, 28:69-83; Idem, The Poor Law in nineteenth-century England and Wales, London, Historical Association, 1982.
    • (1982) The Poor Law in Nineteenth-century England and Wales
    • Digby, A.1
  • 79
    • 0020859718 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Bodies, death and pauper funerals
    • T Laqueur, 'Bodies, death and pauper funerals', Representations, 1983, 1: 109-31. These conventions are also discussed in R Richardson, 'A dissection of the Anatomy Acts', Studies in Lab. Hist., 1976, 1: 8-11; M Wheeler, Death and the future life in Victorian literature and theology, Cambridge University Press, 1990; P Jalland, Death in the Victorian family, Oxford University Press, 1996.
    • (1983) Representations , vol.1 , pp. 109-131
    • Laqueur, T.1
  • 80
    • 0017026597 scopus 로고
    • A dissection of the Anatomy Acts
    • T Laqueur, 'Bodies, death and pauper funerals', Representations, 1983, 1: 109-31. These conventions are also discussed in R Richardson, 'A dissection of the Anatomy Acts', Studies in Lab. Hist., 1976, 1: 8-11; M Wheeler, Death and the future life in Victorian literature and theology, Cambridge University Press, 1990; P Jalland, Death in the Victorian family, Oxford University Press, 1996.
    • (1976) Studies in Lab. Hist. , vol.1 , pp. 8-11
    • Richardson, R.1
  • 81
    • 0020859718 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Cambridge University Press
    • T Laqueur, 'Bodies, death and pauper funerals', Representations, 1983, 1: 109-31. These conventions are also discussed in R Richardson, 'A dissection of the Anatomy Acts', Studies in Lab. Hist., 1976, 1: 8-11; M Wheeler, Death and the future life in Victorian literature and theology, Cambridge University Press, 1990; P Jalland, Death in the Victorian family, Oxford University Press, 1996.
    • (1990) Death and the Future Life in Victorian Literature and Theology
    • Wheeler, M.1
  • 82
    • 0020859718 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Oxford University Press
    • T Laqueur, 'Bodies, death and pauper funerals', Representations, 1983, 1: 109-31. These conventions are also discussed in R Richardson, 'A dissection of the Anatomy Acts', Studies in Lab. Hist., 1976, 1: 8-11; M Wheeler, Death and the future life in Victorian literature and theology, Cambridge University Press, 1990; P Jalland, Death in the Victorian family, Oxford University Press, 1996.
    • (1996) Death in the Victorian Family
    • Jalland, P.1
  • 83
    • 85039566655 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • PRO, MH74/11, A Macalister to J Pickering Pick, memo, 9 Oct. 1896
    • PRO, MH74/11, A Macalister to J Pickering Pick, memo, 9 Oct. 1896.
  • 85
    • 85039576660 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • Northamptonshire Record Office (hereafter NRO), PL2/12, Brixworth Poor Law Union register of deaths, 1837-1895. These were checked against interment records held at Brixworth parish church. I am indebted to the present incumbent, Rev. Watson, for his assistance in reconstituting these burial records.
  • 86
    • 85039578184 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • This facet of the late-Victorian Poor Law is much under studied, see Hurren's articles note 46 above.
    • Rural Hist.
  • 87
    • 0003767886 scopus 로고
    • Oxford, Clarendon Press
    • The election of lady guardians is outlined in P Hollis, Ladies elect: women in English local government, 1865-1914, Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1987; however, conventional views of female administration are being challenged, see S A King, Born to intellectual freedom out of material security: Mary Haslam and the Bolton Union, 1870-1914, Manchester University Press, forthcoming 2004.
    • (1987) Ladies Elect: Women in English Local Government, 1865-1914
    • Hollis, P.1
  • 88
    • 85039569391 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Manchester University Press, forthcoming
    • The election of lady guardians is outlined in P Hollis, Ladies elect: women in English local government, 1865-1914, Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1987; however, conventional views of female administration are being challenged, see S A King, Born to intellectual freedom out of material security: Mary Haslam and the Bolton Union, 1870-1914, Manchester University Press, forthcoming 2004.
    • (2004) Born to Intellectual Freedom out of Material Security: Mary Haslam and the Bolton Union, 1870-1914
    • King, S.A.1
  • 89
    • 85039581344 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • MP, memo from Claude Douglas, New Walk, Leicester, 7 Oct. 1897, to Downing anatomy school
    • MP, memo from Claude Douglas, New Walk, Leicester, 7 Oct. 1897, to Downing anatomy school.
  • 90
    • 85039588199 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • the London Hospital medical school, University College London, to Prof. Macalister, 6 May 1903
    • MP, A Keith, the London Hospital medical school, University College London, to Prof. Macalister, 6 May 1903.
    • Keith, A.1
  • 93
    • 84972191108 scopus 로고
    • Workhouse to nursing home: Residential care of elderly people in England since 1840
    • D Thomson, 'Workhouse to nursing home: residential care of elderly people in England since 1840', Ageing and Society, 1983, 3: 43-69.
    • (1983) Ageing and Society , vol.3 , pp. 43-69
    • Thomson, D.1
  • 96
    • 85039575846 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • I am grateful to the staff at Cambridgeshire Record Office who helped me plot the post-1885 Downing site and its surrounding street network from maps in their collection.
  • 97
    • 0035402459 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Although Richardson (op. cit., note 4 above, pp. 3-30) stresses the reluctance of the poor to sell children's bodies because of moral and religious dilemmas, financial desperation may have forced some families to sell their dead infants. Possibly, a lack of residential property in that area facilitated covert sales. Selling a baby's cadaver outside its neighbourhood decreased the chances of surveillance by the community, and may have been more desirable than approaching a local intermediary to arrange the transaction. Evidence exists in letters from paupers among the Estcourt Papers, Gloucestershire Record Office, that they were anxious to avoid neighbourhood gossip and occasionally acted in this manner. This was not just a British phenomenon, as Frank McCourt's childhood memoir, Angela's Ashes, London, Penguin, 1994, p. 41, reveals. He recounts how his father sold his sister Margaret, after she died just seven weeks old, direct to anatomists for dissection in 1940s America. This prevented her being buried in consecrated ground, a bitter, but necessary, financial transaction for his Irish Roman Catholic mother. Similarly, Sappol, op. cit., note 9 above, pp. 39-43, reveals that it was common in nineteenth-century America to pose for a photoportrait with a deceased infant before it was handed over to anatomists. The visual representation was designed to console the family with a wholesome image, because the child's remains were to be dissected and dismembered with consent. The fact that a baby-farm existed in the Downing area cannot be discounted, but no evidence has come to light. However, since, as Hamrighaus explains, children were seldom abandoned but were sent to baby-farms by middle-class families, it seems unlikely that the data represent sales of the bodies of lost and unwanted children only. R E Hamrighaus, 'Wolves in women's clothing: baby farming and the British Medical Journal, 1860-72', J. Fam. Hist., 2001, 26: 350-72.
    • Death, Dissection and the Destitute, 2nd Ed. , pp. 3-30
    • Richardson1
  • 98
    • 0035402459 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Childhood memoir
    • London, Penguin
    • Although Richardson (op. cit., note 4 above, pp. 3-30) stresses the reluctance of the poor to sell children's bodies because of moral and religious dilemmas, financial desperation may have forced some families to sell their dead infants. Possibly, a lack of residential property in that area facilitated covert sales. Selling a baby's cadaver outside its neighbourhood decreased the chances of surveillance by the community, and may have been more desirable than approaching a local intermediary to arrange the transaction. Evidence exists in letters from paupers among the Estcourt Papers, Gloucestershire Record Office, that they were anxious to avoid neighbourhood gossip and occasionally acted in this manner. This was not just a British phenomenon, as Frank McCourt's childhood memoir, Angela's Ashes, London, Penguin, 1994, p. 41, reveals. He recounts how his father sold his sister Margaret, after she died just seven weeks old, direct to anatomists for dissection in 1940s America. This prevented her being buried in consecrated ground, a bitter, but necessary, financial transaction for his Irish Roman Catholic mother. Similarly, Sappol, op. cit., note 9 above, pp. 39-43, reveals that it was common in nineteenth-century America to pose for a photoportrait with a deceased infant before it was handed over to anatomists. The visual representation was designed to console the family with a wholesome image, because the child's remains were to be dissected and dismembered with consent. The fact that a baby-farm existed in the Downing area cannot be discounted, but no evidence has come to light. However, since, as Hamrighaus explains, children were seldom abandoned but were sent to baby-farms by middle-class families, it seems unlikely that the data represent sales of the bodies of lost and unwanted children only. R E Hamrighaus, 'Wolves in women's clothing: baby farming and the British Medical Journal, 1860-72', J. Fam. Hist., 2001, 26: 350-72.
    • (1994) Angela's Ashes , pp. 41
    • McCourt's, F.1
  • 99
    • 0035402459 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Although Richardson (op. cit., note 4 above, pp. 3-30) stresses the reluctance of the poor to sell children's bodies because of moral and religious dilemmas, financial desperation may have forced some families to sell their dead infants. Possibly, a lack of residential property in that area facilitated covert sales. Selling a baby's cadaver outside its neighbourhood decreased the chances of surveillance by the community, and may have been more desirable than approaching a local intermediary to arrange the transaction. Evidence exists in letters from paupers among the Estcourt Papers, Gloucestershire Record Office, that they were anxious to avoid neighbourhood gossip and occasionally acted in this manner. This was not just a British phenomenon, as Frank McCourt's childhood memoir, Angela's Ashes, London, Penguin, 1994, p. 41, reveals. He recounts how his father sold his sister Margaret, after she died just seven weeks old, direct to anatomists for dissection in 1940s America. This prevented her being buried in consecrated ground, a bitter, but necessary, financial transaction for his Irish Roman Catholic mother. Similarly, Sappol, op. cit., note 9 above, pp. 39-43, reveals that it was common in nineteenth-century America to pose for a photoportrait with a deceased infant before it was handed over to anatomists. The visual representation was designed to console the family with a wholesome image, because the child's remains were to be dissected and dismembered with consent. The fact that a baby-farm existed in the Downing area cannot be discounted, but no evidence has come to light. However, since, as Hamrighaus explains, children were seldom abandoned but were sent to baby-farms by middle-class families, it seems unlikely that the data represent sales of the bodies of lost and unwanted children only. R E Hamrighaus, 'Wolves in women's clothing: baby farming and the British Medical Journal, 1860-72', J. Fam. Hist., 2001, 26: 350-72.
    • A Traffic of Dead Bodies: Anatomy and Embodied Social Identity in Nineteenth-century America , pp. 39-43
    • Sappol1
  • 100
    • 0035402459 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Wolves in women's clothing: Baby farming and the British Medical Journal, 1860-72
    • Although Richardson (op. cit., note 4 above, pp. 3-30) stresses the reluctance of the poor to sell children's bodies because of moral and religious dilemmas, financial desperation may have forced some families to sell their dead infants. Possibly, a lack of residential property in that area facilitated covert sales. Selling a baby's cadaver outside its neighbourhood decreased the chances of surveillance by the community, and may have been more desirable than approaching a local intermediary to arrange the transaction. Evidence exists in letters from paupers among the Estcourt Papers, Gloucestershire Record Office, that they were anxious to avoid neighbourhood gossip and occasionally acted in this manner. This was not just a British phenomenon, as Frank McCourt's childhood memoir, Angela's Ashes, London, Penguin, 1994, p. 41, reveals. He recounts how his father sold his sister Margaret, after she died just seven weeks old, direct to anatomists for dissection in 1940s America. This prevented her being buried in consecrated ground, a bitter, but necessary, financial transaction for his Irish Roman Catholic mother. Similarly, Sappol, op. cit., note 9 above, pp. 39-43, reveals that it was common in nineteenth-century America to pose for a photoportrait with a deceased infant before it was handed over to anatomists. The visual representation was designed to console the family with a wholesome image, because the child's remains were to be dissected and dismembered with consent. The fact that a baby-farm existed in the Downing area cannot be discounted, but no evidence has come to light. However, since, as Hamrighaus explains, children were seldom abandoned but were sent to baby-farms by middle-class families, it seems unlikely that the data represent sales of the bodies of lost and unwanted children only. R E Hamrighaus, 'Wolves in women's clothing: baby farming and the British Medical Journal, 1860-72', J. Fam. Hist., 2001, 26: 350-72.
    • (2001) J. Fam. Hist. , vol.26 , pp. 350-372
    • Hamrighaus, R.E.1
  • 101
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    • MP, cadaver invoices, 1901-2
    • MP, cadaver invoices, 1901-2.
  • 102
    • 85039577163 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • superintendent Three Counties Asylum, to Dr Barclay-Smith, Cambridge anatomical teaching school, 2 Oct. 1912
    • MP, W H Ekins, superintendent Three Counties Asylum, to Dr Barclay-Smith, Cambridge anatomical teaching school, 2 Oct. 1912.
    • Ekins, W.H.1
  • 103
    • 85039588021 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Thomson, Rutherford and atomic physics at Cambridge
    • P Herman and S Mitton (eds), Cambridge University Press, ch. 11
    • B Pippard, 'Thomson, Rutherford and atomic physics at Cambridge', in P Herman and S Mitton (eds), Cambridge scientific minds, Cambridge University Press, 2002, ch. 11, pp. 155-72, points out that experiments were being carried out in the Cavendish Laboratory on the conduction of electricity on cadavers. It was here in 1895 that scientists announced the discovery of X-rays and in 1896 radioactivity. Cadavers seem to have been passed on from the anatomy department for these research purposes. Though why they preferred young research material is not clear.
    • (2002) Cambridge Scientific Minds , pp. 155-172
    • Pippard, B.1
  • 104
    • 0037514889 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • op. cit., note 7 above
    • Weatherall, Gentlemen, scientists and doctors, op. cit., note 7 above, pp. 104-8, discusses the close relationships that developed between science (specifically embryology and physiology) and anatomy at Cambridge. He explains that human anatomy by the mid-1880s found itself competing with new branches of clinical medicine. It responded by developing interdependent ties with its competitors, which facilitated a culture of shared research material.
    • Gentlemen, Scientists and Doctors , pp. 104-108
    • Weatherall1
  • 105
    • 85039570858 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Known as the Strangeways Laboratory, details of its tissue culture work can be researched at the Wellcome Library, Archives and Manuscripts, SA/SRL, Strangeway papers, 1900-1990 (contains also papers of and on T S P Strangeways 1886-1926); Wellcome, PP/HBF, Dame Honor Fell papers, 1919-1988
    • Known as the Strangeways Laboratory, details of its tissue culture work can be researched at the Wellcome Library, Archives and Manuscripts, SA/SRL, Strangeway papers, 1900-1990 (contains also papers of and on T S P Strangeways 1886-1926); Wellcome, PP/HBF, Dame Honor Fell papers, 1919-1988.
  • 106
    • 85039578635 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • Two methodological caveats are worth noting. First, the figures for Cambridge city centre should be viewed alongside those for Addenbrooke's Hospital. Post-1900 the burial register of St Benedict's records that most bodies listed as having died in a Cambridge city street had in fact "died in hospital" and not at home. For example, a pauper named Eliza Johnson aged forty-eight from New Street, Cambridge, was interred by the anatomy school on 13 Jan. 1910. A pencilled entry, "died in hospital" appears in the register beside her place of death. This was probably Addenbrooke's Hospital and she was doubtless a coroner's case. The Macalister archive indicates that such arrangements were common. These "died in hospital" cases have not been reallocated to the Addenbrooke's figures because we have no way of checking their accuracy. It means, however, that the Addenbrooke's figures are likely to be considerably under-estimated. Second, over time cadavers were procured from three sources in each location: workhouses, workhouse infirmaries and, by the 1920s, refurbished former workhouses (listed as Poor Law nursing homes). These have only been expressed as one location in Table 1 because all three categories were under the remit of the late-Victorian Poor Law.
  • 107
    • 85039574710 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • At this research stage it is difficult to ascertain whether the arrangements were between doctors and undertakers, rather than directly with families. The high numbers suggest various agencies may have been involved.
  • 109
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    • Poverty, disease, responsibility: Arthur Newsholme and the public health dilemmas of British Liberalism
    • 71 J M Eyler, 'Poverty, disease, responsibility: Arthur Newsholme and the public health dilemmas of British Liberalism', Milbank Q., 1989, 67: 109-26; idem, 'The sick poor and the state: Arthur Newsholme on poverty, disease and responsibility', in C Rosenberg and J Golden (eds), Framing disease: studies in cultural history, New Brunswick, Rutgers University Press, 1992, pp. 276-96; J M Eyler, Sir Arthur Newsholme and state medicine, 1885-1935, Cambridge University Press, 1997. Newsholme's epidemiological research during his tenure at Brighton as medical officer of health from 1888 (notably on tuberculosis, scarlet fever and diphtheria) demonstrates the complexities of central-local welfare relations in late-Victorian England. New health policies sponsored by the Local Government Board often ran contrary to its own desire to keep poor relief costs low, exemplified by the crusade against outdoor relief. See E T Hurren, 'Diphtheria debates: the challenge of the crusade against outdoor relief to public health improvements in late-Victorian England, 1870-1900', forthcoming, copy at University College Northampton. These welfare policy tensions benefited anatomists.
    • (1989) Milbank Q. , vol.67 , pp. 109-126
    • Eyler, J.M.1
  • 110
    • 0024465331 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • The sick poor and the state: Arthur Newsholme on poverty, disease and responsibility
    • C Rosenberg and J Golden (eds), New Brunswick, Rutgers University Press
    • J M Eyler, 'Poverty, disease, responsibility: Arthur Newsholme and the public health dilemmas of British Liberalism', Milbank Q., 1989, 67: 109-26; idem, 'The sick poor and the state: Arthur Newsholme on poverty, disease and responsibility', in C Rosenberg and J Golden (eds), Framing disease: studies in cultural history, New Brunswick, Rutgers University Press, 1992, pp. 276-96; J M Eyler, Sir Arthur Newsholme and state medicine, 1885-1935, Cambridge University Press, 1997. Newsholme's epidemiological research during his tenure at Brighton as medical officer of health from 1888 (notably on tuberculosis, scarlet fever and diphtheria) demonstrates the complexities of central-local welfare relations in late-Victorian England. New health policies sponsored by the Local Government Board often ran contrary to its own desire to keep poor relief costs low, exemplified by the crusade against outdoor relief. See E T Hurren, 'Diphtheria debates: the challenge of the crusade against outdoor relief to public health improvements in late-Victorian England, 1870-1900', forthcoming, copy at University College Northampton. These welfare policy tensions benefited anatomists.
    • (1992) Framing Disease: Studies in Cultural History , pp. 276-296
    • Eyler, J.M.1
  • 111
    • 0024465331 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Cambridge University Press
    • J M Eyler, 'Poverty, disease, responsibility: Arthur Newsholme and the public health dilemmas of British Liberalism', Milbank Q., 1989, 67: 109-26; idem, 'The sick poor and the state: Arthur Newsholme on poverty, disease and responsibility', in C Rosenberg and J Golden (eds), Framing disease: studies in cultural history, New Brunswick, Rutgers University Press, 1992, pp. 276-96; J M Eyler, Sir Arthur Newsholme and state medicine, 1885-1935, Cambridge University Press, 1997. Newsholme's epidemiological research during his tenure at Brighton as medical officer of health from 1888 (notably on tuberculosis, scarlet fever and diphtheria) demonstrates the complexities of central-local welfare relations in late-Victorian England. New health policies sponsored by the Local Government Board often ran contrary to its own desire to keep poor relief costs low, exemplified by the crusade against outdoor relief. See E T Hurren, 'Diphtheria debates: the challenge of the crusade against outdoor relief to public health improvements in late-Victorian England, 1870-1900', forthcoming, copy at University College Northampton. These welfare policy tensions benefited anatomists.
    • (1997) Sir Arthur Newsholme and State Medicine, 1885-1935
    • Eyler, J.M.1
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    • 0024465331 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • forthcoming, copy at University College Northampton. These welfare policy tensions benefited anatomists
    • J M Eyler, 'Poverty, disease, responsibility: Arthur Newsholme and the public health dilemmas of British Liberalism', Milbank Q., 1989, 67: 109-26; idem, 'The sick poor and the state: Arthur Newsholme on poverty, disease and responsibility', in C Rosenberg and J Golden (eds), Framing disease: studies in cultural history, New Brunswick, Rutgers University Press, 1992, pp. 276-96; J M Eyler, Sir Arthur Newsholme and state medicine, 1885-1935, Cambridge University Press, 1997. Newsholme's epidemiological research during his tenure at Brighton as medical officer of health from 1888 (notably on tuberculosis, scarlet fever and diphtheria) demonstrates the complexities of central-local welfare relations in late-Victorian England. New health policies sponsored by the Local Government Board often ran contrary to its own desire to keep poor relief costs low, exemplified by the crusade against outdoor relief. See E T Hurren, 'Diphtheria debates: the challenge of the crusade against outdoor relief to public health improvements in late-Victorian England, 1870-1900', forthcoming, copy at University College Northampton. These welfare policy tensions benefited anatomists.
    • Diphtheria Debates: The Challenge of the Crusade Against Outdoor Relief to Public Health Improvements in Late-victorian England, 1870-1900
    • Hurren, E.T.1
  • 114
    • 85039586237 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • medical superintendent, Norfolk County Asylum, to Dr Barclay-Smith, Cambridge anatomical school, 16 Sept. 1912, and follow up letter, 4 Oct. 1912.
    • MP, D G Thomson, medical superintendent, Norfolk County Asylum, to Dr Barclay-Smith, Cambridge anatomical school, 16 Sept. 1912, and follow up letter, 4 Oct. 1912.
    • Thomson, D.G.1
  • 115
    • 85039562157 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • superintendent Hertfordshire County Asylum, to Dr Barclay-Smith, Cambridge anatomical school, 9 Oct. 1912.
    • MP, A Boyle, superintendent Hertfordshire County Asylum, to Dr Barclay-Smith, Cambridge anatomical school, 9 Oct. 1912.
    • Boyle, A.1
  • 116
    • 85039583196 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • work in progress paper read at University College Northampton
    • Although Reading, Southampton and Whitechapel sold only a few cadavers to the Cambridge anatomy school, they were the chief suppliers of the Oxford anatomy school. It was the surplus which was sold to Cambridge. See Oxford City Council Archives, Cemetery Committee Books 1870-1900, Oxford Record Office; E T Hurren, 'The business of anatomy: Oxford anatomical school and its pauper cadaver trafficking, 1870-1914', work in progress paper read at University College Northampton.
    • The Business of Anatomy: Oxford Anatomical School and its Pauper Cadaver Trafficking, 1870-1914
    • Hurren, E.T.1
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    • London, Methuen
    • See, for example, M A Crowther, The workhouse system, 1834-1929, London, Methuen, 1983; Pickstone, op. cit., note 7 above; S Cherry, Medical services and the hospitals in Britain, 1860-1939, Cambridge University Press, 1986; F F S Driver, 'The English bastille: dimensions of the workhouse system, 1834-1884', unpublished PhD thesis, University of Cambridge, 1988; G Bock and P Thane (eds), Maternity and gender politics: women and the rise of the European welfare states, 1880s-1950s, London, Routledge, 1991; H Hendrick, Child welfare: England, 1872-1989, London, Routledge, 1994; F Crompton, Workhouse children, Thrupp, Stroud, Sutton Publishing, 1997.
    • (1983) The Workhouse System, 1834-1929
    • Crowther, M.A.1
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    • See, for example, M A Crowther, The workhouse system, 1834-1929, London, Methuen, 1983; Pickstone, op. cit., note 7 above; S Cherry, Medical services and the hospitals in Britain, 1860-1939, Cambridge University Press, 1986; F F S Driver, 'The English bastille: dimensions of the workhouse system, 1834-1884', unpublished PhD thesis, University of Cambridge, 1988; G Bock and P Thane (eds), Maternity and gender politics: women and the rise of the European welfare states, 1880s-1950s, London, Routledge, 1991; H Hendrick, Child welfare: England, 1872-1989, London, Routledge, 1994; F Crompton, Workhouse children, Thrupp, Stroud, Sutton Publishing, 1997.
    • Medicine and Industrial Society: A History of Hospital Development in Manchester and its Regions, 1752-1946
    • Pickstone1
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    • Cambridge University Press
    • See, for example, M A Crowther, The workhouse system, 1834-1929, London, Methuen, 1983; Pickstone, op. cit., note 7 above; S Cherry, Medical services and the hospitals in Britain, 1860-1939, Cambridge University Press, 1986; F F S Driver, 'The English bastille: dimensions of the workhouse system, 1834-1884', unpublished PhD thesis, University of Cambridge, 1988; G Bock and P Thane (eds), Maternity and gender politics: women and the rise of the European welfare states, 1880s-1950s, London, Routledge, 1991; H Hendrick, Child welfare: England, 1872-1989, London, Routledge, 1994; F Crompton, Workhouse children, Thrupp, Stroud, Sutton Publishing, 1997.
    • (1986) Medical Services and the Hospitals in Britain, 1860-1939
    • Cherry, S.1
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    • unpublished PhD thesis, University of Cambridge
    • See, for example, M A Crowther, The workhouse system, 1834-1929, London, Methuen, 1983; Pickstone, op. cit., note 7 above; S Cherry, Medical services and the hospitals in Britain, 1860-1939, Cambridge University Press, 1986; F F S Driver, 'The English bastille: dimensions of the workhouse system, 1834-1884', unpublished PhD thesis, University of Cambridge, 1988; G Bock and P Thane (eds), Maternity and gender politics: women and the rise of the European welfare states, 1880s-1950s, London, Routledge, 1991; H Hendrick, Child welfare: England, 1872-1989, London, Routledge, 1994; F Crompton, Workhouse children, Thrupp, Stroud, Sutton Publishing, 1997.
    • (1988) The English Bastille: Dimensions of the Workhouse System, 1834-1884
    • Driver, F.F.S.1
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    • London, Routledge
    • See, for example, M A Crowther, The workhouse system, 1834-1929, London, Methuen, 1983; Pickstone, op. cit., note 7 above; S Cherry, Medical services and the hospitals in Britain, 1860-1939, Cambridge University Press, 1986; F F S Driver, 'The English bastille: dimensions of the workhouse system, 1834-1884', unpublished PhD thesis, University of Cambridge, 1988; G Bock and P Thane (eds), Maternity and gender politics: women and the rise of the European welfare states, 1880s-1950s, London, Routledge, 1991; H Hendrick, Child welfare: England, 1872-1989, London, Routledge, 1994; F Crompton, Workhouse children, Thrupp, Stroud, Sutton Publishing, 1997.
    • (1991) Maternity and Gender Politics: Women and the Rise of the European Welfare States, 1880s-1950s
    • Bock, G.1    Thane, P.2
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    • London, Routledge
    • See, for example, M A Crowther, The workhouse system, 1834-1929, London, Methuen, 1983; Pickstone, op. cit., note 7 above; S Cherry, Medical services and the hospitals in Britain, 1860-1939, Cambridge University Press, 1986; F F S Driver, 'The English bastille: dimensions of the workhouse system, 1834-1884', unpublished PhD thesis, University of Cambridge, 1988; G Bock and P Thane (eds), Maternity and gender politics: women and the rise of the European welfare states, 1880s-1950s, London, Routledge, 1991; H Hendrick, Child welfare: England, 1872-1989, London, Routledge, 1994; F Crompton, Workhouse children, Thrupp, Stroud, Sutton Publishing, 1997.
    • (1994) Child Welfare: England, 1872-1989
    • Hendrick, H.1
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    • Thrupp, Stroud, Sutton Publishing
    • See, for example, M A Crowther, The workhouse system, 1834-1929, London, Methuen, 1983; Pickstone, op. cit., note 7 above; S Cherry, Medical services and the hospitals in Britain, 1860-1939, Cambridge University Press, 1986; F F S Driver, 'The English bastille: dimensions of the workhouse system, 1834-1884', unpublished PhD thesis, University of Cambridge, 1988; G Bock and P Thane (eds), Maternity and gender politics: women and the rise of the European welfare states, 1880s-1950s, London, Routledge, 1991; H Hendrick, Child welfare: England, 1872-1989, London, Routledge, 1994; F Crompton, Workhouse children, Thrupp, Stroud, Sutton Publishing, 1997.
    • (1997) Workhouse Children
    • Crompton, F.1
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    • May, new History Policy Internet journal edited by M Daunton and S Szreter, St John's College, Cambridge, launched at the Institute of Historical Research, May 2002, copy available at University College Northampton
    • E T Hurren, 'Late-Victorian "Alder Keys": Why have we failed to learn the historical lessons about medical research?', May 2003, www.historyandpolicy.org new History Policy Internet journal edited by M Daunton and S Szreter, St John's College, Cambridge, launched at the Institute of Historical Research, May 2002, copy available at University College Northampton.
    • (2003) Late-Victorian "Alder Keys": Why have We Failed to Learn the Historical Lessons about Medical Research?
    • Hurren, E.T.1


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