Obstetrics: The Science and the Art

Charles D. MEIGS

Item#: 109396 We're sorry, this item has been sold

Obstetrics: The Science and the Art
Obstetrics: The Science and the Art
Obstetrics: The Science and the Art

"USED AS A TEXTBOOK IN MANY MEDICAL SCHOOLS": FIRST EDITION OF MEIGS' OBSTETRICS: THE SCIENCE AND THE ART, 1849, WITH DOZENS OF ANATOMICAL ILLUSTRATIONS AND DIAGRAMS

MEIGS, Charles D. Obstetrics: The Science and the Art. Philadelphia: Lea and Blanchard, 1849. Thick octavo, modern three-quarter brown calf, elaborately gilt-decorated spine, raised bands, marbled endpapers, top edge gilt.

First edition of this essential 19th-century obstetrics text, with 121 mainly anatomical illustrations, attractively bound.

A distinguished member of Philadelphia's medical community who was heavily involved in the city's cholera epidemic, "Meigs first ventured into teaching obstetrics in 1830, when he offered lectures in one of the many private medical schools in the city. From 1838 to 1849 he headed the Lying-in Department of the Pennsylvania Hospital. In 1841 he was appointed professor of midwifery and diseases of women and children at Jefferson Medical College, where he would teach for twenty years… Meigs's own The Philadelphia Practice of Midwifery (1838), later republished as Obstetrics: The Science and the Art (1849) [expanded to nearly twice the length and generally treated as a separate work], appeared in a number of editions and was used as a textbook in many medical schools" (ANB). Today, Meigs' legacy is often reduced to his objection to anesthesia in childbirth (essentially an argument that childbirth was a natural process that involved pain) and his incorrect contention that puerperal fever was not contagious; this book reveals the man for the accomplished scholar that he was in his own time. With 32-page publisher's catalog.

A few finger smudges and mild toning to interior, binding handsome. A near-fine copy.

add to my wishlist ask an Expert