8vo
1859 · New York
by RICE, Nathan P.
New York: Pudney & Russell, 1859. 8vo. (7 1/2 x 4 7/8 inches). Complete. xx, [13]-460 pp. Engraved portrait frontispiece of Dr. William T. G. Morton. Half-title. Two engravings of Morton administering ether (p.62, p.92) by G. R. and H. B. Hall, with the two-page spread of two engravings of the front and back of Morton's Institut National de France medal from 1850 (p.218). Publisher's brown cloth, covers bordered in blind, spine lettered and stamped in gilt, yellow endpapers.
Provenance: Presentation inscription by Dr. William T. G. Morton to Richard Fletcher.
Presentation copy inscribed by Dr. Morton to Vermont Governor Richard Fletcher for his Town Library in Cavendish, Vermont, with all plates.
First edition of the first biography of William T. G. Morton, the Boston dentist who in 1846 demonstrated to the medical profession the efficacy of sulfuric ether as a general surgical anesthetic. Completed in three months, Trials of a Public Benefactor was first issued in October 1858 in an unillustrated advance "press copy" edition, with the title-page dated 1858. The published edition, with the date changed to 1859 and quotations from Shakespeare and Burns added to the title, appeared a few months later, as here. Trials of a Public Benefactor, with its self-serving rendition of Morton's role in the discovery of ether anesthesia, is a key document in the history of the ether controversy. "As the account most readily available, this has been the principal document that historians and researchers have depended upon for what they believed were the facts of the matter ... Over-reliance on the Rice version, to the exclusion of looking beyond it, has largely been responsible for legitimizing the claim of William T.G. Morton while at the same time abrogating the claims of his principal rivals, Horace Wells and Charles T. Jackson, or, at least, diminishing the critical roles they played in Morton's ultimate success" (Wolfe).
Fulton & Stanton IV.66; Wolfe Tarnished Idol pp 62; 407-11; Osler 1432. (Inventory #: 38989)
Provenance: Presentation inscription by Dr. William T. G. Morton to Richard Fletcher.
Presentation copy inscribed by Dr. Morton to Vermont Governor Richard Fletcher for his Town Library in Cavendish, Vermont, with all plates.
First edition of the first biography of William T. G. Morton, the Boston dentist who in 1846 demonstrated to the medical profession the efficacy of sulfuric ether as a general surgical anesthetic. Completed in three months, Trials of a Public Benefactor was first issued in October 1858 in an unillustrated advance "press copy" edition, with the title-page dated 1858. The published edition, with the date changed to 1859 and quotations from Shakespeare and Burns added to the title, appeared a few months later, as here. Trials of a Public Benefactor, with its self-serving rendition of Morton's role in the discovery of ether anesthesia, is a key document in the history of the ether controversy. "As the account most readily available, this has been the principal document that historians and researchers have depended upon for what they believed were the facts of the matter ... Over-reliance on the Rice version, to the exclusion of looking beyond it, has largely been responsible for legitimizing the claim of William T.G. Morton while at the same time abrogating the claims of his principal rivals, Horace Wells and Charles T. Jackson, or, at least, diminishing the critical roles they played in Morton's ultimate success" (Wolfe).
Fulton & Stanton IV.66; Wolfe Tarnished Idol pp 62; 407-11; Osler 1432. (Inventory #: 38989)