Main content

Daniel J. Swinney papers

Notifications

Held at: Historical Medical Library of The College of Physicians of Philadelphia [Contact Us]19 S. 22nd Street, Philadelphia, PA 19103

This is a finding aid. It is a description of archival material held at the Historical Medical Library of The College of Physicians of Philadelphia. Unless otherwise noted, the materials described below are physically available in their reading room, and not digitally available through the web.

Overview and metadata sections

Daniel J. Swinney, physician, attended the lectures of Benjamin Rush at the University of Pennsylvania during the session of 1808-1809. He then began to practice medicine in Philadelphia County at Blockley, 1811-1813, then at Haddington, 1814, and in Montgomery County at Moreland, 1815-1816. He later removed to Ohio and had a practice in Mansfield, Richland County, from 1822-1827.

Swinney appears to have had one son, Andrew Jackson Swinney.

This small collection of Daniel J. Swinney's student lecture notes and related papers, recipe book, daybook, and vaccination records, 1808-1827, documents the education and early medical career of an obscure country physician during the early 19th century.

The collection is divided into two series. Series 1 concerns Swinney's medical education at the University of Pennsylvania, 1808-1809, and includes a receipt for his 1808-1809 session fee; an 1809 copy of Benjamin Rush's table of fevers, a diagram and description of the causes of ordinary fever; and two volumes of notes on the lectures of Rush on the institutes of medicine, 1808-1809. The Rush lectures (nos. 1-55, 7 November 1808-11 January 1809, and 78-94, 7 February 1809-27 February 1809) concern the duties of the patient to the physician; physiology; pathology; therapeutics; and the diseases of the mind.

Series 2 documents Daniel J. Swinney's medical practice in Pennsylvania and, later, Ohio. The series includes Swinney's recipe book, 1809-1813, containing specifics against diseases such as cancer, dysentery, and rheumatism; four volumes of Swinney's records, follow up examinations, and observations on the vaccination of children for smallpox at Blockley and Haddington in Philadelphia County, 18111814, then at Moreland in Montgomery County, 1815-1816; and a daybook, containing a chronological account of Swinney's patients, their ailments, and charges, from his practice in Mansfield, Ohio, 1822-1827.

The Daniel J. Swinney Papers were purchased by the Historical Collections of the College of Physicians of Philadelphia from an auction at Sotheby's, 1334 York Avenue Galleries, New York, N.Y., 10021, on 6 April 1983.

The collection was processed and catalogued in April 1990.

Publisher
Historical Medical Library of The College of Physicians of Philadelphia

Collection Inventory

Subseries 1.1 Receipt from the Medical Department of the University of Pennsylvania to D. J. Swinney for 1808-1809 session, circa 1808.
Box 1 Folder 1
1. Lectures 1-55, 7 November 1808-11 January 1809, 1809.
Box 1 Folder 2
2. Lectures 78-94, 7 February 1809-27 February 1809, 1808-1809.
Box 1 Volume 3-4
Subseries 1.3 Dr. Rush's table of fever, 1 March 1809, 1809.
Box 1 Folder 5
Materials Viewable Online
  1. Dr. Rush's table of fever, 1 March 1809

Subseries 2.1 Recipe book, 1809-1813.
Box 1 Volume 6
1. Vaccinations at Blockley, 23 January 1811-24 April 1811, 1811.
Box 1 Volume 7
2. Vaccinations at Blockley, 5 April 1811-23 April 1811; Vaccinations at Moreland, 15 April 1816, 1811; 1816.
Box 1 Volume 8
3. Vaccinations at Blockley, 27 May 1811-31 May 1811; 19 March 1812-6 June 1812, 1811-1812.
Box 1 Volume 9
4. Vaccinations at Blockley, 20 February 1813-11 June 1813; Vaccinations at Haddington, 7 January 1814-23 January 1814; Vaccinations at Moreland, 29 May 1815; 30 January 1816-6 February 1816, 1813-1816.
Box 1 Volume 10
Subseries 2.3 Daybook, Mansfield, Ohio, 21 July 1822-30 December 1827, 1822-1827.
Box 1 Volume 11

Print, Suggest