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Coxe family papers
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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.
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John Redman Coxe was born on 16 September 1773 in Trenton, N.J. and died in Philadelphia on 22 March 1864. Coxe studied medicine under Dr. Benjamin Rush during the yellow fever epidemic of 1793 and attended the University of Pennsylvania, which granted him a medical degree in 1794. He furthered his medical studies for two years in London, Paris, and Edinburgh, before returning again to Philadelphia to set up private practice. During the second outbreak of yellow fever in Philadelphia in 1798, Coxe was appointed Physician to the Poor by the Board of Health. He served several years as a physician at Pennsylvania Hospital and the Philadelphia Dispensary.
Coxe held the positions of Professor of Chemistry (1809-1818) and Professor of Materia Medica and Pharmacy (1818-1835) at the University of Pennsylvania. He was a strong advocate of vaccination and one of the first to practice this new preventive method in Philadelphia. Coxe also added to the knowledge of materia medica by cultivating a true jalap plant (1829) and developing a "Hive Syrup" that remained in common use for fifty years. From 1804-1811, Coxe published the first regularly issued periodical in Philadelphia and the second American medical journal, The Medical Museum.
The Coxe family papers is a small collection dating from 1857 to 1869, containing mostly correspondence and wills. The collection includes an 1857 copy of John Redman Coxe's (1773-1864) will; Alfred Coxe's 1882 will; letters of consent from E. M. Lewis and Ferdinand Coxe for the sale of timber and land belonging to the estate of John Redman Coxe, 1872; letters to Alfred Coxe from his lawyer, L. C. Cleeman, 1882; three letters from Ferdinand Coxe to his brother Alfred Coxe, 1872; a letter from Mary R. Lewis to her uncle Alfred Lewis, 1872; a letter to Alfred Coxe from Henry Southern, 1869; a deed for a plot in Woodlands Cemetery, signed by Mary C. Coxe and Sallie C. Boyer; an expenditure account of Ferdinand Coxe in the estate of John Redman Coxe, 1866 to 1869; documents from a legal case between John Redman Coxe and Thomas B. and Thomas H. Towne, 1859; and a draft of Alfred Coxe's will.
- Publisher
- Historical Medical Library of The College of Physicians of Philadelphia
- Finding Aid Author
- Chrissie Perella
- Finding Aid Date
- March 2020