Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Jacob Bigelow (February 27, 1787 [1] – January 10, 1879) was an American physician, botanist and botanical illustrator. He was architect of Mount Auburn Cemetery in Cambridge, Massachusetts (in which he is interred), husband to Mary Scollay, and the father of physician Henry Jacob Bigelow.

  2. Mar 9, 2021 · As a bright young surgeon at MGH in the fall of 1846, Henry Jacob Bigelow was in prime position to observe the events of Ether Day and shape their impact thereafter. His article announcing the success on that day is known as one of the most influential articles ever published in NEJM.

  3. Phineas Gage was a railroad worker who survived a tamping iron injury to his frontal lobe in 1848. Henry Jacob Bigelow, a doctor, brought Gage to Boston to study his recovery and donated his skull and iron bar to the Warren Anatomical Museum.

  4. Jun 27, 2018 · Bigelow, Jacob (17861879). Rumford Professor of Medicine at Harvard University, responsible for the design of Mount Auburn Cemetery, Cambridge, MA, with its Egyptian Revival gateway and lodges (1825–42). It was the first garden-cemetery in the USA. Bibliography. Carrott (1978); Linden-Ward (1988)

  5. Henry Jacob Bigelow (March 11, 1818 – October 30, 1890) was an American surgeon and Professor of Surgery at Harvard University. A dominating figure in Boston medicine for many decades, he is remembered for the Bigelow maneuver for hip dislocation, a technique for treatment of kidney stones, and other innovations.

  6. The employment of surgical anesthesia is arguably one of the greatest medical discoveries of all time, and has immensely broadened our ability to treat the ill. While Dr. Henry Jacob Bigelow (1818-1890) was not the inventor of anesthesia, he was the first to publish and advocate its use in the 19th century (Bigelow and Bigelow [1894] A Memoir ...

  7. People also ask

  8. Bust of Jacob Bigelow, MD (1786-1879) artifact, Second floor. Bigelow began working with MGH co-founder James Jackson in 1811, and they were considered the most popular medical practitioners in Boston for the next 60 years. He was on staff at MGH from 1836 to 1856.

  1. People also search for