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  2. Night Doctors (also known as Night Riders, Night Witches, Ku Klux Doctors and Student Doctors) are bogeymen of African American folklore, resulting from some factual basis.

  3. Aug 18, 2021 · The night doctors were terrifying figures, the boogeymen of their day, and the stories surrounding them are rooted in a uniquely American folk tradition – a tradition shaped by the legacy of racial violence and subjugation from the not-so-distant past.

    • Mark Laskey
  4. Oct 11, 2016 · Also known as “Ku Klux doctors,” “night witches,” “night riders,” and “student doctors,” night doctors, according to popular legend, were doctors, medical students, or their agents who prowled northern cities at night looking for African Americans, whom they would kidnap and murder, using their bodies in anatomical dissections.

  5. Night Doctors (also known as Night Riders, Night Witches, Ku Klux Doctors and Student Doctors) are bogeymen of African American folklore, resulting from some factual basis.

    • The Rise of The Resurrectionists
    • Sack-‘Em-Up-Men
    • Snatching to Order
    • The Burkers

    Although the causes of disease were still little understood, 18th-century surgeons like John Hunter were beginning to prove the true value of anatomy. Medicine was fast becoming a respectable profession and, from 1805 to 1820, there were around a thousand medical students in London and the same again in Edinburgh. Despite the law of 1726 granting t...

    Resurrectionists were sometimes known as ‘night doctors’ or ‘sack-‘em-up-men’for their way of unearthing a corpse and carrying it off in a large hessian sack. On dark winter nights, coffins were partially dug up, the lid prised open with a crowbar and the occupant hauled out on a stout rope. The body was unceremoniously stripped bare. The shroud an...

    Surgeons often connived with their suppliers, directing them to the grave of a deceased patient whose condition they wished to investigate. The price might be as high as 16 guineas for a fresh, adult corpse, while curiosities commanded a premium. John Hunter was so desperate to secure the body of Charles Byrne, a seven-and-a-half-foot giant, that h...

    The names of William Burke and William Harestill ring down the ages. In 1828, the city of Edinburgh was appalled to discover that these two men had committed as many as 60 murders. Although the most infamous of the resurrection men, the pair fell into the trade by chance. When an elderly lodger at Hare’s Edinburgh boarding house died of natural cau...

  6. Aug 8, 2020 · Night doctors kidnapped people to use for experimentation without their consent. Read about their history and related ethical issues at Johns Hopkins.

  7. The night doctor is one of several popular tropes in Black American narratives, dating it as far back as slavery itself.[2] It subjects the imagination to ruthless medical students and their coconspiratures prowling urban streets.

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