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Founders and Early Benefactors

John F. Fulton

John
Farquhar Fulton,
D.Phil., M.D., 1899-1960
Photograph by Samuel Kravitt, March 1946 |
John Fulton, the youngest of the three founders of the Historical Library,
trained in medicine and physiology at Harvard and Oxford, and came to Yale in
1930 as professor of physiology. He was already deep into collecting books when
he served as a resident and disciple of Harvey Cushing at the Peter Bent Brigham
Hospital. The two men shared a close friendship based on both scientific and
historical interests. Like Cushing, Fulton became a bibliophile, bibliographer,
and historian. His special collecting interest was physiological works from the
16th to 18th century. In addition to his major texts in physiology, Fulton authored
or coauthored biographies of Harvey Cushing, Benjamin Silliman, and Michael Servetus,
and bibliographies of Fracastoro’s poem Syphilis, Luigi Galvani and his nephew
Aldini, Richard Lower and John Mayow, Joseph Priestley, Robert Boyle, and early
works on anesthesia. Fulton became the first chairman of the Department of History
of Medicine at Yale in 1951 with offices across the hall from the Historical
Library offices.
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Sir Thomas Browne, 1605-1682.
Religio medici
[London]: Printed for Andrew Crooke, 1642.
Gift of John F. Fulton.
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Religio medici, essays on the religious philosophy of a practicing doctor,
has been said to be one of the most famous works of English literature written
by a physician. Browne circulated manuscripts privately, not intending to publish,
but two unauthorized editions appeared in 1642, and the work has been printed
scores of times since. Fulton collected a large number of editions. Osler and
Cushing both loved the work. A copy was placed in Osler’s coffin. Cushing named
a book of his essays Consecratio medici after Religio medici. The engraved title
page was by William Marshall. |
John F. Fulton A Bibliography of the Honourable Robert Boyle
Oxford : Oxford University Press, 1932 |
John F. Fulton’s A Bibliography of the Honourable Robert Boyle (Oxford: Oxford
University Press, 1932) remains the authoritative bibliography for works of the
famous 17th century natural philosopher, chemist, and physiologist. Any book
dealer today offering a book by Boyle continues to identify it by its Fulton
number. This copy belonged to Klebs and is bound in partial vellum.
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| Robert Boyle was one of the chief figures associated with the new Royal Society
of London founded after the Restoration. Fulton collected editions of Boyle’s
many works on chemistry, physics, physiology, and religion, as a basis for his
definitive bibliography. Although Boyle was not a physician, he wrote also on
remedies. The plate shows Robert Boyle’s pneumatic machine used in studies of
the air, including animal respiration. |

Robert Boyle, 1627-1691
New Experiments Physico-mechanical, Touching Spring of the Air, and its Effects. (Made, For the Most Part, in a New Pneumatical Engine).
Oxford: H. Hall for T. Robinson, 1662.
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John Mayow, 1641-1679. Tractatus quinque medico-physici.
[Five medico-physical tracts] Oxford: E Theatro Sheldoniano, 1674. Gift of John F. Fulton.
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Fulton collected and wrote a bibliography of the works of two 17th century
British physiologists Richard Lower and John Mayow. Mayow was the first to
locate the production of animal heat in the muscles, and suggested that the
purpose of breathing was to extract specific life-sustaining particles from the
ambient air. This book, five treatises on nitro-aerial spirits, respiration,
fetal respiration, muscular motion, and rickets, is a medical classic.
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| Fulton’s collection of works on anesthesia, on which this bibliography is
based, includes works on early methods of relieving surgical and dental pain,
works related to Crawford Long, Horace Wells, William T.G. Morton, Charles Jackson,
James Young Simpson, and other early books and pamphlets |
John F. Fulton and Madeline Stanton,
compilers. The Centennial of Surgical Anesthesia: An Annotated Catalogue of Books and Pamphlets bearing on the
Early History of Surgical Anesthesia, Exhibited at the Yale Medical Library, October 1946.
New York: H. Schuman, 1946.
Presentation signature by John F. Fulton.
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Horace Wells, 1815-1848
Essay on Teeth; Comprising a Brief Description of
Their Formation, Diseases, and Proper Treatment.
Hartford: Printed for the author, 1838.
Gift of John F. Fulton
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This early American work on dentistry, part of Fulton’s anesthesia collection,
was published by Hartford dentist Horace Wells when he was only 23. Wells
discussed here the problem of toothache and other dental pain and the available
means of alleviation. In 1844, he successfully used nitrous oxide anesthesia
in his dental practice, but the demonstration of his method at Harvard Medical
School proved a failure. Wells destroyed his life trying to wrest credit for
the discovery of anesthesia from William T.G. Morton who successfully
demonstrated ether anesthesia in October 1846.
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Arnold Klebs and John Fulton |

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Fulton bookplates
8 x 8 cm & 3 x 9 cm |
Fulton Fund bookplate. The original design was cut circular. The fund is used to purchase
rare books and prints for the Historical Library. Fulton’s own bookplate found
in the books he donated.
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