Flip through the beautiful pages of this 1501 Liber Navitatus…
Have you checked out our image collection yet? We’ve been running a harvester through the MHL collections pulling out all the images and collecting them on Flickr for easy use. There are over 2 million images there now and we’re only through the nineteenth century! Have a look and let us know what you think!
The Paneth Codex, which includes selections from Galen, Hippocrates,
Constantinus Africanus, Rhazes, Gerardus Cremonensis, Macer Floridus, and Bruno Longoburgensis.
Check out the full, gorgeous volume below!
Our partners have been busily adding all sorts of wonderful things to our collection, including lots more MS and handwritten materials. Among the latest additions are fourteen volumes of handwritten notes on lectures given by Eli Ives, William Tully, both Yale School of Medicine professors, as well as others only identified by their initials.
You can see all fourteen volumes in our collections here.
You can view all fourteen volumes of notes in our collections here.
If you’re attending ALHHS/AAHM in Columbus this year, keep an eye out for MHL goodies: we’ve got stickers and bookmarks (try the NLM table) and don’t forget to follow us on Twitter because our president, Melissa Grafe, has control of the account for the event!
Check out this beautiful bound manuscript, written on vellum, with red and blue lettering; first initial in colors and gold.
It ncludes some descriptive material by Dr. Ignaz Schwarz of Vienna,
antiquarian bookseller from whom Dr. Cushing purchased the manuscript in 1936.
If you’re looking to improve or start your garden this year, Tusser redivivus: being part of Mr. Thomas Tusser’s Five hundred points of husbandry; directing what corn, grass, & c. is proper to be sown; what trees to be planted; how land is to be improved; with what ever is fit to be done for the benefit of the farmer in every month of the year may be just the book you’re looking for!
Did you know you can get a RSS feed from the MHL on the Internet Archive? Put this in your favorite reader and never miss another upload!
Our latest uploads include a manuscript from Galen, Nine Tracts from Jean Gerson in 1456, and a fifteenth century medical dictionary. Our partners are adding new material all the time, so be sure you check in regularly!
Applications for the 2019 MHL fellowships are due on Monday, April 1st!
This is one of a great series of posts from the College of Physicians of Philadelphia Historical Medical Library blog called #TravelTuesday. This post by Caitlin Angelone.
Rawley Springs is an unincorporated community in Rockingham County, 9 miles west of Harrisonburg, Virginia, and was once known for its lavish medical resort. European men began to settle the land in the early 19th century. One of the earliest settlers was Benjamin Smith, who sent his wife Elizabeth to the springs for her health in 1810. Doctors were perplexed on what was causing her illness, but within six weeks of staying at the springs and drinking the water she was cured. Shortly after, people began to set up summer camps by the springs. Joseph Hicks is credited for purchasing land and officially advertising the small village as a resort community in 1824.
The chalybeate waters of the spring are high in iron and salts, acting as a natural tonic which has been bottled and marketed as a cure all for disease, including maladies peculiar to females, liver disease, and diseases by poverty of the blood and nervous system. The springs usually remain around “earth temperature” which is 54 degrees, making it a popular destination for a summer dip or a place to escape the diseases of summer in larger cities. The B & O and A & M Railroads reached nearby Harrisonburg, or people also had the option of taking the Rawley Springs Turnpike, which was $3.00 for a one-way trip.
Rooms cost $2.50 a day, $15 for a week, or $50 for a four week stay. The resort also housed a post office, toll house, pottery shed, and distillery. The grand dining hall could host dinners for up to 389 people and was a local attraction for a night out.
In 1886, 2 days before the grand season re-opening on June 10, a fire destroyed the dining room along with two of the three hotels. The resort struggled, but rebuilt its dining hall with the insurance money collected. The resort continued to struggle, and was sold to Massanetta & Rawley Springs Company in 1914, and the same year another fire destroyed the rest of the remaining buildings. The company did not rebuild and instead divided the land in 1918, which was sold for smaller cottage homes.
Today, Rawley Springs remains a popular attraction. The large and risky rock formations make it popular for hikers, while places like the “Blue Hole” in the Dry River still attract people for fishing and swimming. Commercialization of the area is not allowed, meaning there are no longer hotels and resorts on the land. All buildings of the former resort have been destroyed, and only stone land markers remain outlining the hotels. Private homes still remain and are actively used for summer homes by nearby Harrisonburg residents.
Sources:
Rafuse, Diana. “A Brief History of Rawley Springs.” 2007.
Rafuse, Diana. “Mixing Pleasure and Profit at the Springs: The Harrisonburg-Rawley Connection.” The Harrisonburg-Rockingham Historical Society Newsletter. Vol. 31, No. 2, 2009.
Rawley Springs. (Medical Trade Ephemera Collection) Historical Medical Library of The College of Physicians of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, PA.
“Rawley Springs, Virginia.” Harrisonburg, 1995. Website. 11/29/18. http://www.harrisonburg.org/rawley/