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by Swallow: Foreign Bodies


  ———. “The Simplification of Technique in Peroral Endoscopy.” British Medical Journal 2, no. 4120 (Dec. 23, 1939): 1223-24.

  Nelson, Marilyn. Fortune’s Bones: The Manumission Requiem. Asheville, North Carolina: Front Street, 2004.

  “A New Bronchoscope and Bronchoscopic Technique.” British Medical Journal 1, no. 3869 (Mar. 2, 1935): 420.

  New York Herald Tribune, “Modern Equivalent of a Saint,” July 24, 1938.

  ———, “What America is Reading,” July 17, 1938.

  New York Times, “Baby Flies to Clinic: She Travels 1,800 Miles with Open Safety Pin in Throat,” Nov. 19, 1942.

  ———, “Baby, Nail in Lung, in from Australia,” June 25, 1936.

  ———, “Boy, 5, Flies from South Africa to Be Treated for Throat Ailment,” Aug. 18, 1945, 16.

  ———, “Boy Ends 10,000-Mile Trip,” May 27, 1946.

  ———, “Boy Who Journeyed to Philadelphia Recovering—Operation Takes Four Minutes,” Jan. 21, 1924.

  ———, “Boy Who Swallowed Nail Coming to U.S. Surgeon,” Mar. 13, 1936.

  ———, “Bronchoscope Clinic Keeps Realistic Record of Work,” Sept. 18, 1927.

  ———, “Can Opener Removed After Child Is Flown to Philadelphia,” Aug. 11, 1942.

  ———, “Child in Race Against Death,” Aug. 16, 1942.

  ———, “Corn Kernel from Child’s Lung,” Apr. 12, 1931.

  ———, “Doctor Treats Lung Abscess Through Tube; Frenchman Also Removes Foreign Objects,” Oct. 20, 1930.

  ———, “Dr. Jackson Quits Active Practice,” June 10, 1938.

  ———, “Football Cheers Punish Larynx, Says Dr. Jackson,” Dec. 30, 1938.

  ———, “Former Miss Biddle of Philadelphia, Suffering from Poisoning, Is Believed Out of Danger,” Mar. 22, 1925.

  ———, “France Honors Dr. Chevalier Jackson,” June 20, 1929.

  ———, “Mercy Operation for Boy,” July 17, 1945.

  ———, “Nail in His Lung, Boy, 3, Undaunted,” June 14, 1936.

  ———, “Nail in Lung Gone, Boy, 3, Tours City,” July 31, 1936.

  ———, “Opera Troupe Elects Head,” Dec. 23, 1949.

  ———, “Razor Blade Is Taken from Boy’s Stomach,” June 13, 1931.

  ———, “Swallows False Teeth,” July 13, 1931.

  ———, “Trip to Save Boy’s Life: South Africa Raises Fund to Fly Child, 5, to Philadelphia,” June 27, 1945, 15.

  News and Observer, “Monument to Doctors and Scientists,” Oct. 23, 1938.

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  “Operation: Dr. Jackson Draws a ‘Nyle’ Out of Kelvin Rodgers.” Newsweek, July 4, 1936.

  Palta, Renee, Amandeep Sahota, Ali Bemarki, Paul Salama, Nicole Simpson, and Loren Laine. “Foreign-Body Ingestion: Characteristics and Outcomes in a Lower Socioeconomic Population with Predominantly Intentional Ingestion.” Gastrointestinal Endoscopy 69, no. 3 (Mar. 2009): 426-33.

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  ———, “Dr. Jackson Hurt in Crash: Bronchoscopic Expert Gives Self First Aid,” Oct. 24, 1933.

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  ———. On Kissing, Tickling, and Being Bored: Psychoanalytic Essays on the Unexamined Life. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1994.

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  Schindler, Rudolf. “Gastroscopy with a Flexible Gastroscope (with Discussants Chevalier Jackson and William A. Swalm).” American Journal of Digestive Diseases and Nutrition 2, no. 11 (Nov. 1935): 656-63.

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  Sunday Star, “Specialist Reveals Rare Zeal,” Sept. 4, 1938.

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  ———. “Voice Forum,” New York Herald Tribune, Dec. 1, 1946.

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  ———. “Endoscopy: Part II.” American Journal of Nursing 29, no. 11 (Nov. 1929): 1289-95.

  ———. “Endoscopy: Part III—Operating Room Technic.” American Journal of Nursing 29, no. 12 (Dec. 1929): 1407-14.

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  Swallow was made possible by the beneficent guidance of numerous outstanding archivists and the collections in their care. I am especially grateful to F. Michael Angelo, University Archivist at Thomas Jefferson University, Scott Memorial Library, for his knowledge, expertise, and on-going correspondence, for his warmth, and for his enthusiasm for this project. F. Michael Angelo introduced me to the gastroenterologist, Dr. V. Alin Botoman, whose generous conversation, instruction, and collaboration grace some of the pages of this book. Dan Super did a fabulous job with photographic reproductions from Jefferson’s collections, and M.M. Alice Haworth’s firsthand account of Idlewood in the Jefferson University Archives, “Some Recollections of Idlewood,” brought that place alive for me and provided me with a living history from which I could draw.

  Anna N. Dhody, Curator of the Mütter Museum, The College of Physicians of
Philadelphia, welcomed me from the start, and I wish to thank her especially for enriching my understanding of the possible significances of the bones found in Jackson’s attic as well as for entrusting me with the important work ahead: the co-curation of the newly improved Chevalier Jackson fbdy collection display. Laurel K. Weller, former Museum Educator, Mütter Museum, graciously introduced me to Margaret Derryberry, and Brandon Zimmerman, former Administrative Coordinator and Designer, Mütter Museum, shared excitement for this project as well as helpful stories about the history of the fbdy collection while tracking down X-rays and other bits of material culture that form a context for the collection. Andrea Kenyon, Director of the Library, and Joan R. McKenzie, Technical Services Librarian of the College of Physicians of Philadelphia, helped me to mine the resources at their disposal and even found traces of work I myself had carried out in the library decades ago that I would have otherwise forgotten.

  Stephen J. Greenberg, Coordinator of Public Services, History of Medicine Division, National Library of Medicine, National Institutes of Health, Department of Health and Human Services, and James Labosier, Associate Curator of Manuscripts at the National Library of Medicine, responded to my research queries, in person and from afar, thoroughly and with aplomb. James Labosier’s impeccable reproductions of so many valuable traces of Jackson’s medical legacy were unsurpassed, and the library and History of Medicine Reading Room is such an endlessly rich resource, I think I could easily live there.

  I spent a wonderful afternoon poring over Jacksoniana with Eric W. Jentsch, Associate Curator, Division of Medicine and Science, National Museum of American History, Smithsonian Institution, and I thank him and his colleagues at the Smithsonian’s Archives Center, the Behring Center, for their generous attention and time: David Haberstitch, Associate Curator of Photography; Reuben Jackson, Associate Curator; Wendy Shay, Deputy Chair; and, Kay Peterson, Customer Service Representative.

  Sarah Elder, Curator of Collections, Glore Psychiatric Museum, and Scott Clarke, the museum’s former curator, filled in important blanks relative to the history of the stomach contents display, and Duane Chandler of Kings County Hospital, Brooklyn, helped me to search for traces of the case of hardware swallower, Miss Mabel Wolfe. I thank Franklin Institute Curator, John Alviti, for his engagement with me and for his swift re-discovery and documentation of the Jackson fbdy display that was built for the museum and on view at the Institute in the 1930s. I am indebted to his staff: Erin Johnson, Research Assistant; Cheryl Desmond, Curatorial Department, Collections Manager; Charles Penniman, Institute volunteer; and Susannah Carroll, part-time Curatorial Associate, all of whom provided me with photographs and other material relative to the exhibit.

 

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