Hi all
I am copying this from a post of mine on a 2004-2005 thread here on "Anatomical Knowledge." --
I have said elsewhere that the stated opinions of the medical men in the case changed noticeably after the uproar over Coroner Wynn Baxter's pronouncements at the Chapman inquest in late September. Specifically, Baxter stated that he had information that a foreign medical man had been enquiring from British medical institutions some time before for specimens of uteri, and was prepared to pay £20 for each specimen, supposedly to issue with copies of a new book.
It was subsequently reported [in the Chicago Tribune of 7 October 1888] that while there had been such a doctor, he was a respectable (though unnamed) Philadelphia physician with a large practice and that he did not want the specimens for the reason stated, nor did he offer that sum of money. The British medical press proclaimed that it was nonsense to think that a medical man could be involved in any way with the crimes.
Best regards
Chris
I am copying this from a post of mine on a 2004-2005 thread here on "Anatomical Knowledge." --
I have said elsewhere that the stated opinions of the medical men in the case changed noticeably after the uproar over Coroner Wynn Baxter's pronouncements at the Chapman inquest in late September. Specifically, Baxter stated that he had information that a foreign medical man had been enquiring from British medical institutions some time before for specimens of uteri, and was prepared to pay £20 for each specimen, supposedly to issue with copies of a new book.
It was subsequently reported [in the Chicago Tribune of 7 October 1888] that while there had been such a doctor, he was a respectable (though unnamed) Philadelphia physician with a large practice and that he did not want the specimens for the reason stated, nor did he offer that sum of money. The British medical press proclaimed that it was nonsense to think that a medical man could be involved in any way with the crimes.
Best regards
Chris
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