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Death Is Never Over Life, Death and Grave Robbery in a Historic Cemetery
Death is Never Over Life, Death and Grave Robbery in a Historic Cemetery By Rebecca Boggs Roberts B.A. in Politics, June 1992, Princeton University A Thesis submitted to The Faculty of The Columbian College of Arts and Sciences of The George Washington University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts May 20, 2012 Thesis directed by Roy Richard Grinker Professor of Anthropology, International Affairs, and Human Sciences Dedication This thesis is dedicated to the 55,000 men and women who are buried at Historic Congressional Cemetery in Washington, D.C. It’s been nice knowing you. ii Acknowledgements The author wishes to thank the staff at Historic Congressional Cemetery for their support and good humor; Cokie and Steve Roberts for the babysitting and copy editing; Dan Hartman for his infinite patience; and Jack, Cal, and Roland Hartman for letting mom steal the comfy desk chair. iii Abstract Death is Never Over Life, Death, and Grave Robbery in a Historic Cemetery The anthropology of death rituals describes various relationships among the three points of a triangle formed by the corpse, the soul, and the survivors. This structure, first proposed by Robert Hertz in 1907 and adapted many times since then, is useful for comparing seemingly disparate death rituals across cultures. Using this structure, the relative emphasis of one leg of the triangle over another can help clarify the needs a living community prioritizes upon the death of one of its members. I argue one leg of this triangle, the connection between the survivor and the corpse, deserves a longer period of examination. -
Dissection: a Fate Worse Than Death
Res Medica, Volume 21, Issue 1 Page 1 of 8 HISTORICAL ARTICLE Dissection: a fate worse than death Elizabeth F. Pond Year 3, MBBS Hull York Medical School Correspondence email: [email protected] Abstract The teaching of Anatomy in medical schools has significantly declined, and doubts have been raised over whether or not doctors of today are fully equipped with anatomical knowledge required to practice safely. The history of anatomy teaching has changed enormously over centuries, and donating your body to medical science after death is very different today, compared with the body snatching and exhumations of the 18th and 19th centuries. With stories of public outcry, theft and outright murder, the history of anatomical education is a fascinating one. History has made an abundance of significant anatomical discoveries, is it not fundamental that medical students today are aware of the great lengths that our peers went to in order to obtain such pioneering discoveries? Copyright Royal Medical Society. All rights reserved. The copyright is retained by the author and the Royal Medical Society, except where explicitly otherwise stated. Scans have been produced by the Digital Imaging Unit at Edinburgh University Library. Res Medica is supported by the University of Edinburgh’s Journal Hosting Service: http://journals.ed.ac.uk ISSN: 2051-7580 (Online) ISSN: 0482-3206 (Print) Res Medica is published by the Royal Medical Society, 5/5 Bristo Square, Edinburgh, EH8 9AL Res Medica, 2013, 21(1):61-67 doi: 10.2218/resmedica.v21i1.180 Pond, EF. Dissection: a fate worse than death Res Medica 2013, 21(1), pp.61-67 doi:10.2218/resmedica.v21i1.180 Pond EF. -
October 15,1990, Volume 27 Number 36 Sweet Selected As Candidate for NCAA President Judith M
The NCAA Official Publication of the National Collegiate Athletic Association October 15,1990, Volume 27 Number 36 Sweet selected as candidate for NCAA president Judith M. Sweet, director of ath- letics at the University of California, San Diego, and current NCAA secretary-treasurer, has been selected by the Nominating Committee as its candidate for president of the Association in 199 I- 1992. If elected at the January 1991 Convention in Nashville, she would replace Albert M. Witte, University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, as NCAA president at the conclusion of that Convention. Other new officers nominated by the committee: l B. J. Skelton, currently Division I vice-president, would replace Sweet as secretary-treasurer. Skelton is faculty athletics representative and dean of admissions and regis- tration at Clemson University. l Douglas S. Hobbs, currently a Judith M. Sweet B. J. Skelton Douglas S. Hobbs Anthony E Ceddia member of the NCAA Council, would replace Skelton as Division I president, replacing Jerry M. sweet was established in 1973. And only 1986-1987. She also is chairing the vice-president. Hobbs is faculty ath- Hughes, director of athletics at Cen- Already in the highest office ever one NCAA president in history was Budget Subcommittee and the Spe- letics representative and professor tral Missouri State University. held by a woman in the Association, from an institution that now is in cial Advisory Committee to Review of political science at the University Sweet would become the NCAA’s Division I I I Clarence P. Houston Recommendations Regarding Dis- of California, Los Angeles. Rocco J. Carzo, director of ath- first woman president. -
History – Body Snatching! on the 17Th May 1978 the Body of Famous Actor
History – Body Snatching! On the 17th May 1978 the body of famous actor Charlie Chaplin was found. The strange thing about this is that Charlie had died on Christmas day 1977 and he was buried in a cemetery near the family home. However, his body, still in the coffin, was stolen from his grave! It took 11 weeks to find the stolen body. The people who stole Charlie’s body were hoping to get a large amount of money to return it. This certainly wasn’t the first time people had stolen human bodies. Video clip - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h7L8CM03lMo Before 1832 it was illegal for anyone to dissect human bodies (apart from some criminals). Who do you think would want to dissect a human body? Why would they want to? Why do you think they were not allowed to? In 1832 a new law was introduced that allowed doctors, medical students and teachers of anatomy to dissect bodies that were donated to them. Before this the only way anyone could dissect a body was if a criminal was executed and the court said they could have the body. This meant that very few bodies were available for doctors to study. Doctors said it was important to do this so they could learn how the human body worked. So, some doctors would pay for bodies that came from other places! People started to steal dead bodies from hospitals, morgues and even graveyards. But they had to be fresh! Grave with metal bars to stop body snatchers. A watchtower in a cemetery to catch body snatchers. -
The Aeneid with Rabbits
The Aeneid with Rabbits: Children's Fantasy as Modern Epic by Hannah Parry A thesis submitted to the Victoria University of Wellington in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy Victoria University of Wellington 2016 Acknowledgements Sincere thanks are owed to Geoff Miles and Harry Ricketts, for their insightful supervision of this thesis. Thanks to Geoff also for his previous supervision of my MA thesis and of the 489 Research Paper which began my academic interest in tracking modern fantasy back to classical epic. He must be thoroughly sick of reading drafts of my writing by now, but has never once showed it, and has always been helpful, enthusiastic and kind. For talking to me about Tolkien, Old English and Old Norse, lending me a whole box of books, and inviting me to spend countless Wednesday evenings at their house with the Norse Reading Group, I would like to thank Christine Franzen and Robert Easting. I'd also like to thank the English department staff and postgraduates of Victoria University of Wellington, for their interest and support throughout, and for being some of the nicest people it has been my privilege to meet. Victoria University of Wellington provided financial support for this thesis through the Victoria University Doctoral Scholarship, for which I am very grateful. For access to letters, notebooks and manuscripts pertaining to Rosemary Sutcliff, Philip Pullman, and C.S. Lewis, I would like to thank the Seven Stories National Centre for Children's Books in Newcastle-upon-Tyne, and Oxford University. Finally, thanks to my parents, William and Lynette Parry, for fostering my love of books, and to my sister, Sarah Parry, for her patience, intelligence, insight, and many terrific conversations about all things literary and fantastical. -
A Sketch of the Life and Writings of Robert Knox, the Anatomist
This is a reproduction of a library book that was digitized by Google as part of an ongoing effort to preserve the information in books and make it universally accessible. https://books.google.com ASketchoftheLifeandWritingsRobertKnox,Anatomist HenryLonsdale V ROBERT KNOX. t Zs 2>. CS^jC<^7s><7 A SKETCH LIFE AND WRITINGS ROBERT KNOX THE ANA TOM/ST. His Pupil and Colleague, HENRY LONSDALE. ITmtfora : MACMILLAN AND CO. 1870. / *All Rights reserve'*.] LONDON : R. CLAV, SONS, AND TAYLOR, PRINTERS, BREAD STREET HILL. TO SIR WILLIAM FERGUSSON, Bart. F.R.S., SERJEANT-SURGEON TO THE QUEEN, AND PRESIDENT OF THE ROYAL COLLEGE OF SURGEONS OF ENGLAND. MY DEAR FERGUSSON, I have very sincere pleasure in dedicating this volume to you, the favoured pupil, the zealous colleague, and attached friend of Dr. Robert Knox. In associating your excellent name with this Biography, I do honour to the memory of our Anatomical Teacher. I also gladly avail myself of this opportunity of paying a grateful tribute to our long and cordial friendship. Heartily rejoicing in your well-merited position as one of the leading representatives of British Surgery, I am, Ever yours faithfully, HENRY LONSDALE. Rose Hill, Carlisle, September 15, 1870. PREFACE. Shortly after the decease of Dr. Robert Knox (Dec. 1862), several friends solicited me to write his Life, but I respectfully declined, on the grounds that I had no literary experience, and that there were other pupils and associates of the Anatomist senior to myself, and much more competent to undertake his biography : moreover, I was borne down at the time by a domestic sorrow so trying that the seven years since elapsing have not entirely effaced its influence. -
Night Doctors: Exhuming the Truth
Rhode Island College Digital Commons @ RIC Open Books, Open Minds: Browse All Submission September 2013 Night Doctors: Exhuming the Truth Dawn Danella Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.ric.edu/obom Part of the Bioethics and Medical Ethics Commons Recommended Citation Danella, Dawn, "Night Doctors: Exhuming the Truth" (2013). Open Books, Open Minds: Browse All Submission. 3. https://digitalcommons.ric.edu/obom/3 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by Digital Commons @ RIC. It has been accepted for inclusion in Open Books, Open Minds: Browse All Submission by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons @ RIC. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Danella, 1 Dawn Danella Dr. Jalalzai Writing 100 7 April 2013 Night Doctors: Exhuming the Truth The curious case of night doctors in the American South was born of over-eager medical professionals seeking bodies for their use in study and practice as well as Ku Klux Klan terrorism. There are some that say that the “night doctors” are a myth belonging solely to black folklore, a story used to frighten and manipulate. There is no doubt that is indeed what the lore achieved but the night doctors, aka “sack-em-up boys” aka “resurrectionists” aka night riders, did indeed live in more than just whispered stories. The night doctors were a real force that made a lasting impression on history and the repercussions of their horror story can still be felt in African American communities today. In this paper, I will delve into a journey through history, both near and far, of multiple genres in order to exhume the true chronicle of night doctors. -
VCU Scholars Compass
View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by VCU Scholars Compass Virginia Commonwealth University VCU Scholars Compass Office of the President Documents VCU University Archives 6-18-2012 Artifacts and Commingled Skeletal Remains from a Well on the Medical College of Virginia Campus: Anatomical and Surgical Training in Nineteenth- Century Richmond Jodi L. Koste Virginia Commonwealth University, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: http://scholarscompass.vcu.edu/arch001 Downloaded from http://scholarscompass.vcu.edu/arch001/2 This Research Report is brought to you for free and open access by the VCU University Archives at VCU Scholars Compass. It has been accepted for inclusion in Office of the President Documents by an authorized administrator of VCU Scholars Compass. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Anatomical and Surgical Training in Nineteenth-Century Richmond Jodi L. Koste The Virginia Commonwealth University (VCU) School of Medicine traces its origins to the Medical Department of Hampden-Sidney College (MDHSC). Four Richmond physicians under the leadership of Dr. Augustus L. Warner successfully petitioned the Hampden-Sidney trustees in October of 1837 to open a medical department in the commonwealth's capital, some seventy miles east of its liberal arts college located in rural Prince Edward County. Warner, a native of Baltimore and 1826 graduate of Princeton, completed his medical studies at the University of Maryland in 1829. An advocate of anatomical instruction and dissection for medical students, he spent his first five years after graduation practicing medicine and giving private lessons in anatomy, physiology, and surgery. -
2019 Topps WWE Raw Checklist
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Convertible Bus No. 4 Comes from the Word- Pseudonym When You Don’T Want to Write Well
The Convertible Bus Has A New Garage The title inspiration comes from Steve I saw two shooting stars last night ... Green, whose response this was to learning I was lucky enough to hear the Today pro- that I’ve moved (address in the indicia at the gramme’s interview with a New Zealand end). I now have space to put up all my fisherman who had been in the area of the books (my academic ones that is — my SF Pacific that Mir had come down in. The gist collection still largely resides in my of the conversation was as follows (jazzed mother’s loft, but they’re mostly embarrass- up for comic effect): ing Star Trek novels anyway) but worry constantly about whether I can actually af- TODAY: So, did you see anything when Mir ford the rent. burnt up? Apologies to anyone who should have got FISHERMAN: No, it was foggy. Convertible Bus 3 but didn’t; my laptop TODAY: Did you hear anything? died in the New Year, taking irretrievably FISHERMAN: No. with it my mailing list (and a half-written TODAY: So did you take any special precau- LoC to Banana Wings that will now never tions? see the light of day). FISHERMAN: No, I left New Zealand in January. First I heard of Mir coming ——— oOo ——— down was last week. No, no, break the mould! You couldn’t make it up (and I didn’t). I feel terribly ‘fannish’ at the moment, in ——— oOo ——— that I’m actually producing this in order To Have A Fanzine For Eastercon.1 Normally I Oh, spooky produce these after cons, since cons provide I have a ghost in the new flat that opens the me with the material (and I may well do kitchen door late at night while I’m working another Convertible Bus for the May First in the living room on my computer (it’s Thursday). -
Grave Robbing in the North and South in Antebellum America
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 3 Grave robbing in the North and South in antebellum America AUTHORS Rachel H. Mathis, M.D. Jill H. Watras, M.D., F.A.C.S Jonathan M. Dort, M.D., F.A.C.S. Inova Fairfax Medical Campus, Falls Church, VA. CORRESPONDING AUTHOR Rachel Mathis Department of Surgery 3300 Gallows Rd Falls Church, VA 22042 703-776-2337 [email protected] ©2016 by the American College of Surgeons. All rights reserved. CC2016 Poster Competition • Grave robbing in the North and South in antebellum America • 15 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 The transition in medical education from Grave robbing and anatomy legislation in the apprenticeship model to formal medical antebellum America courses in eighteenth and nineteenth century Colonial American medical education in the eighteenth America required a supply of cadavers for century, based on an apprenticeship model, still considered anatomic dissection. By the 1850s, all American practical anatomy essential to complete medical education. Formal courses in anatomy began to form, and by the 1850s, medical schools required anatomy courses as all American medical schools required anatomy courses as a a prerequisite for a medical degree, all of them prerequisite for a medical degree. The schools needed a steady facing the difficulty of acquiring the needed supply of instructional material—frankly, cadavers.1 cadavers. Early colonial laws forbade dissection, In the colonial era, the procurement of cadavers and the although later the use of cadavers of convicted practice of dissection were regulated by British law. -
Cooper Fine After Flight; Awaits Hero's Welcome ABOARD USS KEARSARGE in the Current Mercury Series, (AP) — L
Dufrlbution Today 21,850 trt* ncatttred Aowtn «Mlfih, terttawm, bifh « to ». San- day, ratty cloudy. Set matter, DIAL SH I-0010 W 2 VOL. 85 ' NO 232 Utmt «•»>*• x««w anv^-rtuar. s«o<md CUM OUlcu. RED BANK, N. J., FRIDAY, MAY 17, 1963 7c PER COPY PAGE ONE Cooper Faced, Met Challenge Magnificently CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) — For some 29 hours,, ond orbit. His fellow astronauts on the ground supposed he Essentially, what it did was to limit the ways Cooper John H. Glenn, Jr., who talked him down -through the early Astronaut Gorden Cooper was a man waiting for a chal- might take other catnaps when he had nothing to do. Finally had to control and to sense the position or attitude of his re-entry, he was right on the money. Glenn counted out the lenge. he slept for 7% hours during a planned rest period, awoke spacecraft. It knocked out the automatic control system's slow-down rocket countdown for him and monitored the po- It came and he met it magnificently. refreshed. usefulness for the first stages of re-entry—and it knocked out sition by radar from the Pacific Ocean ship on which he This is the story of a relaxed man—a man who can It seemed almost as dull as catching the bus to go to the accurate sensing devices that give an instrument reading was stationed, the coastal sentry. catch it catnap a hundred miles above the earth between work on Monday morning. of the spacecraft's attitude. Cooper had to rely on marks on his window, lining them up with references such as the earth's horizon, to set his jobs—and the story of that man in stress.