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'Olav Thulesius sets out to resurrect the sullied reputation of one
of the most prolific writers of medical works during the
Interregnum. - Thulesius has given us a welcome beginning of a
study of a fascinating and neglected figure who made serious
contributions to mid-seventeenth-century medicine while always
living on the fringes of the established and licensed medical
community.' - Martha Baldwin, Journal of the History or Medicine
Was Nicholas Culpeper (1616-54) the father of English herbal
medicine or a quacksalver and charlatan astrologer? This first
modern biography shows a more complex picture. For example during
the Civil War the Puritan Culpeper was wounded while fighting on
the Parliamentarian side, as a physician of the poor, he had a
burning desire to explain the secrets of medicine to ordinary
people, He was not only the author of the famous herbal The English
Physician but he also wrote the first book on midwifery and
childcare and translated The London Pharmacopoeia.
Mention Civil War naval confrontations and the Monitor instantly
springs to mind. The first of the ironclads, the Monitor not only
took part in a major battle, it forever changed the face of naval
construction. But who was the man behind the ship? Born in
Filipstad, Sweden, in 1803, the brilliant and somewhat eccentric
engineer John Ericsson spent his childhood observing his father's
work in mining and later learned his engineering skills at the
North Atlantic-Baltic canal. As a young man Ericsson turned to a
variety of projects. In England, he introduced the ship's
propeller, built an Arctic expedition vessel and designed some of
the first successful steam locomotives. Moving to New York in 1839,
he soon teamed up with Harry Cornelius Delameter of the Phoenix
foundry, a partnership which resulted in Ericsson's most famous
work, the USS Monitor. Focusing on the man behind the inventions,
this book tells the life story of John Ericsson. It details a
number of Ericsson's inventions including a steam-powered fire
engine, the first screw-propelled warship, a variety of hot-air
engines, and early experiments in solar power from the roof of his
Manhattan home. The main focus is Ericsson's design and
construction of the ironclad USS Monitor. One of the first viable
armored warships, the Monitor revolutionized naval warfare the
world over. The ship's battle with the CSS Virginia at Hampton
Roads and its eventual fate off the coast of Cape Hatteras are
covered. Ericsson's relationships with contemporaries such as
Alfred Nobel and recent developments concerning the recovery of the
wreck of the Monitor are also examined.
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