Francis Gurney Smith (1818 - 1878) was a Civil War Union Army physician, Professor of the Institutes of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania from 1863 to 1877, editor the Philadelphia Medical Examiner from 1849 to 1854, first President of the Obstetrical Society of Philadelphia, serving from 1868 to 1872, and served a term as Vice-President of the American Medical Association in 1870.
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John Neill (1819 - 1890) was a Civil War Union Army surgeon and Professor of Clinical Surgery in the University of Pennsylvania. He volunteered his services soon after the war started, and was appointed Medical Director of the Home Guard in charge of all military hospitals in Philadelphia. Through his efforts and organization the city's first eight military hospitals were established in building he appropriated. He used his influence and contacts to quickly staff the hospitals with recruits and volunteers, and he secured all the medical supplies for them. Because of his rapid work, Philadelphia became established as one of the main centers in the United States for military hospitals throughout the war. After the war he spent a number of years in simple private practice, but in 1874 he was elected as Professor of Clinical Surgery in the University of Pennsylvania. He also served as consulting surgeon of the Asylum of the Deaf and Dumb, and to the Presbyterian Hospital. He founded the College of Physicians Museum, and was it's first curator (it is now known as the Mütter Museum).
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Second ed., rev. and improved
Published as part 2 of An analytical compendium of the various branches of medical science