Page:American Medical Biographies - Kelly, Burrage.djvu/481

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GREEN
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GREEN

cine (Wright). Green laid himself open to criticism by his faulty pathology; and yet, except in the origin of pulmonary phthisis from follicular pharyngitis, Morell Mackenzie supported him. In spite of the opposition and jealousy of many of the physicians in New York, Green built up a very lucrative practice, and, confining his work to laryngeal affections, became the first specialist in this country to devote himself to diseases of the throat.

1839. Trousseau and Belloc: A practical treatise on laryngeal phthisis, chronic laryngitis, and diseases of the voice. Philadelphia.
1846. Green, Horace: A treatise on diseases of the air passages. New York.
1847. Boston Medical and Surgical Journal, vol. XXXV.
1847. New York Journal of Medicine, vol. viii.
1848. Green, Horace: Observations on the pathology of croup: with remarks on its treatment by topical medications. New York.
1850. Boston Medical and Surgical Journal, vol. xlii.
1853. Erichsen, John: The Science and Art of Surgery. London.
1854. Green, Horace: On the employment of injections into the bronchial tubes, and into tubercular cavities of the lungs. American Medical Monthly, vol. iii.
1855. Reports of the special committee to which the paper of Dr. Horace Green, on "Injections into the bronchial tubes, and into tubercular cavities of the lungs," was referred. Majority and minority report. Transactions of the New York Academy of Medicine, vol. i.
1855. Discussion on the reports of the committee of the New York Academy of Medicine, to whom was referred the paper of Dr. Horace Green "On the employment of injections into the bronchial tubes and tubercular cavities of the lungs." American Medical Monthly, vol. iii.
1867. Remarks and resolutions on the death of Horace Green. Bulletin of the New York Academy of Medicine, vol. iii.
1914. Wright, Jonathan: A history of laryngology and rhinology. Philadelphia.
1919. Miller, W. S. Horace Green and his probang. Johns Hopkins Hosp. Bull., vol. xxx.

Green, Jacob (1790–1841)

Jacob Green, physician and scientist, was born in Philadelphia, July 26, 1790, son of Ashbel Green, D. D., LL. D., president of the College of New Jersey (Princeton College), and later a trustee of Jefferson Medical College in Philadelphia.

From boyhood he was interested in science, his first work being in botany. He made a large collection of plants, and when twenty-four years of age published "An Address on the Botany of the United States . . . to which is added a Catalogue of Plants Indigenous to the State of New York." Later he extended his studies to mineralogy, conchology, chemistry, electricity and galvanism, and zoology in general.

In 1807 he graduated A. B. from the University of Pennsylvania and soon after, in connection with a friend, wrote a "Treatise on Electricity" which gave him a reputation, although yet a boy. In 1812 he graduated from Rutgers College; Rutgers and Princeton gave him an A. M. in 1815 and Jefferson an M. D. and LL. D. in 1835. He studied law and practised in Philadelphia, but in 1818 he accepted a professorship in chemistry, experimental philosophy and natural history in Princeton. Four years later he resigned, moved to Philadelphia and was given the chair of chemistry when the Jefferson Medical College was established, holding this position until his death.

He wrote a "Text-book of Chemical Philosophy on the Basis of Dr. Turner's Elements of Chemistry," 616 pp., Philadelphia, 1829. He was a frequent contributor to Silliman's Journal. Yale University gave Dr. Green an honorary A. M. in 1827.

Green died on February 1, 1841.

Lives of Eminent Philadelphians Now Deceased, H. Simpson, 1859.
Univ. of Penn., 1740–1900, J. L. Chamberlain, ed., 1900, vol. ii.

Green, John (1736–1799)

John Green was the son of the Rev. Thomas Green, Baptist elder and physician, one of the earliest settlers of Leicester (Greenville), Massachusetts, where John was born August 14, 1836.

Instructed in medicine by his father, he came to Worcester and built his house on the eminence now known as Green Hill, which although relatively nearer town at that time, when many persons lived north of Lincoln Square and there were but seven houses on Main Street between that point and the Old South Church on the common, seems yet to have been at a distance that might well make prospective patients hesitate before storming the steeps in the dead of night or in bad weather. Patients came, however; medical students also from Worcester and surrounding towns; Green Lane became a county road and, although during the latter part of his life, his office was in a little wooden affair on the present site of the Five Cents Savings Bank, the doctor always lived in the Green Hill house, and there he died forty-two years later (October 29, 1799), aged sixty-three.

An earnest patriot, he was, in 1733, a member (and the only medical member) of the American Political Society, which was formed on account of the grievous burdens of the times and did much to bring about that change of public sentiment which expelled the adherent of the crown. He took a prominent part in all the Revolutionary proceedings, and in 1777 was sent as representative to the General Court. In 1778 and 1779 he was town treasurer, and in 1780 one of the selectmen, the only physician who ever held that office.