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John Elliotson

 
(1791-1868)

President of the Royal Medical and Chirurgical Society of London and the first great exponent of animal magnetism in England. Elliotson was born October 29, 1791, in London. He later studied medicine at Edinburgh and Cambridge Universities, continuing after his M.D. degree with studies at Guy's Hospital, London. He became a professor of principles and practice of medicine at University College Hospital, which he helped to establish and where he lectured and served as a physician for a brief period (1834-38). In 1837 he became president of the Medico-Chirurgical Society, London, and was also a fellow of the Royal Society, Royal College of Physicians.

He was introduced to the subject of animal magnetism in 1837 by Baron Du Potet, whom he allowed to experiment at University College Hospital. His curiosity aroused, he himself began to study the phenomena and in 1838 found two wonderful somnambules in the O'Key sisters, Jane and Elizabeth. The success of his experiments created a stir. When he applied for a demonstration in one of the theaters of the college, he was refused permission, and he was finally requested to discontinue mesmeric practice in the hospital. Following this, in the autumn of 1838, he resigned his professorship and severed his connections with the hospital.

Elliotson's enthusiasm sustained the first serious blow when Thomas Wakeley, the editor of the medical journal The Lancet, invited the O'Key sisters to his own house and demonstrated that the violent convulsions into which the patients were sent were produced when, unknown to Elliotson and the patients, the mesmerized piece of money that was supposed to call forth the phenomena was resting in the waistcoat pocket of one of the company. He also proved that if the subjects were kept in ignorance, unmesmerized water could produce sleep, whereas mesmerized water had no effect.

After this the O'Keys were considered exposed and The Lancet closed its columns to mesmerism. Elliotson, nevertheless, was not discouraged. The year 1843 witnessed the birth of the journal The Zoist, which continued under the direction of Elliot-son and one Engledue until 1856. It was a journal of mesmerism and phrenology, Elliotson being also an enthusiastic phrenologist. In 1824 he founded the Phrenological Society of London and was its president until 1843.

In mesmerism he saw a powerful means for phrenological research. Nevertheless, The Zoist was mainly concerned with the therapeutic aspects of mesmerism. With the advent of Spiritualism, it opened its columns to many critical articles on the phenomena. Elliotson himself attended a few sittings with Maria Hayden and described his experiences in an article, "The Departed Spirits." He was somewhat skeptical and attributed everything to the agency of the medium. Table-turning, however, meant something different to him. It fitted into the magnetic effluence theory, and Elliotson, on the basis of observations of others alone, concluded that: "there probably is true movement of the table independent of muscular force."

In 1863 he was introduced at Dieppe, France, to the famous medium D. D. Home, with the result that, according to the Morning Post of August 3, 1868 "… he expressed his conviction of the truth of the phenomena, and became a sincere Christian, whose handbook henceforth was the Bible. Some time after this he said he had been living all his life in darkness and had thought there was nothing in existence but the material."

Elliotson's first step after his conversion was to seek a reconciliation with John Ashburner, from whom he had become alienated by the latter's advocacy of Spiritualism. In 1867 Ashburner had published Notes and Studies on Animal Magnetism and Spiritualism. Elliotson now advocated what he saw as the truth of Spiritualism with the same zeal that he had formerly opposed it. Both Elliotson and Ashburner are of importance as representing the transition from animal magnetism to Spiritualism by the British. Elliotson died the next year on July 29, 1868, in London.

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John Elliotson

John Elliotson
Born 29 October 1791
Southwark, London
Died 29 July 1868
Nationality United Kingdom
Fields medicine
Alma mater University of Edinburgh
Known for Mesmerism, Phrenology, introducing stethoscope to United Kingdom
Influences Thomas Brown

John Elliotson (29 October 1791 – 29 July 1868) was an English physician, born in Southwark, London.

He studied medicine first at the University of Edinburgh (1805–1810),[1] where he was influenced by Thomas Brown, M.D. (1778–1820), who held the chair of Moral Philosophy at Edinburgh from 1808 to 1820, and then at Jesus College, Cambridge (1810–1821) — in both of which institutions he took the degree of M.D.[2] — and subsequently in London at St Thomas' and Guy's hospitals. In 1831 he was elected professor of the principles and practice of physic in London University (now University College London), and in 1834 he became physician to University College Hospital.

He was a student of phrenology and mesmerism, but at the time both fields were vying for scientific authority. Study of such topics, which we now consider ‘pseudo-science’ was less obviously derisive to mid 19th century academia. Elliotson hoped his development of mesmerism would lead to new therapeutic applications for medical science (and so also help score 'social reform' points against UCL's 'Tory' Rival, Kings). Elliotson tended to use working class, female subjects for mesmeric research and demonstration, often from Irish immigrant communities. This was not unusual, but was perhaps his downfall. Because the effects of mesmerism took place in the subjects mind, the scientific community had to believe their testimony. Elliotson tried using middle-class peers as subjects, but felt they brought with them an undesirable obtrusion of their own sense of identity and their expectations of the experiment would led them to censor their reports. In comparison, Elliotson, rather patronisingly to contemporary eyes, felt the poorer subjects were closer to the mechanical instruments or animals of physical or physiological experimental traditions. He famously claimed he could play the brain of his subjects as he would a piano. The same prejudices, however, made it easier to discount his work, especially as Elliotson's subjects proved to be slightly less passive than he had hoped.

His interest in mesmerism eventually brought him into collision with the medical committee of the hospital, a circumstance which led him, in December 1838, to resign the offices held by him there and at the university. According to Alison Winter's study of 19th C Mesmerism[3], this was largely down to the actions of the Lancet which at the time was relatively new and, with the medical profession itself, seeking to prove its authority. Its founder, Thomas Wakley initially supported Elliotson but quickly changed his mind, considering the mesmeric subjects and experiments rather too 'unruly' for his taste. The Lancet ran a series of trials of Elliotson's mesmeric experiments at Wakely's home in Bedford Square during the summer of 1838, with a jury of witnesses drawn from the medical establishment. The results of these trials not only discredited Elliotson but helped clarify the authority and status of both Wakely and the Lancet. Elliotson continued the practice of mesmerism, holding mesmeric séances in his home and editing a magazine, The Zoist, devoted to the subject. In 1849 he founded a mesmeric hospital. He died in London on the 29th of July 1868.

Elliotson was one of the first teachers in London to appreciate the value of clinical lecturing, and one of the earliest among British physicians to advocate the employment of the stethoscope. He wrote:

  • a translation of Blumenbach's Institutiones Physiologicae (1817)
  • Cases of the Hydrocyanic or Prussic Acid (1820)
  • Lectures on Diseases of the Heart (1830)
  • Principles and Practice of Medicine (1839)
  • Human Physiology (1840)
  • Surgical Operations in the Mesmeric State without Pain (1843)

He was the author of numerous papers in the Transactions of the Medico-Chirurgical Society, of which he was at one time president; and he was also a fellow both of the Royal College of Physicians and Royal Society, and founder and president of the Phrenological Society. WM Thackeray's Pendennis was dedicated to him. Elliotson, "one of the greatest English physiologists," and his Human Physiology are cited as authoritative in Collins' The Moonstone.[4]

Notes

  1. ^ The University of Edinburgh was also the alma mater of James Braid and James Esdaile.
  2. ^ Elliotson, John in Venn, J. & J. A., Alumni Cantabrigienses, Cambridge University Press, 10 vols, 1922–1958.
  3. ^ Winter, Alison (1998) Mesmerized: Powers of Mind in Victorian Britain (Chicago: University of Chicago Press)
  4. ^ Wilkie Collins, The Moonstone, Oxford World's Classics (New York: Oxford University Press, 1999), 458.
  • SCHNECK, J M (April 1963). "John ELLIOTSON, William Makepeace Thackeray, and Doctor Goodenough". The International journal of clinical and experimental hypnosis 11: 122–30. doi:10.1080/00207146308409236. PMID 13992112. 
  • Kaplan, F (. 1974). ""The mesmeric mania": the early Victorians and animal magnetism". Journal of the history of ideas 35 (4): 691–702. doi:10.2307/2709095. PMID 11615403. 
  • James, C D (July 1975). "Mesmerism: a prelude to anaesthesia". Proc. R. Soc. Med. 68 (7): 446–7. PMID 801840. 
  • Ridgway, E S (February 1994). "John Elliotson (1791-1868): a bitter enemy of legitimate medicine? Part II: The mesmeric scandal and later years". Journal of medical biography 2 (1): 1–7. PMID 11615263. 

This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica, Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.


 
 
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Occultism & Parapsychology Encyclopedia. Encyclopedia of Occultism and Parapsychology. Copyright © 2001 by The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
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