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Book Review
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Volume 346:70 January 3, 2002 Number 1
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Tarnished Idol: William T.G. Morton and the Introduction of Surgical Anesthesia

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By Richard J. Wolfe. 672 pp., illustrated. San Anselmo, Calif., Norman, 2001. $125. ISBN 0-930405-81-1.

"Tarnished idol" is an apt description of William Thomas Green Morton (Figure 1). After his successful demonstration of surgical anesthesia in the Ether Dome of the Massachusetts General Hospital on October 16, 1846, Morton attained the status of a hero. But he himself besmirched that reputation by a reckless pursuit of fame and money and an underhanded way of denying recognition of the contributions of others to the discovery. In this book, Richard Wolfe, former librarian at the Countway Library of Harvard Medical School, examines both aspects of Morton's character.

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Figure 1. William Thomas Green Morton. (Courtesy of the Boston . . . [Full Text of this Article]

 



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