The Planter's and Mariner's Medical Companion: Treating, According to the Most Successful Practice
The planter's and mariner's medical companion : treating, according to the most successful practice, I. the diseases common to warm climates and on ship board, II. common cases in surgery, as fractures, dislocations, &c. &c., III. the complaints peculiar to women and children
James Ewell
Printed by P. Mauro, Baltimore [Md.], 1813
[Early American Medicine: South Carolina] Bound in contemporary leather. Red leather spine label with gilt lettering. 381 , [1] p. Toning. NLM 2553031R. James Ewell, was a physician in Savannah. "James Ewell (1773–1832), physician and author, was born near Dumfries. His father, Jesse Ewell, was a classmate of TJ at the College of William and Mary. Ewell studied medicine first under his uncle James Craik, of Alexandria, and later with the Baltimore physician Henry Stevenson, and he attended lectures in the medical department of the University of Pennsylvania. His medical practice began in Lancaster County, Virginia, followed by a move to Dumfries, and from 1801 to 1808 he worked in Savannah. During this time Ewell wrote and published The Planter’s and Mariner's Medical Companion (Philadelphia, 1807; Sowerby, no. 893). The volume went through numerous editions under varying titles, all of which were dedicated to TJ. Settling in Washington by 1808, the British army made Ewell's home its headquarters during the occupation of 1814. His willingness to negotiate with the occupiers and treat British soldiers attracted criticism that he answered in 1816 in the third edition of his Medical Companion. In 1831 Ewell made a final move to New Orleans, where he died of cholera (ANB; DAB; anonymous biography in The Medical Companion, or Family Physician [10th ed., 1847], xv–xxii; TJ to Ewell, 1 Mar. 1808 [MHi]; Washington National Journal, 27 May 1831; Washington Daily National Intelligencer, 23 Nov. 1832)." - National Archives. First printed in 1807.