{"id":3237,"date":"2014-02-04T11:00:48","date_gmt":"2014-02-04T16:00:48","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/circulatingnow.nlm.nih.gov\/?p=3237"},"modified":"2023-05-30T10:56:58","modified_gmt":"2023-05-30T14:56:58","slug":"making-a-medical-heritage-milestone","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/circulatingnow.nlm.nih.gov\/2014\/02\/04\/making-a-medical-heritage-milestone\/","title":{"rendered":"Making a Medical Heritage Milestone"},"content":{"rendered":"

By Michael J. North<\/em><\/p>\n

The Medical Heritage Library<\/a> (MHL) has achieved an important milestone by adding the 50,000th item to its online collection housed in Internet Archive<\/a>. The MHL was formed in the summer of 2009 when curators of historical collections at the medical libraries of Harvard, Yale, Columbia, and the National Library of Medicine together with the Open Knowledge Commons collectively received a start-up grant of $1.5 million<\/a> from the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation<\/a> to digitize over 30,000 books relating to the history of health and medicine from their collections over the following three years.<\/p>\n

\"A<\/a>
The Doctor\u2019s Advice, 1898
NLM #63610540R<\/a><\/figcaption><\/figure>\n

As it turned out, it was the National Library of Medicine that scanned and uploaded that 50,000th item: Alvarado Middleditch\u2019s The Doctor\u2019s Advice<\/i><\/a>, published in Philadelphia in 1898. This popular advice guide for families, most likely designed as a gift book, contains a treasure-trove for cultural historians of the American Victorian household, with chapters on topics such as: \u201chow, when and what to eat and drink, how to secure good health and long life, \u2026 what mothers and nurses ought to know, how to care for baby, and give our boys and girls the best moral, mental, and physical culture, when and whom to marry, and how to choose a wife or husband, and how to be happy.\u201d<\/p>\n

Included are over 20 illustrations showing ideal middle class Victorian family scenes and elaborate chapter headings, such as this one for \u201cOccupations for Women,\u201d whose text begins, \u201cOur girls\u2014Shall we educate our girls to be genteel, and shall gentility mean to us only idleness, helplessness and a lolling mien?\u201d The author, Alvarado Middleditch (1829\u20131909), was a physician based in Waterloo, Iowa, where he was a general practitioner and known for his skill in electrotherapeutics.<\/p>\n