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Pious Traders in Medicine
A German Pharmaceutical Network in Eighteenth-Century North America

By Renate Wilson

272 pages | 12 illustrations/1 map | 6 x 9 | 2000

Cloth edition is not available

ISBN 978-0-271-02833-0 | paper: $22.95 sh

Max Kade German-American Research Institute Series


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Winner of the 2003 St. Paul Prize of the Lutheran Historical Society of the Mid-Atlantic Region Winner of the Kremers Award from the Institute for the History of Pharmacy at Wisconsin, Madison

This book tells the story of two generations of Pietist ministers sent from Halle, in Brandenburg Prussia during the eighteenth century, to the German communities of North America. In conjunction with their clerical office, these ministers provided medical services using pharmaceuticals and medical texts brought with them from Europe. Their practice is an example of how different medical markets and medical cultures evolved in North America.

At the heart of the story is the Francke Orphanage, a famous religious and philanthropic foundation started in Halle in 1696. Pharmaceuticals from Halle were manufactured and sold throughout Europe as part of a commercial enterprise designed to support Francke's charitable goals. Halle's reputation for consistent product quality and safety soon spread to North America, where men and women became actively engaged in providing medical care to Lutheran and Reformed congregations along the east coast, mainly the backcountry of Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Maryland, and Virginia. The story continues to about 1810, when Halle's North American clergy had become independent from the motherhouse and American medical practice and education began to follow its own course.

Wilson draws upon a large array of correspondence, trading ledgers, and daybooks in European and American archives. Through these records she enables us to see firsthand the experience of men and women as both patients and practitioners. The result is a rare glimpse into the world of German medicine and the pharmaceutical trade in eighteenth-century North America.



Renate Wilson is Adjunct Associate Professor in the Department of Health Policy and Management, the School of Hygiene and Public Health, and the Institute for the History of Medicine at Johns Hopkins University. She is co-editor, with Hartmut Lehmann and Hermann Wellenreuther, of In Search of Peace and Prosperity: German Migrations of the 18th Century (Penn State, 1999). She also edited a special issue of Caduceus, A Humanities Journal for Medicine and the Health Sciences entitled 'An 18th Century Traffic in Medicine and Medical Ideas.'