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Barton began the study of medicine under Dr. William Shippen, Jr. in 1784, soon after his eighteenth birthday. In 1786, he left for Scotland to continue his studies at Edinburgh University. Able, ambitious, industrious, and not without charm, Barton was quickly accepted by all groups of students in the university town. He became a member of the Royal Medical Society, received its Harveian Prize for his dissertation on hyosciamus niger (or black henbane), and was chosen one of the Society's four annual presidents for 1787-88. In 1787, while still a medical student, he published a monograph entitled Observations on some Parts of Natural History, which discussed the Indian mounds of North America. Despite his success at Edinburgh, however, Barton suddenly left the university in the winter of 1788 prior to receiving his M.D. A likely explanation for his departure is found in two 1791 letters addressed to Benjamin Rush, which state that, while its president, Barton borrowed a considerable sum of money from the Royal Medical Society but failed to pay it back. Though the Society did not advertise Barton's mishandling of its funds, word of his behavior must have spread to student circles in Edinburgh, prompting his immediate departure.
Barton wrote a score of books and monographs on natural history, botany, paleontology, etymology, and medicine. He conducted the Medical Physical Journal for several years and was the author of Elements of Botany, published in 1804, and of Collections towards a Materia Medica of the United States. His other publications include various papers in the Philosophical Transactions and the first American text on botany. Barton was also an advisor to the Lewis and Clark Expedition and a pioneer in exploring the botanical treasures of the Western Continent. He was the first to erect a greenhouse in Philadelphia, which was attached to his residence on Chestnut Street, below Eighth. Barton died on December 19, 1815. He left behind his two children: Sarah Barton, who died unmarried in 1817, and Thomas Pennant Barton, Secretary of Legation to France from 1833 to 1835, who married Coralie, daughter of Hon. Edward Livingston, Secretary of State.
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REFERENCES |
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Penn in the Age of Franklin | University of Pennsylvania | Archives | Library |
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