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Tuesday, January 26, 2010 - 6:28 PM
Scientific curiosity about the inner workings of the human
body has led to countless medical breakthroughs. Medical discovery has
been a noble path, but one that has also experienced detours, such as
this one, into crime and murder. In the early 1800s,
Great Britain saw an increase in the number of students wanting
anatomical training, and classrooms of medical colleges swelled to
capacity. Most classes could easily be taught in lecture halls to many
students, but anatomy classes had the special requirement of a corpse
for lecture and demonstration purposes. Until the
19th century, Britains laws specified that the only cadavers that could
be used in these classes were those of recently executed criminals, as
religious thought and superstitions of the time deemed it unthinkable
to disturb a persons remains. The number of executions was, as William
Roughead wrote, "...wholly inadequate to meet the growing needs...and
the surgeons' and barbers' apprentices had been in use diligently to
till the soil and reap the harvest of what has been finely called
'Death's mailing.'" This practice soon became the
regular occupation of some underworld characters, and author Hugh
Douglas wrote of the proficiency of these workers: (Grave robbers)
could open a grave, remove a body and restore the soil between patrols
of the night watch.... Relatives of the subject could mourn by the
grave the following day, unaware that their loved one was gracing some
anatomy slab in Edinburgh. Upon receiving a delivery
of a cadaver from someone other than those authorized to transport
criminals corpses, doctors and their assistants most likely suspected
that the bodies were from graves, but generally said nothing in order
to keep the anatomy classes full of interested (and paying) students. Irishmen
William Burke and Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire, however, developed a more direct method
to provide fresh cadavers to Edinburgh anatomy schools.
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