What was advertised in a revolutionary American newspaper 250 years ago today?

“THE DISEASES incident to ARMIES … published for the use of military and naval surgeons.”
During the first week of May 1776, Robert Bell announced the publication of “THE DISEASES incident to ARMIES, with the Method of Cure; translated from the original of Baron Van Swieten, physician to their imperial Majesties.” Yet that was not the only title in the volume. Bell compiled an anthology that also included “the Nature and Treatment of GUN SHOT WOUNDS, by John Ranby, Esq; Surgeon General to the British army,” “Preventatives of the Scurvy at Sea, by William Northcote, surgeon many years in the sea service,” “Rules for preserving Health in warm and cold climates, by Doctor Lind,” and “Directions to be observed by sea surgeons in engagements.” Bell presented the compilation “for the use of military and naval surgeons.” Over the past year, Bell and other printers in Philadelphia published an array of military manuals for officers and soldiers. The publication of this volume acknowledged another aspect of the war that began at the battles in Lexington and Concord in April 1775.
To promote this medical manual, Bell added a “Memorandum” to his advertisement in the May 7 edition of the Pennsylvania Evening Post. “It is presumed,” he declared, “that whatever contributeth to promote the health and happiness of such valuable lives as those of American soldiers and sailors, should meet with a generous reception.” He considered it appropriate that “those who are more immediately engaged in the pecuniary superintendment of [soldiers’ and sailors’] welfare” would purchase and consult the volume, yet those were not the only prospective customers who should support the publication of the medical manual. The printer suggested that “all friends to liberty and humanity” should demonstrate their support for American soldiers and sailors, including civilians “who are in opulent circumstances” and, especially, “all the capital land sea officers, whose personal safety, wither from or in diseases (as well as the very large number of privates under their command) are so very dependent on the knowledge and abilities of their physicians.” In other words, officers should purchase copies that they could later give or loan to the doctors and surgeons who provided medical care to the soldiers and sailors under their command. Doing so, Bell suggested, was an obligation they assumed when they accepted the responsibilities of leadership. That made his medical anthology an essential companion to the military manuals that he published and sold during the Revolutionary War.























