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Sulph. Quinine, Keasbey and Mattison, Philadelphia

American History Museum

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    Object Details

    maker

    Keasbey & Mattison Company

    Description

    The indications or uses for this product as provided by the manufacturer, or as found in contemporary medical literature, are:
    For malarial diseases, preventing and curing periodic fevers, remittent fever, yellow fever, inflammatory affections, whooping cough, sunstroke, acute articular rheumatism, typhus, typhoid fever, puerperal fever, scarlet fever, smallpox, erysipelas, diphhtheria, septicemia, asthenic pneumonia, profuse sweating, pneumonia, ulcers, abscesses, eye inflammations, mucous fluxes, whooping cough, hay fever, auditory vertigo, catarrh, gonorrhea, growths, and ulcers [The National Dispensatory, 4th Edition, 1880]
    One of 13 specimens of quinine sulphate manufactured by American and foreign firms donated to the museum in 1923 by pharmaceutical chemist, Dr. Frederick B. Power. The specimens were portions of a series of samples used by an international committee around 1882 to determine standard tests for purity. Frederick Belding Power (1853-1927) was a graduate of the Philadelphia College of Pharmacy (1874) and the University of Strasbourg in Germany (1880). In 1883 he became the first leader of the University of Wisconsin's College of Pharmacy and later directed research in several pharmaceutical firms. Beginning in 1916 until his death, Power led the phytochemical laboratory of the U.S.D.A. Bureau of Chemistry.

    Location

    Currently not on view

    Credit Line

    Gift of Dr. Frederick B. Power

    date made

    ca 1882

    ID Number

    MG.M-01635

    catalog number

    M-01635

    accession number

    69510

    Object Name

    pharmaceutical

    Other Terms

    Pharmaceuticals; Drugs; Non-Liquid

    Physical Description

    glass (container material)
    paper (label/packaging material)
    sulphate of quinine (drug active ingredients)
    string (packaging material)
    wax (packaging material)

    Measurements

    overall: 2 3/4 in x 1 1/4 in; 6.985 cm x 3.175 cm

    place made

    United States: Pennsylvania, Philadelphia

    See more items in

    Medicine and Science: Medicine
    Health & Medicine
    The Antibody Initiative
    Antibody Initiative: Smallpox
    Botanical Medicine
    Antibody Initiative: Infectious Disease, Allergy, and Immunotherapy Collections

    Data Source

    National Museum of American History

    Subject

    Fever & Chill Drugs
    Catarrh, Cough & Cold Drugs

    Metadata Usage

    CC0

    Link to Original Record

    https://n2t.net/ark:/65665/ng49ca746a5-5994-704b-e053-15f76fa0b4fa

    Record ID

    nmah_717312

    Discover More

    Suppressing Whooping Cough

    Infectious Disease, Allergy, and Immunotherapy Collections

    Eradicating Smallpox

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