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| "Historical Account of the Small-Pox Inoculated in New England..." was written in 1730 by Zabdiel Boylston and is among the 32,000 volumes in the Academy's Malloch Rare Book Room. |
In addition to printed books, these holdings contain an enormous collection of primary sources in the history of the health sciences. Our manuscript collection includes the Edwin Smith Papyrus, a work on surgery written in 1700 B.C. in ancient Egypt, and a number of significant medieval and Renaissance manuscripts, such as the Chirurgia of Guy de Chauliac, written in Middle English and dated 1363. The Rare Book Room retains primary source materials in public health, infectious disease, developments in medical research and in clinical medicine,
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| The Pepys Amputation set, circa 1820, is among the valuable artifacts held by Historical Collections. |
To support this remarkable collection, Historical Collections maintains an extensive reference collection in the history of the health sciences, as well as the history of books and printing. The fact that medical books have remained a significant part of the world's production of written and printed texts is reflected in the Rare Book Room's collections.


