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Joseph Pancoast



 

Joseph Pancoast (November 23, 1805- March 6, 1882) was a renowned American surgeon. His name is eponymic to the practice of surgery, in general, and plastic surgery, in particular. Pancoast was responsible for many seminal advancements in surgery which he described, and were depicted graphically, in numerous scholarly articles and books. His greatest work, A Treatise on Operative Surgery, was published in 1844. He was also famous for his lectures and clinics in anatomy and surgery.

Joseph Pancoast was born of Quaker parentage at Springfield Township, Burlington County, New Jersey, the son of John Pancoast (1771-1841) and Lucy Abbott. He married Rebecca Abbott.

In 1828, Pancoast was awarded a degree in medicine by the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. From 1839 to 1841, he was Chairman of the Department of Surgery at Jefferson Medical College. From 1841 until his resignation in 1874, he was Chairman of the Department of Anatomy at the same institution. He was succeeded by his son, William Henry Pancoast, who was also a renowned surgeon.

References

  • Morton, Thomas G., and F. Woodbury (1895), The History of the Pennsylvania Hospital, 1751-1895, Philadelphia: Times Printing House, p. 521
  • Pancoast, Joseph (1844), A Treatise on Operative Surgery, Philadelphia: A. Hart
 
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Joseph_Pancoast". A list of authors is available in Wikipedia.
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