Thomas Cadwalader
Thomas Cadwalader (1707–1779) was an American physician in Philadelphia.[1][2] After studying medicine with his uncle Dr. Evan Jones, he traveled to London to study medicine where he was an understudy of William Cheselden. In France he probably attended lectures at Rheims University.[3] He lived for a while near Trenton, New Jersey, where he became the chief burgess in 1746. After returning to Philadelphia, he was elected in 1751 to the city's Common Council. He served on Pennsylvania's Provincial Council from 1755 until the Revolution. He was one of the founders of the Pennsylvania Hospital in 1751.[2] Dr. Cadwalader was one of the first to inoculate patients against smallpox[3] He was a founder and director of the Library Company of Philadelphia and a member of the American Philosophical Society.[2]
His sons, John and Lambert were active in the American Revolutionary War.
Cadwalader Park, in Trenton, New Jersey, was named in his honor. The park has an area of nearly 100 acres (0.40 km2), and was designed by Frederick Law Olmsted and built starting in 1887.
References
- ^ Kelly, Howard A.; Burrage, Walter L. (eds.). . . Baltimore: The Norman, Remington Company.
- ^ a b c Dr. Thomas Cadwalader (1707-1779), Penn Biographies (University of Pennsylvania).
- ^ a b Francis R. Packard (1912). "Cadwalader, Thomas (1708–1779)". In Howard A. Kelly (ed.). A Cyclopedia of American Medical Biography. Vol. 1. Philadelphia: W. D Saunders and Company. p. 154.
Further reading
- Sandra L. Cadwalader (1996). The Cadwaladers, 1677–1879: five generations of a Philadelphia family.
- The Cadwalader Family Papers, documenting the Cadwalader family through four generations in America, are available for research use at the Historical Society of Pennsylvania.
- 1708 births
- 1779 deaths
- Members of the Pennsylvania Provincial Council
- American people of Welsh descent
- University of Pennsylvania people
- People from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
- People from Trenton, New Jersey
- 18th-century American physicians
- Members of the American Philosophical Society
- People of colonial New Jersey
- People of colonial Pennsylvania