Young, James Harvey.
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Young, James Harvey.
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Name :
Young, James Harvey.
Young, James Harvey, 1915-
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Name :
Young, James Harvey, 1915-
Young, Jim
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Young, Jim
Young, Jim (hurler)
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Young, Jim (hurler)
Young, James H.
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Young, James H.
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Biographical History
James Harvey Young (b. 1915) is an internationally recognized authority on American food and drug regulation and the history of health quackery in the United States. After earning his Masters degree and PhD at the University of Illinois, he became a professor at Emory University in 1941. While completing his nearly 40-year tenure at Emory, Dr. Young solidified his reputation by authoring such landmark books on the history of drug regulation and patent medicines as The Toadstool Millionaires (1961) and The Medical Messiahs (1967). During this period he also wrote about 100 articles for historical and medical history journals and reviewed more than 110 books published about American drug and medicine history.
BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH: James Harvey Young (1915- ) is an internationally recognized authority on American food and drug regulation and the history of health quackery in the United States. After earning his Masters degree and PhD at the University of Illinois, he became a professor at Emory University in 1941. While completing his nearly 40-year tenure at Emory, Dr. Young solidified his reputation by authoring such landmark books on the history of drug regulation and patent medicines as The toadstool millionaires (1961) and The medical messiahs (1967). During this period he also wrote about 100 articles for historical and medical history journals and reviewed more than 110 books published about American drug and medicine history.
James Harvey Young, educator and historian, was born 8 September 1915, in Brooklyn, New York.
He graduated from the University of Illinois (Ph. D. 1941) and Rush University (Sc. D., 1976). Young was on the faculty (1941-1984) and was chairman of the Emory University Department of History (1958-1966), where he was the Charles Howard Candler professor of American Social History (1980-1984). He has held numerous honors, including a fellowship with the Social Science Research Council (1960-1961), a research appointment with the United States Food and Drug Administration (1977-1981), a consultancy in history to the Centers for Disease Control, the Radbill lectureship (Philadelphia College of Physicians, 1978), and the Beaumont lectureship (Yale University, 1980). He is the author of dozens of articles and papers on the history of medicine (including patent medicines and quackery), food, and Anna Dickinson, a nineteenth century abolitionist and suffragist.
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External Related CPF
https://viaf.org/viaf/79308746
https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n83189536
https://id.loc.gov/authorities/n83189536
https://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q6199071
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Subjects
Care of the sick
Universities and colleges
Deans (Education)
Fairs
History
History of Medicine
Laetrile
Legislation, Pharmacy
Medical scientists
Medicine
Middle Ages
Oral history
Patent medicines
Pharmacologists
Public schools
Quackery
Quacks and quackery
Race relations
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Occupations
Authors
Educators
Historians
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United States
AssociatedPlace
Georgia--Atlanta
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