biography
| sex:
| male
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| lived:
| (1761–1818)
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| biography:
| Physician, born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA, the grandson of Caspar Wistar (1696–1742). After completing his medical studies at Edinburgh, Scotland, he returned to Philadelphia and started a practice. In 1789 he succeeded Benjamin Rush as professor of chemistry at the medical school of the College of Philadelphia (later University of Pennsylvania), then became professor of anatomy and midwifery (1792–1810), and published System of Anatomy, the first American anatomy textbook (1811). Elected to the American Philosophical Society (1787), he succeeded Thomas Jefferson as president (1815–18). Wistar parties, the discussion groups he was noted for sponsoring, continued after his death, and in 1818 a genus of vines, Wistaria (now Wisteria ), was named in his honour. |
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