Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Jonathan Stokes

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Jonathan Stokes

Role
  
Film director

Education
  
Claremont Colleges


Jonathan Stokes pmcdeadline2fileswordpresscom201310stokesph

Movies
  
El Gringo, The Last Hurrah

Similar People
  
Courtney Solomon, Ravi Patel, Randy Wayne, Valerie Azlynn, Kate Micucci

15 rb jonathan stokes 13 14 junior senior highlights 1080p hd


Jonathan Stokes (c. 1755 – 30 April 1831) was an English physician and botanist, a member of the Lunar Society of Birmingham, and an early adopter of the heart drug digitalis.

Contents

Life and work

Stokes was probably born in Chesterfield, Derbyshire, around 1755 and studied medicine at the University of Edinburgh in 1778, qualifying as MD in 1782. He practised medicine in Stourbridge, Worcestershire, and also pursued interests in botany as a plant collector and cataloguer.

Stokes became associated with William Withering (1741–1799), physician and botanist, who was a member of the influential Lunar Society. Stokes had dedicated his thesis on oxygen to Withering and became a member with him of the Lunar Society from 1783 to 1788.

Stokes contributed to Withering's An Account of the Foxglove and its Medical Uses (1785), writing a preface on the history of digitalis and providing details of six clinical trials on patients he had treated for heart failure using Withering's pioneer method. He helped to disseminate medical knowledge of digitalis, lecturing to the Medical Society of Edinburgh on 20 February 1799.

He was elected a Foreign Honorary Member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1788. Stokes collaborated with Withering on the third volume of the second edition (1792) of Withering's standard botanical text, The Botanical Arrangement of All the Vegetables Naturally Growing in Great Britain. Withering later fell out with Stokes (as he had with Erasmus Darwin), in a dispute over Stokes's role in the new edition. Withering did not fall out with Erasmus Darwin. Erasmus Darwin tried in an underhand way to claim precedence in identifying the medical use of Digitalis. He failed and could not tolerate Witherings success. He set out to try and deliberately destroy Withering's reputation. A letter from Darwin to Dr. Johsntone in Birmingham dated 1788 exists seeking such evidence and trying to accuse Withering of Quakery - the worst insult that could be used at that time. the letter is in the Osler Withering bequest at the Royal Society of Medicine in London. Darwin wrote two further and similarly toned letters to Matthew Boulton in 1789. They all failed. The reason for the falling out with Stokes is unclear but Stokes had failed to return around 150 of Withering's books (valuable property then). Withering had to reclaim these through legal action. When returned, several of the books had been damaged by having plates removed. Withering's letter listing the volumes - some were around 100 years old - is in the Osler Withering bequest at the Royal Society of Medicine in London. The full text of this letter is included in Ronald D. Manns “William Withering And The Foxglove” MTP press 1986 on pge 8. In 1790 Stokes was elected as one of the inaugural 16 associates of the newly founded Linnean Society of London and corresponded with Carolus Linnaeus the Younger. He spent the rest of his life in private medical practice in Chesterfield and pursued many scientific interests, publishing A Botanical Materia Medica: Consisting of the Generic and Specific Characters of the Plants Used in Medicine and Diet, with Synonyms, and References to Medical Authors (1812) and Botanical Commentaries (1830).

He died in Chesterfield on 30 April 1831 and was buried at St Mary's, Chesterfield. The plant Stokesia cyanea or Stokesia laevis (Asteraceae/Compositae) is named after him.

Selected writings

  • Stokes, Jonathan (1812). A Botanical Materia Medica. London: J. Johnson and Company. 
  • Stokes, Jonathan (1830). Botanical Commentaries. London: Simpkin and Marshall. 
  • References

    Jonathan Stokes Wikipedia