James Derham

For the American diplomat, see James M. Derham.

James Derham[1] (c. 1757-1802?), also known as James Durham,[2] was the first African American to formally practice medicine in the United States though he never received a M.D. degree.

Biography

Derham was born into slavery in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. He was owned by several doctors, and one of his owners, a physician named Dr. Bob Love, encouraged him to go into medicine. By working as a nurse, he purchased his freedom by 1790. He opened a medical practice, and by the age of 20 his annual earnings exceeded $3,000.

Derham met with Dr. Benjamin Rush, the father of American medicine, and Rush was so impressed by Derham that he encouraged him to move to Philadelphia. There he became an expert in throat diseases and in the relationship between climate and disease.

He also had 10 siblings. Derham disappeared after 1801 and died of a heart attack.

See also

References

  1. "James Derham". Journal of the National Medical Association 4 (1): 50. 1912. PMC 2621656. PMID 20891259.
  2. Charles E. Wynes (July 1979). "Dr. James Durham, Mysterious Eighteenth-Century Black Physician: Man or Myth?". The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography 103 (No. 3): 325–333.

External links


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