Reproduction
Photograph
[nb-NO]Description[nb-NO]
First (U.K) clinical x-ray photograph. Two contact-sized photos of a thumb containing needle roughly mounted on one piece of card (remains of an old invitation).
Believed to be the first clinical X-ray taken in the UK. Date on back reads 'February 1896'. Two X-ray photographs pasted onto a calling card (rsvp visible). On the back, in Collie's writing: "The first X ray photograph taken in Great Britain for surgical purposes. Feb. 1896. The photograph is that of the finger of a patient in University College Hospital who said she had a broken needle in her thumb. Taken by an X ray tube made by J.N. Collie"
On 19th Feb 1896 a boy's broken arm was x-rayed at Dartmouth Medical School, U.S.A. - this is believed to be the world's first clinical x-ray. See 'The First Clinical X-Ray made in America - 100 years' by Peter Spiegel, American Journal of Roentgenology, 1995, Vol 164, pg 241 - 243. A pdf copy is in the Chemistry Folder on S-Drive (ajr.161.1).
Asbestos Inspection - Non-Asbestos
[nb-NO]Creator[nb-NO]
Collie, J Norman (Maker) (1859-09-10 - 1942-11-01)
[nb-NO]Date[nb-NO]
circa 1896-02-01 to circa 1896-02-28
[nb-NO]Material[nb-NO]
[nb-NO]Dimensions[nb-NO]
length: 157 mm frame/ border
width: 130 mm frame/ border
[nb-NO]Documentation[nb-NO]
- Davies, A.G., UCL Chemistry Department 1828-1974, pg.66;. Fig 5.9, pg.66;
Chemistry
[nb-NO]Object number[nb-NO]
LDUSC-CHEM-105
123
UCL Science and Engineering Collections