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William Alcott

William Andrus Alcott (August 6, 1798 – March 29, 1859), also known as William Alexander Alcott, was an American educator, educational reformer, physician, vegetarian and author of 108 books. His works, which include a wide range of topics including educational reform, physical education, school house design, family life, and diet, are still widely cited today.

William Alcott
Born
William Andrus Alcott

(1798-08-06)August 6, 1798
DiedMarch 29, 1859(1859-03-29) (aged 60)
Other namesWilliam Alexander Alcott
EducationYale School of Medicine
Occupation(s)Educator, physician, author
Signature

Early life and family edit

William Alcott was born in Wolcott, Connecticut.[1] His father was a farmer, Obedience Alcox (1776–1847); in the 1820s, like many members of the family, he altered the spelling of his last name, which on his tombstone appears as "Obid. Alcott".[a] His mother was Anna Andrus (1777–1864) who was the daughter of a Revolutionary War soldier and William's most important educational influence.[2] He attended local schools and became a close friend with his near neighbor Amos Bronson Alcott who would later enjoy wide fame as a philosopher and as the father of writer Louisa May Alcott. Although sometimes described simply as "cousins" the two were actually second cousins; William's grandfather David Alcott (1740–1841) was the brother of Amos Bronson Alcott's grandfather, Captain John Alcott. The two boys shared books, exchanged ideas, and started a small library together. Odell Shepard had written of Amos Bronson Alcott, "Indeed there is a sense in which nearly everything Alcott wrote and did is attributable to William".[3]

Alcott lived in Dedham, Massachusetts, where he was the superintendent of the Sunday School at the Allin Congregational Church.[4] He was known to walk barefoot in summer mornings from his home in the village up to Federal Hill to obtain a bucket of milk.[4]

Teaching and medical education edit

At the age of 18 Alcott began teaching in a school located just a few yards from his father's house. With brief interruptions, he would continue to teach for the next nine years. His experiences as a student country school teacher would later become the subject of many of his later publications. He observed that the benches used by students were often painful and, at his own expense built backs onto the benches; these became the ancestors of the later school desks. He campaigned for better heating and ventilation in schools. He labored to improve the intellectual content of classrooms. While he was successful as a teacher,[5] in the summer of 1824 he suffered an attack of the disfiguring, dangerous skin infection erysipelas,[6] and about this time was beginning to suffer from tuberculosis. He would suffer symptoms of both for the remainder of his life.[7] He began studying medicine, with the thought that the extra knowledge would aid his teaching.[8] His formal study of medicine was brief. In the winter of 1825–26 he attended "a regular course of medical studies" in New Haven, Connecticut. In March 1826 he was granted a license to practice medicine. In addition to teaching, he practiced medicine at least until 1829.[9]

William Channing Woodbridge and early writing edit

In the spring of 1830 he met William Channing Woodbridge. Woodbridge had just returned from Europe and was in the process of revising his second geography. Alcott at first worked as an assistant to Woodbridge[10] for which he was paid twelve dollars a month to check facts and improve maps. The two became close friends. In 1831, Woodbridge purchased the American Journal of Education and renamed it American Annals of Education And Instruction. The two men then moved to Boston. Alcott wrote many articles for the journal, especially those dealing with school design and physical education. Even after Woodbridge lost control of the Journal in 1836 and became its foreign editor, Alcott became its Editor in 1837.[11] He would later publish a poignant memoir of Woodbridge's life.[12] While still teaching he had begun to contribute articles to newspapers and started work on the book that would become The Young Man's Guide.[13]

Later life edit

On June 14, 1836, he married Phebe Lewis Bronson (June 14, 1812 – November 9, 1907). They had three children. For a time they shared a house, Cottage Place, with the family of his old friend and cousin Amos Bronson Alcott. In the 1840s William moved to the town of Newton, Massachusetts, just outside Boston. Eventually he would settle into a house in Auburndale in the town of Newton. He died here[10] of a lung infection. He worked until the day before he died. William Alcott is buried in Newton Cemetery.[14]

"Vegetable Diet" edit

 
The American Vegetarian and Health Journal - Published by The American Vegetarian Society (AVS) - 1853

Alcott published "Vegetable Diet: As Sanctioned by Medical Men and By Experience in All Ages." in 1838. It is his best known work[15] and is significant to the medical literature about a vegetarian diet.[16] A second edition was published in 1849 "with an added cookbook and medical testimonies supporting what today would be called a vegan diet."[17]

In 2009, author Andrew Smith said in the book "Eating History" that "Vegetable Diet" was "America's first vegetarian cookbook."[18] In 2020, journalist Avery Yale Kamila wrote: "The book is considered a seminal work in the cannon of American vegetarian literature."[19] The book contains letters written by physicians, including Horace A. Barrows, about vegetarian diets. The book is still in print.[20]

The book is included in the American Antiquarian Cookbook Collection.[21] In 2012, the book was republished by Andrews McMeel publishing with an introduction by Anna Thomas.[22]

Ideas, diet and morals edit

Alcott became one of the most prolific authors in early American history. He wrote frequently on the topics of education and health. In 1836 he wrote a letter to the editor of the Boston Medical and Surgical Journal titled "The Graham System" (May 4, p. 199-201; he signed it "M.D." The cause of greatest interest to Alcott throughout his life was vegetarianism. In 1850 he wrote three long letters on vegetarianism to the editor of the New York Tribune - at the request of the editor (Aug 14, Nov. 6). Here he shows clearly that his preference was for a diet that used no animal products - what would today be called a vegan diet.

Alcott opposed the consumption of alcohol, coffee, meat, spices and tea.[23] He argued against the use of condiments which were "stimulating" substances. He rejected the use of ginger, fennel, cardamom, mace, nutmeg and coriander. He believed that garlic, horseradish, molasses and sauces were disgusting and indecent "drugs".[23]

Alcott wrote The Physiology of Marriage in 1856. He deplored free courtship manners. He specifically deplored "conversation which is too excitable", "presence of exciting books", "unnecessary heat", and many other courtship practices prevalent in 18th century America but steadily going out of fashion by 1856. He warned young people of the dangers of courtship. He is criticized by modern-day feminists for his "rigidity".[citation needed]

Alcott edited the Moral Reformer (1835-1939) in Boston, a journal dedicated to eliminating intemperance, gluttony and licentiousness.[24][25] He was the editor of the vegetarian Library of Health journal.[26] In 1840, the Moral Reformer and The Graham Journal of Health and Longevity were merged in the Library of Health.[24]

Alcott was a founding member of the American Physiological Society in 1837, America's first vegetarian organization.[27] He was a founding member (in 1850) and the first president of the American Vegetarian Society.[28]

Works edit

In all, he wrote about one hundred works, which have been influential in reforming educational methods, and improving the physical and moral well-being of mankind.[10]

Books edit

  • Confessions of a School Master, 1839[29]
  • The Young Man’s Guide, 1834[30][31]
  • The Young Woman's Guide[32]
  • The Use of Tobacco: Its Physical, Intellectual, and Moral Effects on The Human System 1836[33]
  • Vegetable Diet: As Sanctioned by Medical Men, and by Experience in All Ages, 1838
  • Tea And Coffee, 1839
  • The Boy’s Guide to Usefulness, 1845
  • Art of Good Behavior, 1848
  • The Young Housekeeper, 1842[34]
  • The Young Mother Or Management Of Children In Regard To Health[35]
  • The Young Mother
  • Adventures of Lot, the Nephew of Abraham[36]
  • Familiar letters to young men on various subjects.: Designed as a companion to The young man's guide.[37]
  • Trust in the Lord; or the Story of Elijah and the Ravens.[38]
  • Stories of Eliot and the Indians[39]
  • Lectures on Life and Health, Or, The Laws and Means of Physical Culture, 1853[40]
  • The House I Live In The first Anatomy book for the general public.[41]
  • Forty Years in the Wilderness of Pills and Powders, 1859
  • The Laws of Health: Or, Sequel to "The house I live in", 1859

See also edit

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Photographs are available on the commercial site Ancestry.com in several family trees

Citations edit

  1. ^ Kelly, Howard A.; Burrage, Walter L. (eds.). "Alcott, William Alexander" . American Medical Biographies . Baltimore: The Norman, Remington Company.
  2. ^ Orcutt, Samuel, History of the Town of Wolcott, Waterbury, Conn.: American Printing company, 1873, pp. 265-267, 435.
  3. ^ The Journals of Bronson Alcott, edited by Odell Shepard. Boston: Little Brown, 1958, p. xv.
  4. ^ a b Clarke, Wm. Horatio (1903). Mid-Century Memories of Dedham. Dedham Historical Society. p. 9.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  5. ^ "Dr. William A. Alcott", Memoirs of Teachers, Educators and Promoters of Education Literature and Science, edited by Henry Bernard; New York Brownell, 1859a, pp. 249-267.
  6. ^ Orcott 1873, p. 268
  7. ^ "Dr. William Alcott," Historical Magazine, June 1859b, p. 193
  8. ^ Alcott, William A. (1859). Forty years in the wilderness of pills and powders. Boston: J. P. Jewett. LCCN 01019657.
  9. ^ "Dr. William A. Alcott, 1859a, p. 257.
  10. ^ a b c Johnson 1906, p. 69
  11. ^ "Dr. William A. Alcott", 1859a, pp. 163-164.
  12. ^ Alcott, William A. "William C. Woodbridge," Memoirs of Teachers, Educators and Promoters of Education Literature and Science, edited by Henry Bernard, New York: Brownell, 1859, p. 51–64.
  13. ^ "Dr. William A. Alcott, 1859a, p. 266.
  14. ^ Orcutt 1873, p. 267
  15. ^ "History of Vegetarianism - William Andrus Alcott (1798-1859)". ivu.org. Retrieved June 30, 2020.
  16. ^ Bramen, Lisa. "The Long Marriage of Vegetarianism and Social Activism". Smithsonian Magazine. Retrieved October 12, 2020.
  17. ^ "William Alcott and the cultural meaning of medical knowledge in the nineteenth century - Hektoen International". hekint.org. Retrieved August 23, 2020.
  18. ^ Smith, Andrew F. (September 18, 2009). Eating History: Thirty Turning Points in the Making of American Cuisine. Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0-231-51175-9.
  19. ^ Kamila, Avery Yale (March 29, 2020). "Vegan Kitchen: A meat-free diet in Maine is nothing new". Press Herald. Retrieved June 30, 2020.
  20. ^ Daley, Bill (December 4, 2013). "The history of America, in cookbooks". The Seattle Times. Retrieved June 30, 2020.
  21. ^ "Delicious history: The American story told in cookbook series | Food and Cooking | siouxcityjournal.com". siouxcityjournal.com. December 4, 2013. Retrieved October 12, 2020.
  22. ^ "Vegetable Diet". Andrews McMeel Publishing. Retrieved October 12, 2020.
  23. ^ a b Smith, Andrew F. (2013). Food and Drink in American History, Volume 1. ABC-CLIO. p. 16. ISBN 978-1-61069-232-8
  24. ^ a b Fletcher, Robert Samuel. (1971). A History of Oberlin College: From its Foundation Through the Civil War, Volume 1. Arno Press. p. 319
  25. ^ Numbers, Ronald L. (2008). Prophetess of Health: A Study of Ellen G. White. William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company. p. 105. ISBN 978-0-8028-0395-5
  26. ^ Shprintzen, Adam D. (2013). The Vegetarian Crusade: The Rise of an American Reform Movement, 1817-1921. University of North Carolina Press. p. 37. ISBN 978-1-4696-0891-4
  27. ^ Iacobbo, Karen; Iacobbo, Michael. (2004). Vegetarian America: A History. Praeger Publishing. pp. 36-37. ISBN 978-0275975197
  28. ^ International Vegetarian Union – History of Vegetarianism – American Vegetarian Society
  29. ^ Old Sturbridge Village | Explore & Learn | OSV Documents - William Alcott’s First Day as a School Master
  30. ^ Old Sturbridge Village | Explore & Learn | OSV Documents - Advice on Choosing a Wife
  31. ^ http://www.nimbus.org/ElectronicTexts/YgMnsGde.1836.html online text
  32. ^ Project Gutenberg Edition of The Young Woman's Guide
  33. ^ Use of Tobacco: Physical, Intellectual, Moral Effects on Human System (1836), by Alcott, William A., M.D
  34. ^ Old Sturbridge Village | Explore & Learn | OSV Documents - The Ward Families and Their "Helps": Domestic Work, Workers, and Relationships on a New England Farm, 1787-1866
  35. ^ Project Gutenberg Edition of The Young Mother: or, Management of Children in Regard to Health
  36. ^ Electronic Text of William A Alcott's "The Adventures Of Lot"
  37. ^ http://quod.lib.umich.edu/cgi/t/text/text-idx?c=moa;idno=AJF2317 page images
  38. ^ Elijah the Tishbite - Alcott, Wm A
  39. ^ Stories of Eliot and the Indians
  40. ^ Internet Archive text
  41. ^ The Anatomical mission to Burma Sciencemag

Sources edit

External links edit

  • Works by William Alcott at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about William Alcott at Internet Archive
  • Works by William Alcott at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • William A. Alcott at the Animal Rights Library

william, alcott, william, andrus, alcott, august, 1798, march, 1859, also, known, william, alexander, alcott, american, educator, educational, reformer, physician, vegetarian, author, books, works, which, include, wide, range, topics, including, educational, r. William Andrus Alcott August 6 1798 March 29 1859 also known as William Alexander Alcott was an American educator educational reformer physician vegetarian and author of 108 books His works which include a wide range of topics including educational reform physical education school house design family life and diet are still widely cited today William AlcottBornWilliam Andrus Alcott 1798 08 06 August 6 1798Wolcott Connecticut U S DiedMarch 29 1859 1859 03 29 aged 60 Auburndale Massachusetts U S Other namesWilliam Alexander AlcottEducationYale School of MedicineOccupation s Educator physician authorSignature Contents 1 Early life and family 2 Teaching and medical education 3 William Channing Woodbridge and early writing 4 Later life 5 Vegetable Diet 6 Ideas diet and morals 7 Works 7 1 Books 8 See also 9 References 9 1 Notes 9 2 Citations 9 3 Sources 10 External linksEarly life and family editWilliam Alcott was born in Wolcott Connecticut 1 His father was a farmer Obedience Alcox 1776 1847 in the 1820s like many members of the family he altered the spelling of his last name which on his tombstone appears as Obid Alcott a His mother was Anna Andrus 1777 1864 who was the daughter of a Revolutionary War soldier and William s most important educational influence 2 He attended local schools and became a close friend with his near neighbor Amos Bronson Alcott who would later enjoy wide fame as a philosopher and as the father of writer Louisa May Alcott Although sometimes described simply as cousins the two were actually second cousins William s grandfather David Alcott 1740 1841 was the brother of Amos Bronson Alcott s grandfather Captain John Alcott The two boys shared books exchanged ideas and started a small library together Odell Shepard had written of Amos Bronson Alcott Indeed there is a sense in which nearly everything Alcott wrote and did is attributable to William 3 Alcott lived in Dedham Massachusetts where he was the superintendent of the Sunday School at the Allin Congregational Church 4 He was known to walk barefoot in summer mornings from his home in the village up to Federal Hill to obtain a bucket of milk 4 Teaching and medical education editAt the age of 18 Alcott began teaching in a school located just a few yards from his father s house With brief interruptions he would continue to teach for the next nine years His experiences as a student country school teacher would later become the subject of many of his later publications He observed that the benches used by students were often painful and at his own expense built backs onto the benches these became the ancestors of the later school desks He campaigned for better heating and ventilation in schools He labored to improve the intellectual content of classrooms While he was successful as a teacher 5 in the summer of 1824 he suffered an attack of the disfiguring dangerous skin infection erysipelas 6 and about this time was beginning to suffer from tuberculosis He would suffer symptoms of both for the remainder of his life 7 He began studying medicine with the thought that the extra knowledge would aid his teaching 8 His formal study of medicine was brief In the winter of 1825 26 he attended a regular course of medical studies in New Haven Connecticut In March 1826 he was granted a license to practice medicine In addition to teaching he practiced medicine at least until 1829 9 William Channing Woodbridge and early writing editIn the spring of 1830 he met William Channing Woodbridge Woodbridge had just returned from Europe and was in the process of revising his second geography Alcott at first worked as an assistant to Woodbridge 10 for which he was paid twelve dollars a month to check facts and improve maps The two became close friends In 1831 Woodbridge purchased the American Journal of Education and renamed it American Annals of Education And Instruction The two men then moved to Boston Alcott wrote many articles for the journal especially those dealing with school design and physical education Even after Woodbridge lost control of the Journal in 1836 and became its foreign editor Alcott became its Editor in 1837 11 He would later publish a poignant memoir of Woodbridge s life 12 While still teaching he had begun to contribute articles to newspapers and started work on the book that would become The Young Man s Guide 13 Later life editOn June 14 1836 he married Phebe Lewis Bronson June 14 1812 November 9 1907 They had three children For a time they shared a house Cottage Place with the family of his old friend and cousin Amos Bronson Alcott In the 1840s William moved to the town of Newton Massachusetts just outside Boston Eventually he would settle into a house in Auburndale in the town of Newton He died here 10 of a lung infection He worked until the day before he died William Alcott is buried in Newton Cemetery 14 Vegetable Diet edit nbsp The American Vegetarian and Health Journal Published by The American Vegetarian Society AVS 1853 Alcott published Vegetable Diet As Sanctioned by Medical Men and By Experience in All Ages in 1838 It is his best known work 15 and is significant to the medical literature about a vegetarian diet 16 A second edition was published in 1849 with an added cookbook and medical testimonies supporting what today would be called a vegan diet 17 In 2009 author Andrew Smith said in the book Eating History that Vegetable Diet was America s first vegetarian cookbook 18 In 2020 journalist Avery Yale Kamila wrote The book is considered a seminal work in the cannon of American vegetarian literature 19 The book contains letters written by physicians including Horace A Barrows about vegetarian diets The book is still in print 20 The book is included in the American Antiquarian Cookbook Collection 21 In 2012 the book was republished by Andrews McMeel publishing with an introduction by Anna Thomas 22 Ideas diet and morals editAlcott became one of the most prolific authors in early American history He wrote frequently on the topics of education and health In 1836 he wrote a letter to the editor of the Boston Medical and Surgical Journal titled The Graham System May 4 p 199 201 he signed it M D The cause of greatest interest to Alcott throughout his life was vegetarianism In 1850 he wrote three long letters on vegetarianism to the editor of the New York Tribune at the request of the editor Aug 14 Nov 6 Here he shows clearly that his preference was for a diet that used no animal products what would today be called a vegan diet Alcott opposed the consumption of alcohol coffee meat spices and tea 23 He argued against the use of condiments which were stimulating substances He rejected the use of ginger fennel cardamom mace nutmeg and coriander He believed that garlic horseradish molasses and sauces were disgusting and indecent drugs 23 Alcott wrote The Physiology of Marriage in 1856 He deplored free courtship manners He specifically deplored conversation which is too excitable presence of exciting books unnecessary heat and many other courtship practices prevalent in 18th century America but steadily going out of fashion by 1856 He warned young people of the dangers of courtship He is criticized by modern day feminists for his rigidity citation needed Alcott edited the Moral Reformer 1835 1939 in Boston a journal dedicated to eliminating intemperance gluttony and licentiousness 24 25 He was the editor of the vegetarian Library of Health journal 26 In 1840 the Moral Reformer and The Graham Journal of Health and Longevity were merged in the Library of Health 24 Alcott was a founding member of the American Physiological Society in 1837 America s first vegetarian organization 27 He was a founding member in 1850 and the first president of the American Vegetarian Society 28 Works editIn all he wrote about one hundred works which have been influential in reforming educational methods and improving the physical and moral well being of mankind 10 Books edit Confessions of a School Master 1839 29 The Young Man s Guide 1834 30 31 The Young Woman s Guide 32 The Use of Tobacco Its Physical Intellectual and Moral Effects on The Human System 1836 33 Vegetable Diet As Sanctioned by Medical Men and by Experience in All Ages 1838 Tea And Coffee 1839 The Boy s Guide to Usefulness 1845 Art of Good Behavior 1848 The Young Housekeeper 1842 34 The Young Mother Or Management Of Children In Regard To Health 35 The Young Mother Adventures of Lot the Nephew of Abraham 36 Familiar letters to young men on various subjects Designed as a companion to The young man s guide 37 Trust in the Lord or the Story of Elijah and the Ravens 38 Stories of Eliot and the Indians 39 Lectures on Life and Health Or The Laws and Means of Physical Culture 1853 40 The House I Live In The first Anatomy book for the general public 41 Forty Years in the Wilderness of Pills and Powders 1859 The Laws of Health Or Sequel to The house I live in 1859See also editList of vegetariansReferences editNotes edit Photographs are available on the commercial site Ancestry com in several family trees Citations edit Kelly Howard A Burrage Walter L eds Alcott William Alexander American Medical Biographies Baltimore The Norman Remington Company Orcutt Samuel History of the Town of Wolcott Waterbury Conn American Printing company 1873 pp 265 267 435 The Journals of Bronson Alcott edited by Odell Shepard Boston Little Brown 1958 p xv a b Clarke Wm Horatio 1903 Mid Century Memories of Dedham Dedham Historical Society p 9 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Dr William A Alcott Memoirs of Teachers Educators and Promoters of Education Literature and Science edited by Henry Bernard New York Brownell 1859a pp 249 267 Orcott 1873 p 268 Dr William Alcott Historical Magazine June 1859b p 193 Alcott William A 1859 Forty years in the wilderness of pills and powders Boston J P Jewett LCCN 01019657 Dr William A Alcott 1859a p 257 a b c Johnson 1906 p 69 Dr William A Alcott 1859a pp 163 164 Alcott William A William C Woodbridge Memoirs of Teachers Educators and Promoters of Education Literature and Science edited by Henry Bernard New York Brownell 1859 p 51 64 Dr William A Alcott 1859a p 266 Orcutt 1873 p 267 History of Vegetarianism William Andrus Alcott 1798 1859 ivu org Retrieved June 30 2020 Bramen Lisa The Long Marriage of Vegetarianism and Social Activism Smithsonian Magazine Retrieved October 12 2020 William Alcott and the cultural meaning of medical knowledge in the nineteenth century Hektoen International hekint org Retrieved August 23 2020 Smith Andrew F September 18 2009 Eating History Thirty Turning Points in the Making of American Cuisine Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0 231 51175 9 Kamila Avery Yale March 29 2020 Vegan Kitchen A meat free diet in Maine is nothing new Press Herald Retrieved June 30 2020 Daley Bill December 4 2013 The history of America in cookbooks The Seattle Times Retrieved June 30 2020 Delicious history The American story told in cookbook series Food and Cooking siouxcityjournal com siouxcityjournal com December 4 2013 Retrieved October 12 2020 Vegetable Diet Andrews McMeel Publishing Retrieved October 12 2020 a b Smith Andrew F 2013 Food and Drink in American History Volume 1 ABC CLIO p 16 ISBN 978 1 61069 232 8 a b Fletcher Robert Samuel 1971 A History of Oberlin College From its Foundation Through the Civil War Volume 1 Arno Press p 319 Numbers Ronald L 2008 Prophetess of Health A Study of Ellen G White William B Eerdmans Publishing Company p 105 ISBN 978 0 8028 0395 5 Shprintzen Adam D 2013 The Vegetarian Crusade The Rise of an American Reform Movement 1817 1921 University of North Carolina Press p 37 ISBN 978 1 4696 0891 4 Iacobbo Karen Iacobbo Michael 2004 Vegetarian America A History Praeger Publishing pp 36 37 ISBN 978 0275975197 International Vegetarian Union History of Vegetarianism American Vegetarian Society Old Sturbridge Village Explore amp Learn OSV Documents William Alcott s First Day as a School Master Old Sturbridge Village Explore amp Learn OSV Documents Advice on Choosing a Wife http www nimbus org ElectronicTexts YgMnsGde 1836 html online text Project Gutenberg Edition of The Young Woman s Guide Use of Tobacco Physical Intellectual Moral Effects on Human System 1836 by Alcott William A M D Old Sturbridge Village Explore amp Learn OSV Documents The Ward Families and Their Helps Domestic Work Workers and Relationships on a New England Farm 1787 1866 Project Gutenberg Edition of The Young Mother or Management of Children in Regard to Health Electronic Text of William A Alcott s The Adventures Of Lot http quod lib umich edu cgi t text text idx c moa idno AJF2317 page images Elijah the Tishbite Alcott Wm A Stories of Eliot and the Indians Internet Archive text The Anatomical mission to Burma Sciencemag Sources edit Alcott William A Memoir of William C Woodbridge American Journal of Education 5 1858 51 64 Hyowitz Carol Weissman Michaele A History of Women In America Johnson Rossiter ed 1906 Alcott William Alexander The Biographical Dictionary of America Vol 1 Boston Mass American Biographical Society p 69 Retrieved November 9 2020 via en wikisource org nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Alcott William Alexander The American Cyclopaedia 1879 Alcott William Alexander Appletons Cyclopaedia of American Biography 1900 Alcott William Alexander American Medical Biographies External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to William Alcott Works by William Alcott at Project Gutenberg Works by or about William Alcott at Internet Archive Works by William Alcott at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp William A Alcott at the Animal Rights Library Portals nbsp Biography nbsp Children s literature nbsp Food nbsp Medicine nbsp United States Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title William Alcott amp oldid 1219793716, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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