Alfred Swaine Taylor (11 December 1806 in Northfleet, Kent – 27 May 1880 in London) was an English toxicologist and medical writer, who has been called the "father of British forensic medicine".[1][2] He was also an early experimenter in photography.[3]
^Rosenfeld, Louis, 'Alfred Swaine Taylor (1806–1880), pioneer toxicologist – and a slight case of murder',Clinical Chemistry 31:7 (1985)
^Alfred Swaine Taylor. Royal College of Physicians of London (2009)
^Taylor, Roger, Impressed by Light. British Photographs from Paper Negatives, 1840-1860, (Yale University Press, 2007), p.378.
and 24 Related for: Alfred Swaine Taylor information
AlfredSwaineTaylor (11 December 1806 in Northfleet, Kent – 27 May 1880 in London) was an English toxicologist and medical writer, who has been called...
Monamy Swaine (c.1750-c.1800), British artist, son of Francis Robert Swaine (d. 1705), first owner of Leverington Hall in Cambridgeshire AlfredSwaine Taylor...
756–63. doi:10.1177/003591577707001103. PMC 1543508. PMID 341167. AlfredSwaineTaylor, Edward Hartshorne (1861). Medical jurisprudence. Blanchard and Lea...
London: Baedeker. Retrieved 18 April 2022., p.95 and currency chart. Taylor, AlfredSwaine, An Account of the Grotta del Cane; With Remarks Upon Suffocation...
York City. AlfredSwaineTaylor and Frederick John Smith (ed.). (1920.) Taylor's Principles and Practice of Medical Jurisprudence, 7 ed., Taylor & Francis...
carroting prompted opium treatment. In Britain, the toxicologist AlfredSwaineTaylor reported the disease in a hatmaker in 1864. In 1869, the French Academy...
toxicologist AlfredSwaineTaylor (no relation), who found no evidence of poisoning. The bodies of Joseph and James Chesham were then exhumed, and Taylor found...
gout. Evidence of colchicine poisoning was given by toxicologist AlfredSwaineTaylor, the defence being that the poison could not be reliably detected...
Royal Engineers to attend on the government's behalf, and dispatched AlfredSwaineTaylor FRS to investigate the chemical causes of the explosion. The inquest...
Colonel Alfred McCormack, CBE (1901-1956), was a trained attorney of Cravath, Swaine & Moore who during and after World War II served in the US Military...
Staffordshire Past Track. Retrieved 17 April 2022. "Toxicology in the dock: AlfredSwaineTaylor and the William Palmer murder trial". National Library of Medicine...
men that could have been the father—that the girl was Edwards'. AlfredSwaineTaylor, the main dissector of Edwards' body, later became one of the leading...
German doctors. For British medico-jurisprudent works, such as AlfredSwaineTaylor's 1846 work A Manual of Medical Jurisprudence, the act of sodomy was...
heard of seem more detestable. The case is further mentioned in AlfredSwaineTaylor's Manual of Medical Jurisprudence, 6th American edition (Philadelphia...
Frederick John; Taylor, AlfredSwaine (1920). Taylor's principles and practice of medical jurisprudence, Volume 1 (7th ed.). Taylor & Francis. p. 218...
physician-extraordinary to Queen Victoria. He was frequently associated with AlfredSwaineTaylor in criminal investigations—notably in the trial of William Palmer...
Dorothy Swaine Thomas (October 24, 1899 – May 1, 1977) was an American sociologist and economist. She was the 42nd President of the American Sociological...
December 19, 2012. Alexander, Harriet; Barrett, David; Donnelly, Laura; Swaine, Jon (December 15, 2012). "Connecticut school shooting: Troubled life of...
History of Excellence: Flowserve. Hines 2011, p. 61. Davis 1994, p. 204. Swaine 1946, p. 633. Wilkins 1989, p. 428. Chandler 2009, p. 198. Maurer 1999,...
from the original on 5 June 2017. Retrieved 19 June 2017 – via Gov.uk. Swaine, Jon (13 January 2009). "Barack Obama presidency will strengthen special...
Volume 33. Andrew Garn, "Bethlehem Steel", 1999 Biography (1999). Robert T. Swaine, "The Cravath firm and its predecessors, 1819-1947", Volume 1 (1948). "The...