Samuel Crumpe

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Dr. Samuel Crumpe
Born (1766-09-15)September 15, 1766
Rathkeale
Died Script error: The function "death_date_and_age" does not exist.
Limerick
Resting place St Mary's Cathedral, Limerick
Residence Limerick
Nationality Irish
Fields medicine, employment
Institutions St. John's Hospital (Limerick)
Alma mater Edinburgh University
Known for An Essay on the Best Means of Providing Employment for the People, 1793.
An Inquiry into the Nature and Properties of Opium, 1793.
Notable awards Prize medal of the Royal Irish Academy
Spouse Susan Ingram

Samuel Crumpe (1766–1796) was an Irish physician and a writer on medical and social issues.

Life

Samuel Crumpe was born at Rathkeale on 15 September 1766. He was the eldest son of Daniel Crumpe and his wife and cousin, Grace, daughter of Richard Orpen of Ardtully, High Sheriff of Kerry.

In 1788, at the age of 22, he was awarded the degree of MD at Edinburgh University, with a dissertation in which he argued that scurvy could be cured by good diet. The same year he set up in practice in Limerick, where he was notable for his active service to the poor through his work at St John's Hospital.[1]

In 1792 he married Susan Ingram, described as an accomplished lady with a large fortune, she was the second daughter of the Rev. Jaques Ingram by his wife Miss Smyth, granddaughter of Thomas Smyth, Bishop of Limerick, Ardfert and Aghadoe. The couple had two children,[2] one of whom (Daniel George Washington Crumpe) wrote the historical novel Geraldine of Desmond: Or, Ireland in the Reign of Elizabeth. An Historical Romance in Three Volumes (1829).

Dr Crumpe was an avid climatologist and kept a weather diary for each day of 1795 [2]

Dr Crumpe died in Limerick on 27 January 1796, aged 29. One obituary notice recorded that he was "a man whose rare virtues and accomplishments recommended him to the respect and esteem of a widely extended and diversified acquaintance".[3]

Writings

In 1793 Crumpe's Essay on the Best Means of Providing Employment for the People won the prize offered by the Royal Irish Academy.[4] It was translated into French and German, as was his book on opium which appeared the same year.[5] The work was heavily indebted to Adam Smith in its assumptions about society and economy.[6]

Crumpe’s work on opium provided an experimental basis for classifying the drug as a stimulant rather than a narcotic,[7] and was the first to provide an extensive discussion of withdrawal effects.[8]

Bibliography

  • De Vitiis quibus Humores corrumpi dicuntur, eorumque Remediis, doctoral dissertation, 1788.
  • An Essay on the Best Means of Providing Employment for the People, 1793. Second edition 1795. Available on Google Books
  • An Inquiry into the Nature and Properties of Opium, 1793. Available on Google Books
  • History of a Case in which very uncommon worms were discharged from the stomach, 1797 (lecture read to the Royal Irish Academy on 6 December 1794, published posthumously). Also available in the Transactions of the Royal Irish Academy, vol. 6 (Dublin, 1797).

Sources

  1. Michael Conway, "Dr. Samuel Crumpe", Old Limerick Journal 15 (Spring 1984), pp. 36-37.
  2. http://limerickslife.com/category/dr-crumps-weather-1795/
  3. Obituary notice in the Monthly Magazine
  4. Reported in, inter alia, Algemeene konst- en letterbode 259 (14 June 1793).
  5. Reviewed in Anthologia Hibernica, April 1794, p. 287.
  6. Charles Ryle Fay, The World of Adam Smith (Cambridge, 1960), p. 21ff.
  7. Andreas Holger Maehler, “Pharmacological Experimentation with Opium”, in Drugs and Narcotics in History, edited by Roy Porter and Mikuláš Teich (Cambridge University Press, 1995), pp. 62-63.
  8. Jan Godderis, En mijn verrukking neemt geen end: Cultuurhistorische reflecties over drugs, roes, verbeelding en creativiteit (Antwerp & Apeldoorn: Garant, 2004), p. 78.