User:AdaptOrPerish/sandbox

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Body Snatching[edit]

Railings used to protect graves from body snatchers

Many cadavers were murderers provided by the state, but there were few of these corpses available for everyone to dissect. The first recorded body snatching was performed by four medical students who were arrested in 1319 for grave-robbing. In the the 1700s most body snatchers were doctors, anatomy professors or their students. By 1828 some anatomists were paying others to perform the exhumation. People in this profession where commonly known in the medical community as “resurrection men”. [1]

The London Borough Gang was a group of resurrection men that worked from 1802-1825. These men provided a number of schools with cadavers and members of the schools would use their influence to keep these men out of jail. Members of rival gangs would often report members of other gangs, or desecrate a graveyard to cause a public upset making it so that rival gangs were not be able to operate. [1]

Selling Murder Victims[edit]

From 1827 to 1828 in Scotland, a number of people were murdered, and the bodies were sold to medical schools for research purposes, known as the West Port murders. Another example of this is H. H. Holmes, a noted serial killer in Chicago, Illinois, USA who sold the skeletons of some of his victims to medical schools.[2] The Anatomy Act of 1832 was created to ensure that relatives of the deceased submitted to the use of their kin in dissection and other scientific processes. Public response to the West Port murders was a factor in the passage of this bill, as well as the acts committed by the London Burkers.

Stories appeared of people murdering and selling the cadaver. Two of the well know are that of Burke and Hare, and that of Bishop, May, and Williams.

Burke Murdering Margery Campbell
  • Burke and Hare — Burke and Hare ran a boarding house. When one of their tenants died, they brought him to Robert Knox's anatomy classroom in Edinburgh where they were paid seven pounds for the body. Realizing the possible profit, they murdered 16 people by asphyxiation over the next year and sold their bodies to Knox. They were eventually caught when a tenant returned to her bed only to encounter a corpse. Hare testified against Burke in exchange for amnesty and Burke was found guilty, hanged, and publicly dissected.[3]
  • London Burkers, Bishop, May and Williams — These body snatchers killed three boys, ages ten, 11 and 14 years old. The anatomist that they sold the cadavers to were suspicious. To delay their departure, the anatomist stated that he needed to break a 50-pound note and sent for the police who then arrested the men. In His confession Bishop claimed to have body snatched 500 to 1000 bodies in his career.[4]

Making Cars Safer[edit]

Since the 1930s cadavers have been used to make vehicles safer.[5] Cadavers have helped set guidelines on the safety features of vehicles ranging from laminated windshields to seat belt airbags. The first recorded use of human crash test dummies was an experiment performed by Lawrence Patrick, in the 1930s, after using his own body, and of his students, to test the limits of the human body. His first use of a cadaver was when he tossed one down an elevator shaft. He learned that the human skull can withstand up to one and a half tons for one second before experiencing any type of damage.[6]

In an article written by Albert King PhD, it was approximated that improvements made to cars since cadaver testing have prevented 143,000 injuries and 4250 deaths. Miniature accelerometers are place on the bone of the tested area of the cadaver. Damage is then inflicted on the Cadaver with different tools including; linear impactors, pendulums, or falling weights. The Cadaver may also be placed on an impact sled, simulating a crash. After these tests are completed, the Cadaver is examined with an x-ray, looking for any damage, and returned to the Anatomy Department.[7] Cadaver use contributed to Ford’s inflatable rear seat belts introduced in the 2011 Explorer.[8]

Public view of Cadaver Crash Test Dummies[edit]

After a New York Times article published in 1993, the public became aware of the use of cadavers in crash testing. The article focused on a Heidelberg University’s use of approximately 200 adult and children cadavers.[9] After public outcry, the university was ordered to prove that the families of the cadavers approved their use in testing.[10]

  1. ^ a b Waite, Frederick C. (1945-07). "Grave Robbing in New England". Bulletin of the Medical Library Association. 33 (3): 272–294. ISSN 0025-7338. PMID 16016694. {{cite journal}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  2. ^ "H.H. Holmes - Crime Museum". Crime Museum. Retrieved 2018-11-17.
  3. ^ Rosner, Lisa (2011-07-07). The Anatomy Murders: Being the True and Spectacular History of Edinburgh's Notorious Burke and Hare and of the Man of Science Who Abetted Them in the Commission of Their Most Heinous Crimes. University of Pennsylvania Press. ISBN 0812203550.
  4. ^ The history of the London Burkers ; containing a faithful and authentic account of the horrid acts of the noted Resurrectionists, Bishop, Williams, May, etc., etc., and their trial and condemnation at the Old Bailey for the wilful murder of Carlo Ferrari, with the criminals' confessions after trial. Including also the life, character, and behaviour of the atrocious Eliza Ross. The murderer of Mrs. Walsh, etc., etc. Wellcome Library. London : T. Kelly. 1832.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  5. ^ Fox, Margalit. "Samuel Alderson, Crash-Test Dummy Inventor, Dies at 90". Retrieved 2018-11-14.
  6. ^ "The Driving Dead: Human Cadavers Still Used In Car Crash Testing". Autoblog. Retrieved 2018-11-14.
  7. ^ "Humanitarian Benefits of Cadaver Research on Injury... : Journal of Trauma and Acute Care Surgery". LWW. Retrieved 2018-11-14.
  8. ^ "How Cadavers Made Your Car Safer". WIRED. Retrieved 2018-11-14.
  9. ^ Press, The Associated. "German University Said to Use Corpses in Auto Crash Tests". Retrieved 2018-11-14.
  10. ^ "GERMAN UNIVERSITY MUST PROVE FAMILIES OK'D TESTS ON CADAVERS". DeseretNews.com. 1993-11-24. Retrieved 2018-11-14.