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  • Dec. 1, 1795
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The Freemasons' Magazine, Dec. 1, 1795: Page 38

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    Article CHARACTER OF GAVIN WILSON, WITH SOME ACCOUNT OF HIS INVENTIONS, ← Page 3 of 6 →
Page 38

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Character Of Gavin Wilson, With Some Account Of His Inventions,

" P . S . Lately the Honourable Board of Trustees for Fisheries ,. ' Manufactories , and Improvements , in Scotland , honoured the inventor of legs and arms with a genteel premium on that account . " Were any farther testimony requisite to evince the hi gh utility of this deserving artist ' s contrivances , besides the approbation of the Patriotic Board which honoured his ingenuity by a premium , the of two of the most celebrated"

authority medical practitioners of the present age might be produced ; Dr Alexander Monro , present Professor of Anatomy and Surgery in the University of Edinburgh ; and Mr . Benjamin Bell , author of the System of Surgery published at Edinburgh . Dr . Monroin his lectures for these thas annuallho

, many year pas , y - noured the memory of Gavin Wilson with a public encomium , as the inventor of the improved artificial arms and legs ; and Mr . Bell , in the ' 6 th volume of the work above mentioned , pays the following tributes to his merit : - . " . These . artificial legs and arms are preferable to any I have ever seen . The legwhen erlfitted equally useful with the *

, propy , proves common timber-leg , and is preferable for being neater ; at the same time that it is not liable to break , an accident to which the others are veiy liable ; and it answers better than a leg made of copper , from being considerably lighter , and not apt to be hurt in its shape by bruises . — They are so constructed as to be fixed on by means of straps , and hooksand buckles , in such a manner that the weight of the person ' s body

coes not rest on the stump of the amputated limb , but hangs quite free within the case of the artificial leg . This , in the most effectual man- ' Tier , prevents the pain and excoriation which otherwise would be apt ' to happen from the friction of the stump against the machine . ' When , a limb is amputated above the knee , a joint is formed in the artificial , limb at the knee . In walking , the limb is made steady by a steel bolt ,-running in two les the outside

stap on of the thigh , being pushed ^ - dawn ; and when the patient sits down , he renders the jointflexible by pulling the bolt up . This is easily done , and adds much to the utilityof the invention . Mr Wilson ' s artificial arms , besides being made of firm , hardened leather , are covered with white lambskin , so tinged asvery nearly to resemble the human skin . The nails are made of white horn

, tinged in such a manner as to be very near imitations of nature . The wrist-joint is a ball and socket , and answers all the purposes of flexion , extension , and rotation . The first joints' of the thumb and fingers are also balls and sockets made of hammered plate-brass , and . all : the -balls are hollow , to diminish their weight . Thesecondand third joints are similar to that which anatomists term Ginglimus , but they are fardifferent to admit of

. as any motion ,, whether flexion , extention , or lateral . The . fingers and metacarpus ( wrist ) are made up to the shape , With soft sham by leather and baked hair . In the palm : of the hand there is an iron screw , in which a screw nail is occasionally fastened . The head of this nail is a spring-plate , contrived in . such a manner as to hold aknife or fork , which it does with perfect firmness . And by . means of a brass ring fixed on the first and second fingers , a pen can

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1795-12-01, Page 38” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 9 July 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01121795/page/38/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
LONDON : Article 1
TO READERS, CORRESPONDENTS, &c. Article 2
Untitled Article 2
Untitled Article 4
WITH A PORTRAIT. Article 5
Untitled Article 5
COVETOUSNESS; A VISION. Article 6
HISTORY OF MASONRY. Article 11
TO THE EDITOR. Article 17
Untitled Article 17
ADVICE TO THE PUBLIC, Article 18
ACCOUNT OF THE SYBARITES. FROM ATHENAEUS. Article 19
COTYS. Article 19
ALCIBIADES. Article 20
FROM THE SAME. Article 22
ON THE ORIGIN OF COCK-FIGHTING. Article 22
FROM THE SAME. Article 22
FROM THE SAME. Article 23
FROM THE SAME. Article 23
FROM THE SAME. Article 23
FROM THE SAME. Article 23
FROM THE SAME. Article 23
FROM THE SAME. Article 24
A BILL OF FARE FOR FIFTY PEOPLE OF THE COMPANY OF SALTERS, A. D. 1506. Article 24
APOPLEXY. Article 24
THE STAGE. Article 25
ACCOUNT OF THE STOCKS OR PUBLIC FUNDS OF THIS KINGDOM. Article 26
BAD EFFECTS OF SPIRITOUS LIQUORS, ESPECIALLY AMONG THE LOWER RANKS. Article 29
TO THE EDITOR. ON THE EFFECTS OF TRAGEDY. Article 31
AN EXPLANATION OF THE FACULTYE OF ABRAC. Article 34
DETACHED SENTIMENTS. Article 35
CHARACTER OF GAVIN WILSON, WITH SOME ACCOUNT OF HIS INVENTIONS, Article 36
THOUGHTS ON QUACKS OF ALL DENOMINATIONS. Article 41
REFLECTIONS ON THE UNEQUAL DISTRIBUTION OF TALENTS TO MANKIND. Article 43
ANECOTE OF SIR ROBERT WALPOLE. Article 45
OPINION OF THE THE GREAT JUDGE COKE, UPON THE ACT AGAINST FREEMASONS. Article 46
THE OPINION. Article 46
A FRAGMENT. Article 47
ANOTHER. Article 47
REMARKS ON THE IMITATIVE POWER OF INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC. Article 48
SKETCH OF THE CHARACTER OF Dr. ADAM SMITH. Article 50
ANECDOTE OF THE LATE EARL OF LAUDERDALE. Article 52
POETRY. Article 53
IMPOSSIBILITIES. Article 54
SIR PHILIP SYDNEY'S EPITAPH. Article 54
EPITAPH under Dr. JOHNSON's STATUE in St. PAUL's. Article 54
ON PLUCKING A ROSE INTENDED FOR A YOUNG LADY. Article 55
THE SOLDIER's PARTING; OR, JEMMY AND LUCY, A SONG. Article 56
EPITAPH on Dr. SACHEVEREL, and SALLY SALISBURY. Article 56
DESCRIPTION OF A PARISH WORKHOUSE. Article 57
TO MY LOVELY FRIEND. Article 57
Untitled Article 58
Untitled Article 58
LOVE WITHOUT SPIRIT. Article 58
STRICTURES ON PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 59
EPILOGUE Article 59
THE ARTS. Article 60
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 61
GRAND LODGE OF SCOTLAND. Article 62
UNTO THE KING'S MOST EXCELLENT MAJESTY, Article 63
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 63
PROMOTIONS. Article 69
BANKRUPTS. Article 70
INDEX TO THE FIFTH VOLUME. Article 71
Untitled Article 74
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Page 38

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Character Of Gavin Wilson, With Some Account Of His Inventions,

" P . S . Lately the Honourable Board of Trustees for Fisheries ,. ' Manufactories , and Improvements , in Scotland , honoured the inventor of legs and arms with a genteel premium on that account . " Were any farther testimony requisite to evince the hi gh utility of this deserving artist ' s contrivances , besides the approbation of the Patriotic Board which honoured his ingenuity by a premium , the of two of the most celebrated"

authority medical practitioners of the present age might be produced ; Dr Alexander Monro , present Professor of Anatomy and Surgery in the University of Edinburgh ; and Mr . Benjamin Bell , author of the System of Surgery published at Edinburgh . Dr . Monroin his lectures for these thas annuallho

, many year pas , y - noured the memory of Gavin Wilson with a public encomium , as the inventor of the improved artificial arms and legs ; and Mr . Bell , in the ' 6 th volume of the work above mentioned , pays the following tributes to his merit : - . " . These . artificial legs and arms are preferable to any I have ever seen . The legwhen erlfitted equally useful with the *

, propy , proves common timber-leg , and is preferable for being neater ; at the same time that it is not liable to break , an accident to which the others are veiy liable ; and it answers better than a leg made of copper , from being considerably lighter , and not apt to be hurt in its shape by bruises . — They are so constructed as to be fixed on by means of straps , and hooksand buckles , in such a manner that the weight of the person ' s body

coes not rest on the stump of the amputated limb , but hangs quite free within the case of the artificial leg . This , in the most effectual man- ' Tier , prevents the pain and excoriation which otherwise would be apt ' to happen from the friction of the stump against the machine . ' When , a limb is amputated above the knee , a joint is formed in the artificial , limb at the knee . In walking , the limb is made steady by a steel bolt ,-running in two les the outside

stap on of the thigh , being pushed ^ - dawn ; and when the patient sits down , he renders the jointflexible by pulling the bolt up . This is easily done , and adds much to the utilityof the invention . Mr Wilson ' s artificial arms , besides being made of firm , hardened leather , are covered with white lambskin , so tinged asvery nearly to resemble the human skin . The nails are made of white horn

, tinged in such a manner as to be very near imitations of nature . The wrist-joint is a ball and socket , and answers all the purposes of flexion , extension , and rotation . The first joints' of the thumb and fingers are also balls and sockets made of hammered plate-brass , and . all : the -balls are hollow , to diminish their weight . Thesecondand third joints are similar to that which anatomists term Ginglimus , but they are fardifferent to admit of

. as any motion ,, whether flexion , extention , or lateral . The . fingers and metacarpus ( wrist ) are made up to the shape , With soft sham by leather and baked hair . In the palm : of the hand there is an iron screw , in which a screw nail is occasionally fastened . The head of this nail is a spring-plate , contrived in . such a manner as to hold aknife or fork , which it does with perfect firmness . And by . means of a brass ring fixed on the first and second fingers , a pen can

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