John Jeffries

John Jeffries (5 February 1745 – 16 September 1819)[1][2] was a Boston physician, scientist, and a military surgeon with the British Army in Nova Scotia and New York during the American Revolution. He is best known for accompanying Jean-Pierre Blanchard on his 1785 balloon flight across the English Channel.[3][4]

John Jeffries
John Jeffries
Born(1745-02-05)5 February 1745
Died16 September 1819(1819-09-16) (aged 74)
Boston
Resting placeGranary Burying Ground
NationalityAmerican
EducationHarvard College, University of Aberdeen
Occupationphysician, surgeon
EmployerBritish Army
Known forballooning
TitleSurgeon General of British Forces in North America 17761780
Spouse(s)Sarah Jeffries (nee Rhoads) - m.1770 and d. 1780; Hannah Jeffries (nee Hunt) m 1787
Children2

Biography

Born in Boston, Jeffries graduated from Harvard College [Class of 1763] and obtained his medical degree at the University of Aberdeen. Dr. Jeffries played a role in the trial for the Boston Massacre as a witness for the defense.[5] He was the surgeon for Patrick Carr,[6] who was one of the Americans shot during that incident.

Between 1771 through 1774 Jeffries was a surgeon on board a squadron of British ships in Boston Harbor and helped the wounded British soldiers on June 17, 1775 at the Battle of Bunker Hill.[7]

Jeffries is credited with being among America's first weather observers. He began taking daily weather measurements in 1774 in Boston, as well as taking weather observations in a balloon over London in 1784. National Weatherperson's Day is celebrated in his honor on 5 February, his birthday.[8] The Archives and Special Collections at Amherst College holds a collection of his papers, including a letter he dropped from the balloon during his historic flight, considered the oldest piece of airmail in existence.[9]

He fled to Halifax, Nova Scotia in 1776 and later to England 1779, and was employed by the Crown during this time.[7]

In 1785, Jeffries and Jean-Pierre Blanchard crossed the English Channel in a balloon, becoming the first human beings to cross the Channel by air.[3][4]

Jeffries lived in England from 1779 to 1790. Despite being named in the Massachusetts Banishment Act, he returned to private practice in Boston, staying there until his death in 1819. His son John Jeffries II (1796–1876) [Harvard] Class of 1815] was an ophthalmic surgeon and co-founded the Massachusetts Charitable Eye and Ear Infirmary.

Notes

  1. Channing 1820, p. 63
  2. Channing 1820, p. 70
  3. Morison, Samuel Eliot (1965). The Oxford History of the American People. New York: Oxford. p. 286.
  4. "1785: Across the English Channel in a balloon". The History Channel. Retrieved 27 May 2018.
  5. "The Summary of the Boston Massacre Trial". Boston Massacre Historical Society. Retrieved 28 October 2012.
  6. "Doctor John Jeffries". CelebrateBoston.com. Retrieved 28 October 2012.
  7. Unknown, Unknown (1841). The American Quarterly Register. 13. American Education Society. p. 53.
  8. February 5 is National Weatherperson's Day
  9. Jeffries Air-Mail Letter Collection.
gollark: It's apparently not very effective for kidnapping (takes ages to work) but *can* give you horrible cancer and whatever.
gollark: Opposing it got considered "green" somehow by the magic of political dimensionality reduction and if that hadn't happened it might be more popular.
gollark: Quite possibly.
gollark: I guess evacuation kind of counts as that?
gollark: Solar panels, though, aren't great for anything but small off grid systems: they take up tons of space, require large amounts of energy to produce in the first place, stop working after a few decades, and don't produce power all the time.

References

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