American Philosophical Society
Member History

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1Name:  John Jones
 Year Elected:  1769
 Residency:  Resident
 Living? :   Deceased
 Birth Date:  5/10/1729
 Death Date:  6/23/1791
   
 
John Jones (10 May 1729–23 June 1791) was a physician, surgeon, and a member of the American Philosophical Society, elected in 1769. Born in Long Island to Quaker parents, Jones studied medicine under his father, a physician, and then his cousin in Philadelphia. In 1750, Jones went to London to further his studies, attending lectures and observing surgeries. He received his M.D. from the University of Rheims the following year. Shortly thereafter, he returned to New York to establish his own medical practice and served as surgeon with provincial troops in the French and Indian War (1754–63). Notably, he treated the injuries of a captive French general. In 1767, he successfully petitioned King’s College (now Columbia University) alongside his colleagues for the establishment of a medical department and became the department’s first professor of surgery. During the Revolutionary War, Jones examined military surgeon candidates and wrote a manual for their instruction, Plain, Concise, Practical Remarks on the Treatment of Wounds and Fractures (1775). When New York fell to the British in 1776, Jones left the city to attend to wounded soldiers elsewhere, leading to his election to the New York assembly the same year. Very little of his library, papers, and anatomical collections survived the British occupation, which caused Jones to lose much of his income. Due to this and his failing health, Jones moved to Philadelphia in 1779. In Philadelphia, he received many honors, such as becoming a physician of the Pennsylvania Hospital (1780), and the first Vice President of the College of Physicians of Philadelphia (1787). He also treated high-profile patients such as Benjamin Franklin and performed surgery on President George Washington in 1790. Jones died the following year in Philadelphia. (ANB)
 
2Name:  John Jones
 Year Elected:  1774
 Residency:  Resident
 Living? :   Deceased
 Birth Date:  7/6/1747
 Death Date:  7/18/1792
   
 
John Jones (6 July 1747–18 July 1792) was a naval officer and a member of the American Philosophical Society, elected in 1774. He was born John Paul Jones in Kirkcudbrightshire, Scotland and began his sailing career as a merchant’s apprentice when he was thirteen years old. By twenty-one, he was in charge of a vessel sailing to the West Indies, and by twenty-eight he was an officer in the U.S. Navy. The newly formed military branch lacked formal structures, and, as a result, Jones’s maneuvers were rarely well-planned in advance. On a 1777 voyage upon a ship called the Ranger, he intended to kidnap and hold hostage the Earl of Selkirk, but, finding the nobleman was not home, stole his household silver instead. He later sent a letter of apology to the Earl’s wife. By Jones’s own admission, his military feats did little to contribute to the war’s outcome, but they were sensational—humiliating to the British and rousing to the Americans. Jones’s colorful Navy career—characterized by acts of heroism and daring—contributed to his already controversial reputation. In 1770, on a voyage to Tobago, he was charged with murder for beating a sailor who then died, and, in a separate incident, he killed a mutinying crewmember in what he claimed was self-defense. After the American Revolution, Jones joined the Russian navy, and in 1789 was accused in St. Petersburg of raping a young girl. He managed to evade serious repercussions for his actions in each case. Jones thrived on the basis of his powerful connections: he joined the Freemasons as a young man in Scotland, and formed long-lasting and advantageous friendships with Robert Morris and Benjamin Franklin. He spent the last years of his life in Paris, living peacefully and largely ignoring the French Revolution. He is now buried in an ornate crypt, fit for his legendary stature, on the campus of the United States Naval Academy. (ANB, DNB)
 
Election Year
1774 (1)
1769 (1)