1736 - Institutional Event
Today’s bookstores offer shelves full of medical advice
books for people seeking alternatives to doctor visits and prescription drugs.
The treatments may be new, but self-help books aren’t. They’ve been guiding
North Carolina for hundreds of years. The following are excerpts from some
popular ones.
Dr. John Tennant published the first American home medicine
manual, Every Man His Own Doctor; or, The
Poor Planter’s Physician (1736). He wrote that:
“[Many people would be] glad of Assistance, if they did not think the
Remedy near as bad as the Disease: For our Doctors are commonly so exorbitant
in their Fees, whether they kill or cure, that the Patient had rather trust to
his Constitution, than run the Risque of beggaring his family.”
The Indian Physician
(1828) by Dr. Jonas Rishel advocated herbal and household remedies in order to:
“...avoid the enormous charges made by physicians for services and
medicines which are in themselves more injurious in many cases to the patient
than were they to let nature have its course without the interruption of
impregnated doses!”
Manufacturers of herbal remedies often published their own
manuals. In The Herb Doctor and Medicine
Man (late 1800’s), the Indiana Herb Company promoted herbal healing and, of
course, their own products. The introduction asked:
“Why Use Poisonous Drugs when nature in her wisdom and beneficence has
provided, in her great vegetable laboratories—the fields and forest—relief for
most of the ills of mankind?”
The People’s Pharmacy
(1999) was written by Durham authors and radio-show hosts Joe and Teresa
Graedon. They combined scientific research and accumulated folk wisdom to offer
advice on using home and herbal remedies safely. Their warning:
“With 60 million people taking herbs and dietary supplements as well as
prescription drugs and over-the-counter remedies, the potential for dangerous
interactions is enormous.”

Sampling of early self help books.