k James Manby Gully 18081883 British physician who practised first in London then in Malvern, Worcestershire, where he specialised in hydrotherapy. His reputation was damaged by connection with the scandal of the Bravo murder case of 1876, at the time of this cartoon. Gully published The Water Cure in Chronic Disease 1846. He was the model for Dr Gullson in Charles Reades reforming novel It is Never Too Late to Mend 1856, later produced as a play. Cartoon from Vanity Fair. London, 5 August 1876. Editorial Stock Photo - Afloimages
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James Manby Gully  (1808-1883) British physician who practised first in London then in Malvern, Worcestershire, where he specialised in hydrotherapy. His reputation was damaged by connection with the scandal of the Bravo murder case of 1876, at the time of this cartoon. Gully published 'The Water Cure in Chronic Disease' (1846). He was the model for Dr Gullson in Charles Reade's 'reforming' novel 'It is Never Too Late to Mend' (1856), later produced as a play. Cartoon from 'Vanity Fair'. (London, 5 August 1876).
ED

James Manby Gully (1808-1883) British physician who practised first in London then in Malvern, Worcestershire, where he specialised in hydrotherapy. His reputation was damaged by connection with the scandal of the Bravo murder case of 1876, at the time of this cartoon. Gully published 'The Water Cure in Chronic Disease' (1846). He was the model for Dr Gullson in Charles Reade's 'reforming' novel 'It is Never Too Late to Mend' (1856), later produced as a play. Cartoon from 'Vanity Fair'. (London, 5 August 1876).

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09-07-2018

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