Public opinion of the physicians in New…
January 1789 CE
Post-mortem dissection is considered an indignity to the dead and the city fathers even forbid using bodies abandoned in the rougher parts of the city.
A year later, in January 1789, a statute is finally put into law in order to codify the proper treatment of corpses, with harsh punishments imposed for those who violate it.
Anyone who breaks the law will stand on the pillory or be publicly whipped, fined, or imprisoned.
The statute also permits the bodies of executed criminals to be used in dissection, “in order that science [might not] be injured by preventing the dissection of proper subjects”.
“Resurrection men”, professionals who use stealth and discretion, are recruited to replace the students and will go on to control the supply of cadavers for generations.
Throughout the 1700s, British law considers dissection as a worse punishment than death.