Bottle for 'Soda Mint' containing phials of hypodermic tablets
- Materials:
- complete , glass , morphine sulphate , cork , cocaine hydrochloride , strychnine , hyoscine and digitalin
- Object Number:
- A700027/1
The Livingstone medicine chest, wooden box covered with natural coloured cow hide. Contains glass bottles of 'Tabloid' brand medicines.
This battered medicine chest was taken by Algot Lane, a Swedish-American explorer, on his 1911 expedition to the Amazon jungle in Brazil. Lange wrote a book about his exploration of the area in 1912 called In the Amazon Jungle: Adventures in the Remote Areas of the Upper Amazon Basin. Unsurprisingly, the chest contains is a large amount of quinine to help prevent and treat malaria, which was common in that area.
The medicine chest was advertised as the ‘Livingstone’ chest after David Livingstone (1813-1873). It was made by Burroughs, Wellcome & Co, who provided medicine chests suitable for a wide range of expeditions – these were often provided free of charge for publicity reasons. It is pictured here with another ‘Livingstone’ medicine chest from the same expedition (A700016).