Merlin’s ‘invalid or gouty chair’ and the origin of the self-propelled wheelchair
2015; SAGE Publishing; Volume: 24; Issue: 3 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1177/0967772015584738
ISSN1758-1087
AutoresMarie-France Weiner, John Russell Silver,
Tópico(s)History of Medical Practice
ResumoWheelchairs are a major advance in enabling independence for people with walking difficulties. The first self-propelled wheelchair has been attributed to John Joseph Merlin, the ‘ingenious mechanick’, in the early 19th century and his ‘gouty chair’ is exhibited at Kenwood House. Research would suggest that comparable chairs existed in France as early as 1751 and the French Revolutionary, Georges Couthon, used one to get around Paris. A later design, also attributed to Merlin, the invalid wheelchair, features large wheels with outer hoops for the occupant to grasp and this is the true ancestor of the modern wheelchair.
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