James Wellwood (physician)

A letter of his to the lady mayoress on the case of Mary Maillard, a girl lame from birth, was published in London in 1694.

Wellwood noted that the atheists and enthusiasts could decide their approach easily he found it difficult to take a side on this happening that was "above the road of nature".

[2] In 1689 he published a "Vindication of the Revolution in England," and an "Answer to the late King James's Last Declaration" (2nd edit.

These were followed in 1700 by "Memoirs of the most Material Transactions in England for the last Hundred Years preceding the Revolution in 1688," which contains several original accounts and an able statement of the whig case.

In 1710 he published "The Banquet of Xenophon," with an introductory essay on the death of Socrates, dedicated to Lady Jean Douglas, eldest daughter of the Duke of Queensberry and Dover.