Richard Brooke (physician)

Richard Brooke (June 2, 1716 – July 13, 1783) was an American physician, surgeon, politician, and slaveholder.

degree, he began regularly contributing to The Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London and Gentleman's Magazine.

His entries touched on issues such as smallpox inoculation, weather, lightning rods, lice, and the eradication of mouth-pimples.

However, Brooke wrote not only about the medical and scientific, but the political as well, as he entered into public life in Maryland after he inherited part of his father's estate in 1744.

[2] While in office, he made enemies of multiple governors of his home state, as well as Roman Catholics (despite some of his family being of the persuasion), and ultimately the British Empire as he became a staunch supporter of the American Revolution.