Seabury was born in New York on November 10, 1844. He was the son of Michael Seeberg, an immigrant from Baden, Germany.[2] He served in the Army during the early part of the War of the Rebellion. He first enlisted as a drummer boy in the Twelfth Regiment and served for more than a year in the Army of the Potomac.[2]
Together with Robert Wood, Seabury improved on the medicated adhesive plaster by introducing a rubber base.[3] This new adhesive surgical dressing reduced sepsis in wounds.[4]
Seabury died at his home in New York on February 15, 1909.[5] He first suffered an attack of influenza and was followed by pneumonia, which caused his death.[2] He is buried in Orange, New Jersey's Rosedale Cemetery.[6]
Works
Shall Pharmacists Become Tradesmen (1899)
The Constructive and Reconstructive Forces Essential to Maintain American International Supremacy (1902)
References
^Benjamin, Marcus, Dictionary of American Biography. American Council of Learned Societies. 1928–1936.
^ abcThe Pacific Pharmacist. San Francisco, CA: Galen Publishing Company. 1908. p. 8.
^Alfred, Randy (2012). Mad Science: Einstein's Fridge, Dewar's Flask, Mach's Speed, and 362 Other Inventions and Discoveries That Made Our World. Little, Brown. p. 65. ISBN978-0-316-20818-5.
^Snodgrass, Mary Ellen (2015). The Civil War Era and Reconstruction: An Encyclopedia of Social, Political, Cultural and Economic History. Routledge. ISBN978-1-317-45790-9.