Shippen followed his father
William Shippen Sr. into a medical career. At his father's encouragement, William Jr. commenced America's first series of anatomy lectures in 1762. He became one of the first professors (of anatomy, surgery, and
midwifery) of America's first medical school (the College of Philadelphia, now the
University of Pennsylvania), which he co-founded in 1765 with Dr.
John Morgan. At the time, male midwifery was considered "offensive" and people threw stones through the windows of his dissecting rooms and occasionally burst into his rooms in mobs. Like his father, William Shippen Jr. was elected to the revived
American Philosophical Society in 1767, where he served as Curator from 1771 to 1772, and as Secretary from 1772 to 1773.
American Revolution During the
American Revolutionary War, Shippen served as Chief Physician & Director General of the Hospital of the Continental Army in New Jersey (1776) and as Director General of the Hospitals West of the Hudson River (October 1776). Ultimately, he served (April 11, 1777 – January 1781) as Director of Hospitals for the Continental Army, a precursor of the
Surgeon General of the U.S. Army. Shippen had connived to replace Dr. Morgan, his predecessor in that position. Later Morgan, with the assistance of Dr.
Benjamin Rush, brought about his forced resignation. He was subsequently
court martialed for misappropriating supplies intended for recovering soldiers and underreporting deaths, but was acquitted on a technicality. ==Personal life==