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A Catalogue of the Fellows, Candidates, Licentiates [And Extra
MDCCCXXXVI. / Od- CATALOGUE OF THE FELLOWS, CANDIDATES, AND LICENTIATES, OF THE ftogal College of LONDON. STREET. PRINTED 1!Y G. WGOUFAM., ANGEL COURT, SKINNER A CATALOGUE OF THE FELLOWS, CANDIDATES, AND LICENTIATES, OF THE Ittojjal College of ^ijpstrtans, LONDON. FELLOWS. Sir Henry Halford, Bart., M.D., G.C.IL, President, Physician to their Majesties , Curzon-street . Devereux Mytton, M.D., Garth . John Latham, M.D., Bradwall-hall, Cheshire. Edward Roberts, M.D. George Paulet Morris, M.D., Prince s-court, St. James s-park. William Heberden, M.D., Elect, Pall Mall. Algernon Frampton, M.D., Elect, New Broad- street. Devey Fearon, M.D. Samuel Holland, M.D. James Franck, M.D., Bertford-street. Park- lane. Sir George Smith Gibbes, Knt., M.D. William Lambe, M.D., Elect, Kings-road, Bedford-row. John Johnstone, M.D., Birmingham. Sir James Fellowes, Knt., M.D., Brighton. Charles Price, M.D., Brighton. a 2 . 4 Thomas Turner, M.D., Elect, and Trea- Extraordinary to surer, Physician the Queen , Curzon-street Edward Nathaniel Bancroft, M.D., Jamaica. Charles Dalston Nevinson, M.D., Montagu- square. Robert Bree, M.D., Elect, Park-square , Regent’s-park. John Cooke, M.D., Gower-street Sir Arthur Brooke Faulkner, Knt., M.D., Cheltenham. Thomas Hume, M.D., Elect, South-street , Grosvenor-square. Peter Rainier, M.D., Albany. Tristram Whitter, M.D. Clement Hue, M.D., Elect, Guildford- street. John Bright, M.D., Manchester-square. James Cholmeley, M.D., Bridge-street Henry , Blackfriars. Sir Thomas Charles Morgan, Knt., M.D., Dublin. Richard Simmons, M.D. Joseph Ager, M.D., Great Portland-st. -
Medico-Chirurgical Transactions
MEDICO-CHIRURGICAL TRANSACTIONS. PUBLISHED BY THE ROYAL MEDICAL AND CHIIRURGICAL SOCIETY OF LONDON. VOLUME THE SIXTY-THIRD. LONDON: LONGMANS, GREEN, READER, AND DYER, PATERNOSTER ROW. 1880. i........OO.EOHTR:IJRQIOA .'.TRANSACTIONS.- THE ROYAL MEDICAL AND. CIUURGICAL SOCIETY * ~~~or LONDON. SECOND SERIES. VOLUME THE FORTY-PffmT LONDON: LONGMANS, G[REN, READER, AND DYER, PATERNOSTER ROW. 1880. PRINTED BY J. E. ADLARD, BARTHOLOXEW COSE. ROYAL MEDICAL AND CHIRURGICAL SOCIETY OF LONDON. PATRON. THE QUEEN. OFFICERS AND COUNCIL, ELECTED MARCH 1, 1880. 8resihet,t JOHN ERIC ERICHSEN, F.R.S. rCHARLES BLAND RADCLIFFE, M.D. ALFRED BARING GARROD, M.D., F.R.S. VICE-PRESIDENTS. BARNARD WIGHT HOLT. LJOHN BIRKETT. r WILLIAM WEGG, M.D. TREASURERS. l JOHN COOPER FORSTER. { REGINALD EDWARD THOMPSON, M.D. SECRETARIES. TIMOTHY HOLMES. GEORGE JOHNSON, M.D., F.R.S. LIBRARIANS. L l JOHN WHITAKER HULKE, F.R.S. r JOHN LANGDON H. DOWN, M.D. CHARLES HILTON FAGGE, M.D. SAMUEL FENVICK, M.D. JOHN HARLEY, M.D. OTHER MEMBERS J GEORGE ROPER, M.D. OF COUNCIL. ] FREDERICK JAMES GANT. CHRISTOPHER HEATH. FRANCIS MASON. JOHN MORGAN. ALFRED WILLETT. THE ABOVE FORM THE COUNCIL. RESIDENT ASSISTANT-LIBRARIAN. BENJAMIN ROBERT WHEATLEY. A LIST OF THE PRESIDENTS OF THE SOCIETY FROM ITS FORMATION. ELECTED 1805. WILLIAM SAUNDERS, M.D. 1808. MATTHEW BAILLIE, M.D. 1810. SIR HENRY HALFORD, BART., M.D., G.C.H. 1813. SIR GILBERT BLANE, BART., M.D. 1815. HENRY CLINE. 1817. WILLIAM BABINGTON, M.D. 1819. SIR ASTLEY PASTON COOPER, BART., K.C.H., D.C.L. 1821. JOHN COOKE, M.D. 1823. JOHN ABERNETHY. 1825. -
New Inventions. Ordinary ; Sir James Clark, Physician to the Queen and to the Queen’S Household (Licentiate); and Dr
639 Cranial Nerves. This article, though short, is a valuable and the fluid from the cyst should at once begin to run ; if it does not the rubber air-ball should be one and represents an amazing amount of careful work. compressed, when the contents of the if fluid or The above-named nerves were dissected out along their whole cyst, gelatinous, should certainly find exit. The makers are Messrs. Arnold course and after being hardened were sectioned along their and Sons of Smithfield, London, E.C. entire length. 8. By Dr. Walter H. Gaskell, F.R.S.: On the Cheltenham. ALEXANDER DUKE. Origin of Vertebrates deduced from the Study of Ammo- coetes. This article constitutes the ninth part of a long argument on a theory advanced by Dr. Gaskell in regard to AN LIST. the phylogeny of the Vertebrata contained in previous INTERESTING numbers of the Journal and is occupied with a discussion on the probable mode of origin of the vertebrate eye. 9. THE following is a list of the Fellows of the Royal College The last article contains the proceedings of the Anatomical of Physicians of London and a few (old) Licentiates or Society of Great Britain and Ireland. Members who held appointments to Her late Majesty Quem Victoria as physicians :- 1837.-Sir Henry Halford, Bart., physician to the Queen ; Sir James M’Grigor, Bart., Sir Henry Holland, Bart., and Dr. Richard Bright, physicians extra- New Inventions. ordinary ; Sir James Clark, physician to the Queen and to the Queen’s household (Licentiate); and Dr. Neil Arnott, physician extraordinary A SYRINGE FOR THE NOSE AND EAR. -
The Hospital Ward: Legitimizing Homœopathic Medicine Through the Establishment of Hospitals in !"Th-Century London and Madrid
“Globulizing” the Hospital Ward: Legitimizing Homœopathic Medicine through the Establishment of Hospitals in !"th-Century London and Madrid Felix Stefan von Reiswitz Submitted in fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of PhD History of Medicine. UCL, Department of History Submitted November 2012 Declaration Declaration of Originality Declaration I, Felix Stefan von Reiswitz, declare that the work submitted is my own and that appropriate credit has been given where reference has been made to the work of others. F. S. von Reiswitz London, November 2012 2 Acknowledgements Acknowledgements Acknowledgements I would like to thank my supervisors, present and past, Dr. rer. nat. Helga Satzinger, Prof. Anne Hardy and Dr. Michael Neve for their tireless and patient guidance throughout this thesis’s long gestation. This thesis benefitted substantially from a “Marie Curie Fellowship for Early Stage Training” held at the Universidad Pablo de Olavide (Seville) and a completion grant from the Institut für Geschichte der Medizin der Robert Bosch Stiftung as well as from a travel grant from the Wellcome Trust Centre for the History of Medicine at UCL. My thanks also go to all those who generously gave their valuable time and knowledge to comment, advise and guide through the different stages of this project, especially Prof. Martin Dinges, Dr. Andrew Wear, Prof. Manuel Herrero Sánchez and Mr. Félix Antón Cortés who opened many doors and guided me through the maze of both Spanish bureaucracy and nineteenth-century Madrid. I am deeply indebted to all those who facilitated my access to public and private collections. Mrs. Enid Segall; Ms. Sato Liu; Mr. -
July 2019 Medicine’S Lunar Legacies • René T
OslerianaA Medical Humanities Journal-Magazine Volume 1 • July 2019 Medicine’s Lunar Legacies • René T. H. Laennec Walter R. Bett • Leonardo da Vinci OslerianaA Medical Humanities Journal-Magazine Editor-in-Chief Nadeem Toodayan MBBS Associate Editor Zaheer Toodayan MBBS Corrigendum: As indicated in the introductory piece to this journal and in footnotes to their respective articles, both editors are Basic Physician Trainees and therefore registered members of the Royal Australasian College of Physicians (RACP). In the initial printing of this volume (on this inner cover and on page 5) the postnominal of ‘MRACP’ was used to refer to the editors’ membership status. This postnominal was first applied to the Edi- tor-in-Chief in formal correspondence from The Osler Club of London. Subsequent discussions with the RACP have confirmed that the postnominal is not formally endorsed by the College for trainee members and so it has been removed in this digital edition. Osleriana – Volume 1 Published July 2019 © The William Osler Society of Australia & New Zealand (WOSANZ) e-mail: [email protected] All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, digital, print, photocopy, recording or otherwise, without the prior written permission of WOSANZ or the individual author(s). Permission to reproduce any copyrighted images used in this publication must be obtained from the appropriate rightsholder(s). Please contact WOSANZ for further information as required. Privately printed in Brisbane, Queensland, by Clark & Mackay Printers. Journal concept and WOSANZ logo by Nadeem Toodayan. Journal design and layout by Zaheer Toodayan. -
The Descendants of John Pease 1
The Descendants of John Pease 1 John Pease John married someone. He had three children: Edward, Richard and John. Edward Pease, son of John Pease, was born in 1515. Basic notes: He lived at Great Stambridge, Essex. From the records of Great Stambridge. 1494/5 Essex Record office, Biography Pease. The Pease Family, Essex, York, Durham, 10 Henry VII - 35 Victoria. 1872. Joseph Forbe and Charles Pease. John Pease. Defendant in a plea touching lands in the County of Essex 10 Henry VII, 1494/5. Issue:- Edward Pease of Fishlake, Yorkshire. Richard Pease of Mash, Stanbridge Essex. John Pease married Juliana, seized of divers lands etc. Essex. Temp Henry VIII & Elizabeth. He lived at Fishlake, Yorkshire. Edward married someone. He had six children: William, Thomas, Richard, Robert, George and Arthur. William Pease was born in 1530 in Fishlake, Yorkshire and died on 10 Mar 1597 in Fishlake, Yorkshire. William married Margaret in 1561. Margaret was buried on 25 Oct 1565 in Fishlake, Yorkshire. They had two children: Sibilla and William. Sibilla Pease was born on 4 Sep 1562 in Fishlake, Yorkshire. Basic notes: She was baptised on 12 Oct 1562. Sibilla married Edward Eccles. William Pease was buried on 25 Apr 1586. Basic notes: He was baptised on 29 May 1565. William next married Alicia Clyff on 25 Nov 1565 in Fishlake, Yorkshire. Alicia was buried on 19 May 1601. They had one daughter: Maria. Maria Pease Thomas Pease Richard Pease Richard married Elizabeth Pearson. Robert Pease George Pease George married Susanna ?. They had six children: Robert, Nicholas, Elizabeth, Alicia, Francis and Thomas. -
42Oirn £T Bterra. ' This Is Death I Send Directly for Halford'; and the King Expired in the Act of Making a Friendly Inclination of the SOME ROYAL DEATH-BEDS
JULY I, NOVA ET VETERA. [ THE BRITISH I9II.] LIMEDICAL JOURNAL 29 Saturday, June 26th, 1830, and more suddenly than was expected. Feeling a sudden thrill of pain he exclaimed, 42oirn £t Bterra. ' This is death I send directly for Halford'; and the King expired in the act of making a friendly inclination of the SOME ROYAL DEATH-BEDS. head to Sir Henry on his entering the apartment." In the History of t7te Foutr Georges and WVilliam IV., by (Continuiiea fromt vol. i, 1911, page 1436.) Justin McCartlhy and Justin Huntly McCarthy,3 it is saidl GEORGE IV. that the royal physicians " kept issuing bulletins, but they GEORGE IV was born in 1762. In 1811 lhe becam3 Prince were so vague in their terms that it is impossible to believe Regent owing to the insanity of his father, George III, they were not made puLrposely deceptive." George IV. lhad and in 1820, on the deatlh of that sovereign, he ascended the same nervous objectioni to any admiiission by himself or the throne. A life of dissipation wrecked a naturally fine on his behalf of there being any ground for alarm as to thIe constitution, and from 1810 to the time of Iiis deatlh state of his lhealth that has been manifested by so maniy of Sir Henry Halford was in regular, almost daily, attendance h-is family. The public was still kept in doubt as to the upon himi. His dependence on his physiciani is illustrated truth till on May 24th a message was sent in the Kinlg's by the following lines, qutoted in Munk's Life of Sir Henry name to both Houses of Parliament to the effect that the King Halford. -
SIR HENRY HALFORD, BART., and the Was Pending, the Question of Expense Has to Be Con- STETHOSCOPE
68 from causes beyond the control of railway officials and Dr. Hadden to contest the case on broad public grounds, for passengers, will be very considerably diminished. I hope had the contention of the plaintift in this matter remained ere long to be able to forward you a " notebook "dealing with unchallenged a blow would have been struck at public safety railway " first-aid" " work, which, I think, will be of some as well as at the independence of medical men. practical use to railway servants and others interested in the If a physician is to be proceeded against for the discharge subject. With apologies for trespassing on your time and of’a duty cast upon him by an Act of Parliament passed space,—I am, Sirs, yours obediently, for the protection of the public at large, it would seriously N. HAY FORBES, F.R.C.S. Edin. (Exam.)., interfere with the profession in carrying out the law and in Examiner, St. John Ambulance Association ; formerly protecting the public as they are bound to do. We feel that Surgeon, H.M. Army Medical Staff. both the moral and substantial support of his profession Tunbridge Wells, Dec. 9th, 1895. should be accorded to Dr. Hadden in the trying position in which he has been placed. The Act referred to is already with and if a new terror in ANÆMIA OR ANEMIA? unpopular enough many persons, the shape of actions for damages against medical men for To the Editors of THE LANCET. carrying out the duty cast on them, and for which they are made legally liable, be introduced it is to be feared that SIRS,—Spelling is, at the present time, a prominent many will be deterred from the law to its full extent. -
Charles Goodall, M.D., F.R.C.P
[From Schurigio: Lithopogia Historico-Medica, Dresden, 1744] ANNALS OF MEDICAL HISTORY Third Series , Volume II January , 1940 Numbe r 1 CHARLES GOODALL, M.D., F.R.C.P. A DEFENDER OF THE ROYAL COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS OF LONDON By SIR HUMPHRY ROLLESTON, BT., G.C.V.O., K.C.B. HASLEMERE, ENGLAND HARLES GOODALL (1642- title page of this printed dissertation, 1712) was ail ardent cham- which is in the British Museum, de- pion of the rights of the scribed him as “Carolus Goddal, anglus, Royal College of Physicians Acad. Cant. L. et Coll. Email., ibidem of London and the vigorous opponentnuper alumnus. ” He was incorporated ofC unlicensed “practisers” during most m.d . at Cambridge on November 26 in of his professional life, beginning, by the same year. bringing out a book on the subject, even Settling in London he then attended before he was connected with the Col- the anatomical lectures of Walter Need- lege and lasting until his death when ham (1631-1691?) whom he was des- he was president. He was the son of tined to succeed on April 28, 1691, as Thomas Goodall, of Earl Stonham. Suf- physician to the Charterhouse where he folk. Admitted a pensioner (an ordinary resided, as the regulations of the foun- undergraduate) at Emmanuel College, dation directed (which Needham had Cambridge, on January 20, 1658-9 he not obeyed), with occasional visits to was licensed to practise surgery (C.L.)* his house in Kensington. This charity in 1665. was founded by Thomas Sutton (1532- On June 21, 1670 he “entered on the 1611), a soldier and the richest com- physic line’’ at Leyden and on July 6 of moner of his day, for eighty poverty- that year obtained the doctorate of med- stricken “gentlemen,” soldiers, mer- icine there with his “Disputatio de chants ruined by piracy or shipwreck, haemorrhageis scorbuticis,” which was and servants of the sovereign, and sec- dedicated to his father, Rev. -
Medical News. Stevens, W
945 delivered on Dec. at 4 P.M., is " On Museums in Refer- Prosser, A. B., L.R.C.P.Lond., Brearley-street, Birmingham 6th, T. A. Australia. ence to Medical Education and the Advancement of Know- Quirk, F., L.R.C.P.Lond., Melbourne, " Reed, J. S., L.R.C.P.Lond., Edgware-road, Hytle-park. ledge." Reynolds, E. J., L.R.C.P.Lond., Milton, Sittingbourne. On the motion by Mr. Macnamara, it was agreed that Rilot, C. F., L.R.C.P.Lond., Grange-park, Ealing. it be referred to a committee to consider and to the Ring, J., L.R.C.P.Lond., Cambridge-gardens. report Roberts, R. L., L.R.C.P.Lond., Rochester-square. Council whether it be desirable, and, if so, practicable, that Robertson, J., L.R.C.P.Lond., St. Anne’s, Thurlow-park-road. candidates for the membership of the College be examined Robinson, G. A., M.B. Durh., Inverness-terrace. in on the dead Rolston, T. R., L.RC.P.Lond., Clarendon Villa, Stoke. operative surgery body. Scott, T. W., L.R.C.P.Lond., Heathfield, Bromley, Kent. Shaw, J. C., L.R.O.P.Lond., Walton House, Wakefield. Sheldon, R. G., L.S.A., Boundary-street, Liverpool. Smith, 1L A., L.R.C.P.Lond., Winchcombe, Turnham-green. Spencer, T. E., L.R.C.P.Lond., Wimpole-street. Stephens, R. J., L.S.A., King’s College Hospital. Medical News. Stevens, W. E., L.R.C.P.Lond., Old Market-street, Bristol. Thompson, G. H., L.R.C.P.Lond., Holly-place, Hampstead-heath. -
Queen Victoria's Medical Household
Medical History, 1982,26:307-320. QUEEN VICTORIA'S MEDICAL HOUSEHOLD by A. M. COOKE* On the 24th of May, 1819, at Kensington Palace it was announced that: Her Royal Highness the Duchess of Kent was safely delivered of a Princess this morning at a quarter past five o'clock. Her Royal Highness and the Princess are doing well. D. D. Davis J. Wilson DRS. DAVIS AND WILSON were the first of a long line of medical men who attended, or were appointed to attend, Queen Victoria throughout her lifetime of nearly eighty-two years. Also assisting at the birth was a midwife, Friaulein Siebold, who, although she also held a medical qualification, did not sign the bulletin. It is an interesting coincidence that the Frilulein also attended at the birth of Prince Albert. We do not know what other medical attendants Victoria had as a child or before she came to the throne, but we know the medical staff of her father and mother. When ill, doubtless she would have been attended by one of them. Date ofdeath David Daniel Davis Attended Queen 1841 James Wilson 841 Friulein Siebold ) Victoria's birth 9 William George Maton 1835 John Merriman (Apothecary) 1839 Sir Joseph de Courcy Laffan, Bt. 1848 Sir Robert Alexander Chermside 1860 Richard Blagden 1861 James Clark 1870 As a girl Victoria was kept strictly under her mother's thumb, was told that she was inexperienced and immature, and that she would require much help when she came to the throne. This is thought to have been part of a plan by her mother and her mother's Comptroller, Sir John Conroy, to make her mother Regent. -
Innes Smith Collection
Innes Smith Collection University of Sheffield Library. Special Collections and Archives Ref: Special Collection Title: Innes Smith Collection Scope: Books on the history of medicine, many of medical biography, dating from the 16th to the early 20th centuries Dates: 1548-1932 Extent: 330 vols. Name of creator: Robert William Innes Smith Administrative / biographical history: Robert William Innes Smith (1872-1933) was a graduate in medicine of Edinburgh University and a general practitioner for thirty three years in the Brightside district of Sheffield. His strong interest in medical history and art brought him some acclaim, and his study of English-speaking students of medicine at the University of Leyden, published in 1932, is regarded as a model of its kind. Locally in Sheffield Innes Smith was highly respected as both medical man and scholar: his pioneer work in the organisation of ambulance services and first-aid stations in the larger steel works made him many friends. On Innes Smith’s death part of his large collection of books and portraits was acquired for the University. The original library is listed in a family inventory: Catalogue of the library of R.W. Innes-Smith. There were at that time some 600 volumes, but some items were sold at auction or to booksellers. The residue of the book collection in this University Library numbers 305, ranging in date from the early 16th century to the early 20th, all bearing the somewhat macabre Innes Smith bookplate. There is a strong bias towards medical biography. For details of the Portraits see under Innes Smith Medical Portrait Collection.