Affichage de 2867 résultats

Notice d'autorité

Johnson, Henry James Wolfenden

  • Personne
  • ?-1889

Son of physician to William IV.

Assistant surgeon at St George's Hospital 1843-1848.

Retired to Boulogne. Returned to medicine with a private practice, but retired again due to ill health. Died in 1889.

Wilson, Richard

  • Personne
  • 1846-?

Educated at St Peter's Collegiate School.

Student at St George's Hospital Medical School 1862. MRCS 1867, LSA 1870. House surgeon at St George's Hospital 1868, obstetric assistant 1871.

Consulting surgeon at Grantham Hospital. Medical officer of Grantham district.

Canton, Frederick

  • Personne
  • ?

Student at St George's Hospital Medical School 1867. MRCS 1871, LRCP 1872, LSA 1872, LDS 1875.

President of the Odontological Association.

Wintle, Frederic J.W.

  • Personne
  • c.1830-?

Student at St George's Hospital Medical School 1854.

Smith, H.

  • Personne
  • ?

Hunt, Edgar Atlee

  • Personne
  • 1854-?

Educated at Uppingham. MRCS 1878, LRCP, LM Edin, LSA 1880.

Student at St George's Hospital Medical School 1873. House surgeon at St George's Hospital 1879, obstetric assistant 1881.

Surgeon at Colchester and Essex Hospital. Consulting surgeon at Eastern Asylum and South Colchester Hospital and East Coast Institute for Idiots. Medical visitor under Lunacy & Mental Deficiency Acts for Essex County and Colchester.

Retired in 1918.

Cowell, Thomas William

  • Personne
  • 1822-1869

Born in Todmorden, son of a vicar. Educated at Wyke House, Isleworth.

Student at St George's Hospital Medical School 1839. MRCS, LSA 1842. Assistant apothecary at St George's Hospital in 1843-1848. Joined Hammerton and Fuller, apothecaries at 112 Piccadilly in 1849.

Died 20 Aug 1869, aged 47; his widow died in 1918.

Cooke, William Henry

  • Personne
  • 1868-1939

Appears in the Medical Register as living in Bath in 1911. Member of the Royal College of Surgeons 1892, Royal College of Physicians 1892, Society of Apothecaries 1892

Kenyon, George A.

  • Personne
  • ?-1910

Educated at Rossall. His brother J.E. Kenyon was also a student at St George's.

Studied medicine at St George's Hospital. MB London 1868, LRCP 1866, MRCS 1866. Obstetric assistant at St George's Hospital 1866-69.

Houe surgeon at Soho Square Hospital for Women. Resident Medical Officer at Manchester New Workhouse. Medical Officer of Health at the City of Chester. Fellow of the Obstetric Society and the Society of Medical Officers of Health.

Died at Chester 6 Mar 1910, aged 66.

Ellison, Joseph Bramhall

  • Personne
  • 1898-1953

Educated at Rugby School. Served in the First World War in the Royal Engineers, suffering severe trauma after being buried alive for several hours. Studied at Clare College, Cambridge after the war.

Studied medicine at St George's Hospital; qualified 1924; MB 1925; MD and DPH 1930. Awarded Certificate of Honour and the Brackenbury Prize in Medicine. House surgeon at St George's Hospital.

House surgeon at Addenbrooke's Hospital. House physician at the Queen's Hospital for Children. Served at the Fever Hospital Service of the Metropolitan Asylum Board. Worked for 25 years at the Grove Fever Hospital in Tooting, London (later merging with St George's Hospital), where he discovered that vitamin A reduced measles mortality.

Died 6 Nov 1953, aged 55.

Evans, Griffith Ivor

  • Personne
  • 1889-?

Educated at Ruthin, Wales and Magdalen College, Oxford. BA 1914, MB, BCL 1916. MRCS, LRCP 1916.

Student at St George's Hospital Medical School 1914. House surgeon at St George's Hospital.

Captain at RAMC, special reserve. Served in France, 1917-1919. Surgeon at Caernarvonshire and Anglesey Infirmary.

Retired in 1955.

Roderick, Henry Buckley

  • Personne
  • 1874-1958

Born on 19th August 1874, the son of William Roderick of Llanelly. He was educated at Bath College, Emmanuel College, Cambridge, and St George's Hospital.

At St George's Hospital he held the posts of House Physician, House Surgeon and Surgical Registrar. In 1900 he returned to Cambridge to act as demonstrator in surgery for Joseph Griffiths, surgeon to Addenbrooke's Hospital. In 1917 Roderick set up in practice and was appointed police surgeon.

In 1901 Roderick had become medical officer to the University Rife Volunteers (later the Cambridge University Officers Training Corps) and he became the commander of the medical contingent. In 1914 he was commissioned Major RAMC attached to the 1st Eastern General Hospital. In 1917 he was promoted Lieutenant-Colonel and went to France in command of the 55th General Hospital, for which he was awarded the OBE and Territorial Decoration.

On returning to Cambridge in 1919 he was appointed honorary surgeon to Addenbrooke's Hospital and from 1928 to 1939 he was supervisor of examinations and examiner in surgery for the University. He retired in 1939. Roderick was a general surgeon, but particularly interested in orthopaedics, for which he established clinics at the hospitals in Huntingdon and Wisbech.

He married Hilda Mary Clay and they had four sons and three daughters. He died on 29th August 1958 in Addenbrooke's hospital aged 84.

Torrens, James Aubrey

  • Personne
  • 1881-1954

Son of Henry C. Torrens, business manager to Sir Beerbohm Tree, and grandson of Henry McCullagh Torrens, secretary and biographer of Lord Melbourne and Member of Parliament for Fulham. He was educated at St Paul's School and St George's Hospital where he gained the general proficiency prize in 1902 and the Brodie surgical prize in 1904.

At St George's Hospital he was house physician, house surgeon, medical registrar and curator of the museum. Following posts as pathologist to the Margaret Street Hospital, bacteriologist to the Hampstead General Hospital, and physician to the Paddington Green Children's Hospital, he was appointed to St George's Hospital as assistant physician in 1913.

Torrens joined the Royal Army Medical Corps in August 1914 and served in France and Mesopotamia. On his return in 1919 he resumed his appointment at St George's, where he became full physician in 1923. He was also consultant to both Chelsea Hospital for Women and the Harrow Hospital. During the Second World War he worked at the West Middlesex Hospital and remained there until his retirement in 1949. He was also an examiner for the Conjoint Board, the Society of Apothecaries, Oxford University and the College.

He was married twice; first in 1910 to Hilda Martin, and after her death in 1944, to Edith Chapman who survived him. He had one daughter of the first marriage. He died on 23rd August 1954.

Menzies, Henry

  • Personne
  • 1894-?

Son of J.J. Menzies, MD of Earl's Court. Educated at St Paul's, London University, St George's and Jesus College, Cambridge. BA 1889, MB BC 1894. MRCS, LRCP 1893.

House surgeon and house physician at St George's Hospital 1895, obstetric assistant 1896, anaesthetist 1897-1902, senior anaesthetist. Clinical assistant at the Hospital for Sick Children, Great Ormond Street. Fellow of the Royal Society of Medicine.

Brodie, Benjamin Collins

  • Personne
  • 1783-1862

Born in Wiltshire 9 Jun 1783, son of Rev Peter Bellinger Brodie and Sarah Collins. His uncle was Thomas Denman, physician and obstetrician, alumnus of St George's and father-in-law of Matthew Baillie.

Student at Charterhouse School in London and St Bartholomew's under John Abernethy in 1801, Windmill Street School of Anatomy in 1802 under John Hunter and at St George's under Everard Home in 1803. Appointed house surgeon at St George's in 1805, assistant surgeon in 1808, surgeon in 1822. Lectured on surgery at the Windmill Street School of Anatomy and at St George's.

Private practice since 1813. Surgeon to the royal family, initially George IV; sergeant-surgeon to William IV and Queen Victoria. Baronetcy 1834. Member of the Royal College of Surgeons 1805; fellow of the Royal Society 1810, aged 26, and president 1858; foreign member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Science 1834; corresponding member of the French Institute 1844; foreign honorary member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences; DCL of Oxford 1855; first president of the General Medical Council.

Published widely on surgery, including 1818 'Pathological and Surgical Observations on the Diseases of the Joints', which led to reduction in the number of amputation and new treatments for joint diseases. He also published on diseases of the urinary organs and nervous affections. In 1854 he published, initially anonymously, 'Psychological Inquiries'.

Married Anne Sellon in 1816; they had four children, including chemist Benjamin Collins Brodie, 2nd Baronet. He resigned from St George's in 1840 and retired to Surrey. Died of a shoulder tumour in Broome Park, Surrey 21 Oct 1862, aged 79.

Allbutt, Thomas Clifford

  • Personne
  • 1836-1925

Born in Dewsbury 20 Jul 1836, son of Rev Thomas Allbutt and Marianne Wooler. Educated at St Peter's School, York and Caius College, Cambridge; graduated BA 1859 in natural sciences.

Studied medicine at St George's and Paris; MB 1860.

Consulting physician in Leeds. Worked at Leeds General Infirmary, Dispensary and Fever Hospital. Lecturer on physic and anatomy at Yorkshire College.

Invented a short-stemmed, portable clinical thermometer in 1866, which was able to record temperature in 5 minutes, instead of the previous 20 minutes. He was one of the first to use the ophthalmoscope, and extended its use beyond the diagnosis of ocular diseases. Published on syphilitic disease of the cerebral ateries and on the effects of strain on the heart.

Retired from medical practice in 1889 to become commissioner in lunacy. Made regius chair of physic at Cambridge in 1892. Edited 'System of Medicine', published in 8 volumes between 1896-1899; its second edition, together with Humphry Davy Rolleston, appeared in 11 volumes in 1905-1911. Physician at Addenbrooke's Hospital 1900. Member of the General Medical Council 1908-1918. Prominent at the Royal College of Physicians.

Married Susan England in 1869; they had no children. Died at Cambridge 22 Feb 1925.

Beaven, Grace Mary

  • Personne
  • 1897-1981

One of the first female students at St George's in 1917.

Born in Warminster, Wiltshire. Graduated LMSSA Lond 1919.

Married Thomas Sidney Nelson in 1921 in East Grinstead, Sussex; he was also a medical doctor. Lived in Chelsea, London. Died in 1981, aged 94.

Daintree, Dorothy Trevor

  • Personne
  • 1888-1965

One of the first female students at St George's in 1915. Withdrew from her studies, but later qualified from the Royal Free Hospital. Worked in India as a missionary.

Knowles, Doris G.

  • Personne
  • ?

One of the first female students at St George's in 1918.

Angues, Janet M.

  • Personne
  • ?

One of the first female students at St George's in 1918.

Megrah, Zaïda Mary

  • Personne
  • 1925-2013

One of the first female students at St George's since the First World War, in 1945. Educated at St Paul's School, London and Somerville College, Oxford.

Studied at Toronto University and St George's Medical School. BM, BCh 1948 (University of Oxford); MRCP Lond 1952. Initially interested in paediatrics and respiratory medicine, she moved to psychiatry and psychotherapy.

Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians and the Royal College of Psychiatrists. First female consultant in psychiatry and psychotherapy at Southampton University and Royal South Hants Hospital. Worked at the Red Hatch Remand Centre, Winchester with sexual abuse survivors.

Married Ruthven Hall (d.1983) and Sir Peter Ramsbotham. She had four sons. Died in 2013 aged 87.

Gainsborough, Hugh

  • Personne
  • 1893-1980

MRCS LRCP (1917), MA Cantab (1919), MB BChir (1921), MRCP (1922), FRCP (1929).

He was resident assistant at St George's Hospital and went on to become assistant physician there in 1927. During the First World War he was a senior physician and remained at St George's Hospital. While at St George's he was known for his biochemical research, which he conducted with St George's biochemist John Addyman Gardner, his compassion for his patients, and his overly scientific lecturing style. His research included renal disease, obesity, chronic bowel disorders, and diabetes mellitus. He established diabetic clinics at St George's Hospital and at the London Jewish Hospital and was known as one of the first physicians to treat with insulin. He also established a gastroenterological unit at Atkinson Morley's Hospital, Wimbledon in 1942. He was keenly interested in the social and psychological factors that influence health. He strongly supported St George's Hospital's move from Hyde Park Corner to Tooting and suggested several design ideas for the new hospital that were implemented. His obituary noted that all of this was achieved despite the fact that Gainsborough was Jewish at a time when few Jewish people held positions in West End hospitals.

In 1926 he married Maia Pilikowski, who died in 1939.

Résultats 76 à 100 sur 2867