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Pathology Museum

Prescott Hewett was appointed the first curator of the museum in the 1840s, and he also introduced the practice of keeping post mortem books. The curator of the museum was also responsible for conducting post mortem examinations together with the assistant curator, and the post mortem casebooks frequently refer to pathological specimens preserved in the museum. Specimens were regularly obtained from post mortem examinations or during surgery at the hospital, and the museum has continued to be an integral part of teaching at St George's.

The first printed museum catalogue was published in 1866, edited by John William Ogle and Timothy Holmes. This was apparently based on a scheme by Henry Gray, which however has not survived.

The museum was rearranged in 1881, and a new numbering system was adopted. In 1882, a supplementary catalogue, edited by Isambard Owen, was published.

Additionally, two manuscript catalogues exist, the first one covering the years 1884-1899, and the second one 1900-c.1917.

The so-called ‘Green books’ include ‘historical specimens’, numbered 1-101 and introduce a new classification based on diseases.

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Artefacts

Artefacts relating to nursing (or hospitals more generally), including clothing, badges/medals, medical equipment, and souvenirs.

For photographs of how some of these items were previously displayed in Grosvenor Wing, St George's Hospital, see the green ring binder (NU/8/6).

St George's Nurses' League

Material relating to the St George's Nurses' League or donated by its members, including minutes, publications, artworks, audio recordings, and artefacts

Papers of Harold Lambert

The papers include material relating to epidemiology and smallpox in particular, including correspondence, a notebook, smallpox testing kit and publications relating to smallpox in the 1960s.

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Papers relating to John Hunter

The collection relates to Hunter’s dispute with St George’s Hospital and the division of pupils’ fees among the surgeons, which Hunter perceived as unfair, arguing he brought in more pupils than the other surgeons. The dispute culminated in a meeting in Oct 1793 at the hospital, during which Hunter suffered a heart attack and died.

In addition to the papers relating to the dispute, there are some additional notes, some collected by Charles Hawkins and some by George Edwards. These include copies of two letters from John Hunter’s pupil James Williams to his sister, describing working with Hunter, dissections and the work of the so-called ‘Resurrection Men’, and describing Hunter’s death. These were acquired apparently from a descendant of Williams by Edwards; the location of the original letters is unknown.

Registers and training records

Registers and training records relating to nurses who trained or worked at St George's and other hospitals in Wandsworth (most of which were subsequently absorbed into St George's), Surrey (connected to St George's indirectly via the affiliation with Kingston) and South West London

Administrative records

Records relating to the administration of nursing training, hospital management (at both St George's and Kingston), or related activities

Papers of Hamid Ghodse

Includes

  • Papers relating to the International Centre for Drug Policy
  • Personal certificates, appraisals, CVs
  • Obituaries
  • Papers relating to courses and conferences including reports, reviews, manuals
  • Publications
  • Correspondence
  • Photographs
  • Reports by Alexander Hosie on opium production in China

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