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THE LATE SIR BENJAMIN COLLINS BRODIE, BART., SERJEANT-SURGEON TO THE QUEEN, ETC., 1862. CREATOR: UNKNOWN.
The late Sir Benjamin Collins Brodie, Bart., Serjeant-Surgeon to the Queen, etc., 1862. 'On passing as a surgeon in 1805, Brodie became an assistant to Sir Everard Home, and gave lectures on anatomy at St. George's Hospital...Brodie was appointed Professor of Anatomy and Surgery in the Royal College of Surgeons in 1819...He was in surgical attendance on George IV. in his last illness, and he was, in 1832, appointed Serjeant-Surgeon to King William IV...He was subsequently appointed Surgeon to the Prince Consort, and Serjeant-Surgeon to her present Majesty [Queen Victoria]...The practice of Sir Benjamin Brodie had during all these years become so enormous that his whole existence may be said to have been employed in the removal or alleviation of human suffering. He was, too, a most highminded and generous practitioner, and was ever as ready to serve the poor who could not pay him as the rich who did. Sir Benjamin's written contributions to medical science wero extremely numerous. His "Hunterian Oration" of 1837 was greatly admired. One of his last essays was on tobacco-smoking, touching which he gave a moderate opinion, though insisting that with young persons it led to neuralgia and amaurosis [vision loss or weakness]'. From "Illustrated London News", 1862. The late Sir Benjamin Collins Brodie, Bart., Serjeant-Surgeon to the Queen, etc., 1862. Creator: Unknown. (KEYSTONE/HERITAGE IMAGES/THE PRINT COLLECTOR)
(RM) 601158938
THE NEW HARTLEY PIT CALAMITY: ANTHONY DAVISON, ESQ., M.R.C.S.E., 1862. CREATOR: UNKNOWN.
The New Hartley Pit Calamity: Anthony Davison, Esq., M.R.C.S.E., 1862. The Hartley Colliery disaster of 16 January 1862 was a coal mining accident in Northumberland which resulted in the deaths of 204 men and children. 'During the long and agonising period that the search for the buried pitmen was carried on, several medical men were in constant attendance at the pit's mouth. While hope existed of the men being recovered alive, a large store of suitable nourishment was provided in the schoolroom, for the use of the sufferers when brought to bank. But, latterly, along with this provision for the living there was piled in ghastly contrast piles of sheets that should form the winding covers of the dead. Foremost among the medical men was Mr. Davison, the colliery surgeon...Mr. Davison is a member of the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh. He is surgeon to several coalmines...In the Hartley catastrophe Mr. Davison by day and night stood patiently on the platform, exposed to all the bitterness of the weather, ready to attend to the badly wounded, or, by his soothing and cheering conversation, to revive the hopes of sinking hearts. Great credit is due to Mr. Davison for the general arrangements he made'. From "Illustrated London News", 1862. The New Hartley Pit Calamity: Anthony Davison, Esq., M.R.C.S.E., 1862. Creator: Unknown. (KEYSTONE/HERITAGE IMAGES/THE PRINT COLLECTOR)
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