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Patrick Heron Watson

Sir Patrick Heron Watson (5 January 1832 – 21 December 1907) was an eminent 19th-century Scottish surgeon and pioneer of anaesthetic development. He was associated with a number of surgical innovations including excision of the knee joint, excision of the thyroid and excision of the larynx for malignant disease. He was President of the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh on two occasions, an unusual honour, and was the first President of the Edinburgh Dental Hospital. He was a great advocate of women training in medicine and surgery and did much to advance that cause.

Patrick Heron Watson
Born(1832-01-05)5 January 1832
Died21 December 1907(1907-12-21) (aged 75)
NationalityScottish
EducationUniversity of Edinburgh
Medical career
ProfessionDoctor
FieldSurgery
InstitutionsUniversity of Edinburgh
The Watson's impressive townhouse at 19 Royal Terrace, Edinburgh
Patrick Heron Watson (second from right) with other Residents at the Old Royal Infirmary, Edinburgh, including Joseph Lister and John Beddoe
Patrick Heron Watson's home at 16 Charlotte Square, Edinburgh (centre)
Watson in middle age
The grave of Patrick Heron Watson, Dean Cemetery, Edinburgh

Early life edit

He was born in Edinburgh on 5 January 1832, the third of four sons of Rev Dr Charles Watson of Burntisland and Isabella Boog. His brothers were Rev Robert Boog Watson, Rev Charles Watson, and David Watson (a businessman). The family moved permanently to Edinburgh around 1840, living on Calton Hill: first at 19 Royal Terrace then in 1850 moving to 13 Carlton Terrace.[1]

He was educated at Edinburgh Academy and then studied medicine at Edinburgh University.

During this time both Joseph Lister and John Beddoe were fellow students and friends. He graduated MD in 1853 with the thesis "On traumatic gangrene"[2] and was elected Licentiate of the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh. He served as house surgeon in the Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh under Professor James Spence. In July 1855 (whilst in the Crimea) he was elected FRCSEd.

Crimea edit

In December 1854 he travelled south to Chatham Dockyard to enlist as an assistant surgeon in the Royal Artillery, specifically hoping to gain experience in military surgery, a standard requirement for Professorship. The Crimean War had just begun and intended to serve his country there. He left Chatham on 15 January 1855 with eight other surgeons, travelling to Crimea via Marseilles and Valletta, their ship arriving at Constantinople on 26 January. His hospital was one of the three main hospitals serving the British troops: Scutari, just two miles from Constantinople and famed for its connection to Florence Nightingale. This he found nightmarish, and was pleased to be reposted to the hill hospital at Koolalee. This, however, had a far higher mortality rate, running at around 25%. On 11 April he reported his first bout of typhus, and moved to a hotel in Therapia to convalesce, returning to Koolalee in early May 1855.[3] He determined to move to a field hospital, closer to the war itself in Crimea, and in June travelled to Balaklava, and from there to a field hospital called Castle Hospital where he began work on 25 June. Here seventy patients were treated, under an Irish doctor named Jephson. He enjoyed six weeks here before being posted to a forward field hospital attached to the Royal artillery near Karane. In August 1855 he had a severe attack of dysentery and on 13 August he was placed on a ship, Imperador, to carry him back to the hospital at Scutari.

As a strange coincidence, here he was able to share a room with his brother Robert who had also caught dysentery whilst serving as chaplain with the Highland Brigade. Florence Nightingale wrote him a letter of apology as she was unable to her own illness at the time. He spent 4 weeks being treated but made little progress. He was placed on the ship the Earl of Shaftesbury to be returned home. He stayed a month in Valletta in Malta en route. Then took the steamship Transit back to Portsmouth in England. On 19 October he reached London.

He thought he would be returned to the Crimea once well, but never returned.

Later life edit

Watson completed his military service at Woolwich and Aldershot, continuing in his role of Surgeon to the Royal Artillery.

He recovered and returned to Edinburgh to teach surgery at the university, that department then being based at High School Yards. Although he had hoped to become Professor of Military Surgery that role was abandoned in 1856.[4] He also lectured at the Edinburgh Extramural School of Medicine at Surgeons' Hall. In the Royal Infirmary he acted as assistant to the Professor of Surgery James Miller, whose daughter Elizabeth he married. On Miller's death Heron Watson took on his father-in-law's large and lucrative practice.

In 1857 Watson was elected a member of the Harveian Society of Edinburgh and served as president in 1885.[5]

In 1860, over and above his academic role, he took on the role of assistant surgeon at the Edinburgh Royal Infirmary. In 1860 he was also elected to the Aesculapian Club.[6] In 1863 he was promoted to full surgeon, a role he then held for 15 years. During this time, he was one of Arthur Conan Doyle's teachers along with Joseph Bell, who ultimately became the inspirations for Dr. John Watson and Sherlock Holmes, respectively.[7]

From 1865 to 1904 he was also a surgeon at Chalmers Hospital in Edinburgh (just west of the Royal Infirmary).

In the admission period of autumn 1870 he was one of the first to permit women to attend his extra mural classes in surgery. He stood alone in this role for sixteen years until his pupil, Sophia Jex-Blake, opened a college specifically for women.

In 1877 he stood for the chair of Clinical Surgery in Edinburgh University, but was beaten (alleged due to his opposition to specialisation) by Thomas Annandale. Nevertheless, he holds an important part in the history of surgery, making advances both in thyroid excision, excision of the knee joint, amputation and in abdominal operations. However, as with many contemporaries he was not a follower of his former student companion, Joseph Lister's use of antiseptic, and as a result, many simple procedures ended in failure.

In 1879 he helped to found the Edinburgh Dental Hospital, also being one of its directors. Here, too, he encouraged female students to join, with Lillian Lindsay becoming the first woman to graduate in Dentistry in the UK (1895).[8] He also had long-running disputes with other Edinburgh medical figures, such as Henry Littlejohn.

He was elected President of the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh in 1878 and again in 1905. On the latter occasion this was to enable him to be President during the College's quatercentenary celebrations, a sign of the esteem in which he was held by the Fellows.

He was Honorary Surgeon in Scotland, both to Queen Victoria and King Edward VII. He was knighted by the latter in 1903.

After a six-month illness, he died at his home at 16 Charlotte Square, on 21 December 1907 and was buried in Dean Cemetery on the west side of Edinburgh.[9]

His collection of pathological specimens was passed to the Royal College of Surgeons and now forms part of their collection.

Family edit

In 1861 he married Elizabeth Gordon Miller, eldest daughter of his mentor, Prof James Miller (1812–1864). She died in Gotha, Germany, on 27 February 1900.[10]

They had two sons: Charles Heron Watson FRCS (1871–1959) and James Miller Watson (1879–1958). They also had two daughters, one of whom, Penelope Gordon Watson, married the surgeon James Haig Ferguson FRSE.[11]

His nephew was Charles Boog Watson FRSE.

Awards and recognition edit

  • Crimean Medal, Turkish Medal, Sardinian Medal, Volunteer Officers' Decoration (VD)
  • Caballero of the Order of King Carlos III of Spain (1878)
  • Member of the General Medical Council (1882)
  • Honorary Doctor of Letters (LLD) from Edinburgh University (1884)
  • Honorary Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons (Ireland) (1887)
  • Member of the University Commission (1889)
  • Knighted by King Edward VII (1903)

In 1894 he was painted by Sir George Reid. This painting is held by the Royal College of Surgeons on Nicolson Street.[12]

Papers of note edit

see[13][14]

  • Modern Pathology and Treatment of Venereal Disease (1861)
  • Excision of the Knee Joint (1867)
  • The use of Nitrous Oxide as an Anaesthetic (1868)
  • Excision of the Thyroid Gland (1873)
  • Micro-organisms of the Mouth and the Relationship to Disease (1883)
  • The inhalation of Gas and Ether (1898)

References edit

  1. ^ Edinburgh Post Office Directories 1840 to 1850
  2. ^ Watson, Patrick Heron (1853). "On traumatic gangrene". {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  3. ^ Watson, WB (1966). "An Edinburgh surgeon of the Crimean war--Patrick Heron Watson (1832–1907)". Med Hist. 10 (2): 166–76. doi:10.1017/s0025727300010954. PMC 1033587. PMID 5325874.
  4. ^ Watson, WB (1966). "An Edinburgh surgeon of the Crimean war--Patrick Heron Watson (1832–1907)". Med Hist. 10 (2): 166–76. doi:10.1017/s0025727300010954. PMC 1033587. PMID 5325874.
  5. ^ Watson Wemyss, Herbert Lindesay (1933). A Record of the Edinburgh Harveian Society. T&A Constable, Edinburgh.
  6. ^ Minute Books of the Aesculapian Club. Library of the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh.
  7. ^ "On this day in 1859: The birth of Sherlock Holmes creator Arthur Conan Doyle". The Telegraph. Retrieved 25 May 2017.
  8. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 1 February 2013. Retrieved 7 January 2016.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  9. ^ British Medical Journal: Obituaries 4 January 1908
  10. ^ "Deaths". The Times. No. 36081. London. 5 March 1900. p. 1.
  11. ^ Biographical Index of Former Fellows of the Royal Society of Edinburgh 1783–2002 (PDF). The Royal Society of Edinburgh. July 2006. ISBN 0-902-198-84-X.
  12. ^ "Sir Patrick Heron Watson (1832–1907), FRCSEd (1855), PRCSEd (1877–1879 & 1905) | Art UK". Art UK. Retrieved 10 April 2018.
  13. ^ British Medical Journal: Obituaries 4 January 1908
  14. ^ "Watson, Patrick Heron (DNB12) – Wikisource, the free online library". en.wikisource.org. Retrieved 10 April 2018.

External links edit

  • Watson, WB (1966). "An Edinburgh surgeon of the Crimean war--Patrick Heron Watson (1832–1907)". Med Hist. 10 (2): 166–76. doi:10.1017/s0025727300010954. PMC 1033587. PMID 5325874.
  • Power, D'Arcy; Bryan, Bettina (2007) [2004]. "Watson, Patrick Heron". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/36776. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • "Sir Patrick Heron Watson (1832–1907), FRCSEd (1855), PRCSEd (1877–1879 & 1905) | Art UK". Art UK. Retrieved 10 April 2018.

patrick, heron, watson, january, 1832, december, 1907, eminent, 19th, century, scottish, surgeon, pioneer, anaesthetic, development, associated, with, number, surgical, innovations, including, excision, knee, joint, excision, thyroid, excision, larynx, maligna. Sir Patrick Heron Watson 5 January 1832 21 December 1907 was an eminent 19th century Scottish surgeon and pioneer of anaesthetic development He was associated with a number of surgical innovations including excision of the knee joint excision of the thyroid and excision of the larynx for malignant disease He was President of the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh on two occasions an unusual honour and was the first President of the Edinburgh Dental Hospital He was a great advocate of women training in medicine and surgery and did much to advance that cause Patrick Heron WatsonBorn 1832 01 05 5 January 1832Died21 December 1907 1907 12 21 aged 75 NationalityScottishEducationUniversity of EdinburghMedical careerProfessionDoctorFieldSurgeryInstitutionsUniversity of Edinburgh The Watson s impressive townhouse at 19 Royal Terrace Edinburgh Patrick Heron Watson second from right with other Residents at the Old Royal Infirmary Edinburgh including Joseph Lister and John Beddoe Patrick Heron Watson s home at 16 Charlotte Square Edinburgh centre Watson in middle age The grave of Patrick Heron Watson Dean Cemetery Edinburgh Contents 1 Early life 2 Crimea 3 Later life 4 Family 5 Awards and recognition 6 Papers of note 7 References 8 External linksEarly life editHe was born in Edinburgh on 5 January 1832 the third of four sons of Rev Dr Charles Watson of Burntisland and Isabella Boog His brothers were Rev Robert Boog Watson Rev Charles Watson and David Watson a businessman The family moved permanently to Edinburgh around 1840 living on Calton Hill first at 19 Royal Terrace then in 1850 moving to 13 Carlton Terrace 1 He was educated at Edinburgh Academy and then studied medicine at Edinburgh University During this time both Joseph Lister and John Beddoe were fellow students and friends He graduated MD in 1853 with the thesis On traumatic gangrene 2 and was elected Licentiate of the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh He served as house surgeon in the Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh under Professor James Spence In July 1855 whilst in the Crimea he was elected FRCSEd Crimea editIn December 1854 he travelled south to Chatham Dockyard to enlist as an assistant surgeon in the Royal Artillery specifically hoping to gain experience in military surgery a standard requirement for Professorship The Crimean War had just begun and intended to serve his country there He left Chatham on 15 January 1855 with eight other surgeons travelling to Crimea via Marseilles and Valletta their ship arriving at Constantinople on 26 January His hospital was one of the three main hospitals serving the British troops Scutari just two miles from Constantinople and famed for its connection to Florence Nightingale This he found nightmarish and was pleased to be reposted to the hill hospital at Koolalee This however had a far higher mortality rate running at around 25 On 11 April he reported his first bout of typhus and moved to a hotel in Therapia to convalesce returning to Koolalee in early May 1855 3 He determined to move to a field hospital closer to the war itself in Crimea and in June travelled to Balaklava and from there to a field hospital called Castle Hospital where he began work on 25 June Here seventy patients were treated under an Irish doctor named Jephson He enjoyed six weeks here before being posted to a forward field hospital attached to the Royal artillery near Karane In August 1855 he had a severe attack of dysentery and on 13 August he was placed on a ship Imperador to carry him back to the hospital at Scutari As a strange coincidence here he was able to share a room with his brother Robert who had also caught dysentery whilst serving as chaplain with the Highland Brigade Florence Nightingale wrote him a letter of apology as she was unable to her own illness at the time He spent 4 weeks being treated but made little progress He was placed on the ship the Earl of Shaftesbury to be returned home He stayed a month in Valletta in Malta en route Then took the steamship Transit back to Portsmouth in England On 19 October he reached London He thought he would be returned to the Crimea once well but never returned Later life editWatson completed his military service at Woolwich and Aldershot continuing in his role of Surgeon to the Royal Artillery He recovered and returned to Edinburgh to teach surgery at the university that department then being based at High School Yards Although he had hoped to become Professor of Military Surgery that role was abandoned in 1856 4 He also lectured at the Edinburgh Extramural School of Medicine at Surgeons Hall In the Royal Infirmary he acted as assistant to the Professor of Surgery James Miller whose daughter Elizabeth he married On Miller s death Heron Watson took on his father in law s large and lucrative practice In 1857 Watson was elected a member of the Harveian Society of Edinburgh and served as president in 1885 5 In 1860 over and above his academic role he took on the role of assistant surgeon at the Edinburgh Royal Infirmary In 1860 he was also elected to the Aesculapian Club 6 In 1863 he was promoted to full surgeon a role he then held for 15 years During this time he was one of Arthur Conan Doyle s teachers along with Joseph Bell who ultimately became the inspirations for Dr John Watson and Sherlock Holmes respectively 7 From 1865 to 1904 he was also a surgeon at Chalmers Hospital in Edinburgh just west of the Royal Infirmary In the admission period of autumn 1870 he was one of the first to permit women to attend his extra mural classes in surgery He stood alone in this role for sixteen years until his pupil Sophia Jex Blake opened a college specifically for women In 1877 he stood for the chair of Clinical Surgery in Edinburgh University but was beaten alleged due to his opposition to specialisation by Thomas Annandale Nevertheless he holds an important part in the history of surgery making advances both in thyroid excision excision of the knee joint amputation and in abdominal operations However as with many contemporaries he was not a follower of his former student companion Joseph Lister s use of antiseptic and as a result many simple procedures ended in failure In 1879 he helped to found the Edinburgh Dental Hospital also being one of its directors Here too he encouraged female students to join with Lillian Lindsay becoming the first woman to graduate in Dentistry in the UK 1895 8 He also had long running disputes with other Edinburgh medical figures such as Henry Littlejohn He was elected President of the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh in 1878 and again in 1905 On the latter occasion this was to enable him to be President during the College s quatercentenary celebrations a sign of the esteem in which he was held by the Fellows He was Honorary Surgeon in Scotland both to Queen Victoria and King Edward VII He was knighted by the latter in 1903 After a six month illness he died at his home at 16 Charlotte Square on 21 December 1907 and was buried in Dean Cemetery on the west side of Edinburgh 9 His collection of pathological specimens was passed to the Royal College of Surgeons and now forms part of their collection Family editIn 1861 he married Elizabeth Gordon Miller eldest daughter of his mentor Prof James Miller 1812 1864 She died in Gotha Germany on 27 February 1900 10 They had two sons Charles Heron Watson FRCS 1871 1959 and James Miller Watson 1879 1958 They also had two daughters one of whom Penelope Gordon Watson married the surgeon James Haig Ferguson FRSE 11 His nephew was Charles Boog Watson FRSE Awards and recognition editCrimean Medal Turkish Medal Sardinian Medal Volunteer Officers Decoration VD Caballero of the Order of King Carlos III of Spain 1878 Member of the General Medical Council 1882 Honorary Doctor of Letters LLD from Edinburgh University 1884 Honorary Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons Ireland 1887 Member of the University Commission 1889 Knighted by King Edward VII 1903 In 1894 he was painted by Sir George Reid This painting is held by the Royal College of Surgeons on Nicolson Street 12 Papers of note editsee 13 14 Modern Pathology and Treatment of Venereal Disease 1861 Excision of the Knee Joint 1867 The use of Nitrous Oxide as an Anaesthetic 1868 Excision of the Thyroid Gland 1873 Micro organisms of the Mouth and the Relationship to Disease 1883 The inhalation of Gas and Ether 1898 References edit Edinburgh Post Office Directories 1840 to 1850 Watson Patrick Heron 1853 On traumatic gangrene a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Watson WB 1966 An Edinburgh surgeon of the Crimean war Patrick Heron Watson 1832 1907 Med Hist 10 2 166 76 doi 10 1017 s0025727300010954 PMC 1033587 PMID 5325874 Watson WB 1966 An Edinburgh surgeon of the Crimean war Patrick Heron Watson 1832 1907 Med Hist 10 2 166 76 doi 10 1017 s0025727300010954 PMC 1033587 PMID 5325874 Watson Wemyss Herbert Lindesay 1933 A Record of the Edinburgh Harveian Society T amp A Constable Edinburgh Minute Books of the Aesculapian Club Library of the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh On this day in 1859 The birth of Sherlock Holmes creator Arthur Conan Doyle The Telegraph Retrieved 25 May 2017 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 1 February 2013 Retrieved 7 January 2016 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link British Medical Journal Obituaries 4 January 1908 Deaths The Times No 36081 London 5 March 1900 p 1 Biographical Index of Former Fellows of the Royal Society of Edinburgh 1783 2002 PDF The Royal Society of Edinburgh July 2006 ISBN 0 902 198 84 X Sir Patrick Heron Watson 1832 1907 FRCSEd 1855 PRCSEd 1877 1879 amp 1905 Art UK Art UK Retrieved 10 April 2018 British Medical Journal Obituaries 4 January 1908 Watson Patrick Heron DNB12 Wikisource the free online library en wikisource org Retrieved 10 April 2018 External links editWatson WB 1966 An Edinburgh surgeon of the Crimean war Patrick Heron Watson 1832 1907 Med Hist 10 2 166 76 doi 10 1017 s0025727300010954 PMC 1033587 PMID 5325874 Power D Arcy Bryan Bettina 2007 2004 Watson Patrick Heron Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 36776 Subscription or UK public library membership required Sir Patrick Heron Watson 1832 1907 FRCSEd 1855 PRCSEd 1877 1879 amp 1905 Art UK Art UK Retrieved 10 April 2018 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Patrick Heron Watson amp oldid 1197708215, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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