Difference between revisions of "David Waterston"

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| name              = Waterston
 
| name              = Waterston
 
| honorific_prefix  =  
 
| honorific_prefix  =  
| honorific_suffix  = MD
+
| honorific_suffix  =  
 
| image              = File:Waterston,_David.jpg
 
| image              = File:Waterston,_David.jpg
 
| birth_date        = 1871
 
| birth_date        = 1871
 
| death_date        = 1942
 
| death_date        = 1942
| address            = Professor of Anatomy, King's College, London, WC
+
| address            = University of St Andrews [A63]
| occupation        = medical<br />academic<br />anatomist
+
| occupation        =  
 
| elected_ESL        =  
 
| elected_ESL        =  
 
| elected_ASL        =  
 
| elected_ASL        =  
| elected_AI        = 1909.01.20
+
| elected_AI        = 1922.02.15
 
| elected_APS        =  
 
| elected_APS        =  
 
| elected_LAS        =  
 
| elected_LAS        =  
| membership        = ordinary fellow
+
| membership        = ordinary fellow - fellowship not taken up
| left              = 1913 last listed
+
| left              =  
 
| clubs              =  
 
| clubs              =  
| societies          = Royal College of Surgeons
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| societies          =  
 
}}
 
}}
 
== Notes ==
 
== Notes ==
Line 23: Line 23:
  
 
=== House Notes ===
 
=== House Notes ===
1908.11.10 proposed by J. Grey, seconded by A. Francis Dixon<br /><br />Dept of Anatomy, University of Edinburgh; later Prof. of Anatomy, King’s College, London
+
1922.01.17 proposed by D. MacRitchie, seconded by E.N. Fallaize, F.C. Shrubsall <br />
 
=== Notes From Elsewhere ===
 
=== Notes From Elsewhere ===
THE death of Prof. David Waterston on September 4 at the age of seventy-one removed one of the distinguished anatomists of the Edinburgh School and a familiar figure for the past twenty-eight years in the life of the University of St. Andrews. After graduating in arts in the University of Edinburgh he took the M. B., C. M. in 1895, the F. R. C. S. (Ed.) in 1898 and the degree of M. D. with a gold medal for his thesis in 1900. [Nature]<br /><br />Anatomist David Waterston of King's College London decided that the two specimens could not belong together and that 'Piltdown Man' was just an ape jaw attached to a human skull.<br />
+
Prof David Waterston OBE FRSE (1871–1942) was a 20th-century British surgeon and anatomist. He was the Bute Professor of Anatomy at St Andrews University.<br /><br />Waterston was one of the first to debunk the Piltdown Man hoax, correctly pointing out that the jaw and skull did not match correctly<br /><br />He was born in the Govan district of Glasgow on 25 August 1871 the son of Rev Richard Waterston (1830-1892) of Union Church on Morrison Street, and his wife Isabella Anderson. The family lived at 2 Park Grove on the Paisley Road.[2] His father moved to St Paul's Church in Dundee in 1878.[3] Ironically the family then lived at 2 Park Place in Dundee (very similar to their Glasgow address).[4]<br /><br />He studied for a general degree at Edinburgh University (the home town of his parents) graduating MA around 1890 then studied Medicine under Sir William Turner graduating MB ChB in 1895. He then began lecturing in Anatomy at the university alongside David Hepburn. He gained his doctorate (MD) in 1898 and won the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh's Gold Medal in 1900.[5] In 1900 he was living at 16 Merchiston Terrace in west Edinburgh.[6]<br /><br />In 1901 he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh. His proposers were Sir William Turner, Ramsay Heatley Traquair, Robert Munro, and David Hepburn.[7]<br /><br />In 1909 he was still working in Edinburgh and lived at 1 Coates Place in the West End of the city, a very large terraced townhouse in the West End of the City.[8]<br /><br />He was Professor of Anatomy at King's College, London from around 1910. During this period he came to national fame in 1913 as the first person to discredit the Piltdown Man hoax which had been made public in December 1912.[9]<br /><br />In 1914 he became the Bute Professor of Anatomy at St Andrews University in 1914, succeeding Prof James Musgrove.[10]<br /><br />He died on 4 September 1942.[11] When he died there was an inter-regnum in the Bute chair due to the Second World War. He was eventually succeeded in 1946 by Prof Robert Walmsley.<br /><br />He was married to Isabel Amy Simsom. Their children included Brigadier Surgeon Richard E Waterston FRCS and David James Waterston FRCSE.[12]
 
== Publications ==
 
== Publications ==
 
=== External Publications ===
 
=== External Publications ===
contributor to the Wellcome Research Laboratories, 3rd Report, 1908, etc.
+
 
 
=== House Publications ===
 
=== House Publications ===
  
 
== Related Material Details ==
 
== Related Material Details ==
 
=== RAI Material ===
 
=== RAI Material ===
 
+
Membership correspondence: Watuston, D.
 
=== Other Material ===
 
=== Other Material ===
Un. of St Andrews: The Collection also contains material such as the nine original watercolour drawings of a progressive dissection of the trunk and inguinal regions, produced by David Waterston, Professor of Anatomy 1914-1942<br />
 

Revision as of 22:10, 28 May 2020

David Waterston
Waterston, David.jpg
Born 1871
Died 1942
Residence University of St Andrews [A63]
Society Membership
membership ordinary fellow - fellowship not taken up
elected_AI 1922.02.15




Notes

Office Notes

House Notes

1922.01.17 proposed by D. MacRitchie, seconded by E.N. Fallaize, F.C. Shrubsall

Notes From Elsewhere

Prof David Waterston OBE FRSE (1871–1942) was a 20th-century British surgeon and anatomist. He was the Bute Professor of Anatomy at St Andrews University.

Waterston was one of the first to debunk the Piltdown Man hoax, correctly pointing out that the jaw and skull did not match correctly

He was born in the Govan district of Glasgow on 25 August 1871 the son of Rev Richard Waterston (1830-1892) of Union Church on Morrison Street, and his wife Isabella Anderson. The family lived at 2 Park Grove on the Paisley Road.[2] His father moved to St Paul's Church in Dundee in 1878.[3] Ironically the family then lived at 2 Park Place in Dundee (very similar to their Glasgow address).[4]

He studied for a general degree at Edinburgh University (the home town of his parents) graduating MA around 1890 then studied Medicine under Sir William Turner graduating MB ChB in 1895. He then began lecturing in Anatomy at the university alongside David Hepburn. He gained his doctorate (MD) in 1898 and won the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh's Gold Medal in 1900.[5] In 1900 he was living at 16 Merchiston Terrace in west Edinburgh.[6]

In 1901 he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh. His proposers were Sir William Turner, Ramsay Heatley Traquair, Robert Munro, and David Hepburn.[7]

In 1909 he was still working in Edinburgh and lived at 1 Coates Place in the West End of the city, a very large terraced townhouse in the West End of the City.[8]

He was Professor of Anatomy at King's College, London from around 1910. During this period he came to national fame in 1913 as the first person to discredit the Piltdown Man hoax which had been made public in December 1912.[9]

In 1914 he became the Bute Professor of Anatomy at St Andrews University in 1914, succeeding Prof James Musgrove.[10]

He died on 4 September 1942.[11] When he died there was an inter-regnum in the Bute chair due to the Second World War. He was eventually succeeded in 1946 by Prof Robert Walmsley.

He was married to Isabel Amy Simsom. Their children included Brigadier Surgeon Richard E Waterston FRCS and David James Waterston FRCSE.[12]

Publications

External Publications

House Publications

Related Material Details

RAI Material

Membership correspondence: Watuston, D.

Other Material