Open main menu

historywiki β

George Dancer Thane

Revision as of 19:37, 20 January 2021 by WikiadminBot (talk | contribs) (Bot: Automated import of articles *** existing text overwritten ***)

George Dancer Thane

Prof.
George Dancer Thane
Thane, George Dancer.jpg
Born 1850
Died 1930
Residence University College, Gower Street, WC
15 Montague Street, Russell Square, WC [1881]
St John's Road, Harrow [1919]
Occupation academic
medical
Society Membership
membership Ordinary Fellow - life compounder
left 1930 deceased
elected_AI 1881.03.08
clubs Athenaeum Club
societies Physiological Society
Anatomical Society
Anthropological Society of Paris
Royal Society of Upsala
Royal College of Surgeons
Zoological Society




Contents

Notes

Office Notes

AI Council 1883 Member
AI Council 1884 Member
AI Council 1885 Member
AI Council 1886 Member
AI Council 1887 Member

House Notes

1881.02.22 proposed
Prof. of anatomy
1914.02.10 The Treasurer announced that ... Prof. G.D. Thane had generously contributed the sum of £10 10s as a donation to the Institute being the difference between the compounding fee at the time that he compounded and the present compounding fee. It was unanimously resolved that a hearty vote of thanks be accorded to Prof. Thane on behalf of the Council for his generous donation
report of the council for 1918: congratulations to Sir George Dancer Thane, who has received the Honour of Knighthood
death noted in the Report of the Council for 1930

Notes From Elsewhere

Born on May 27th, 1850, at Great Berkhamsted, the eldest son of George Dancer Thane, MD St Andrews, who practised in Hart Street, Bloomsbury. He entered University College, London, in 1867 and was appointed Demonstrator of Anatomy to Professor G Viner Ellis (qv) in 1870, a year before he obtained the diploma of MRCS. He succeeded Viner Ellis as Professor of Anatomy at University College in 1877 and retained the chair until 1919, when he was elected Emeritus Professor. As Professor of Anatomy he trained some brilliant men who acted as his demonstrators, amongst them being Rickman J Godlee (qv), Quarry Silcock (qv), Bilton Pollard, S G Shattock (qv), and Charles Stonham (qv). For many years he was Inspector of Anatomy and Inspector under the Vivisection Acts. Both positions were delicate and full of difficulties, but he carried out the duties tactfully and without friction. On Dec 8th, 1881, he was elected a member of the Physiological Society, which was then a small body of working physiologists. Numerous honours came to him. He was created a Knight Bachelor in 1919; was President of the Anatomical Society of Great Britain and Ireland in 1896; was a member of the French and German Anatomical Societies, of the Anthropological Society of Paris, and of the Royal Society of Upsala. The Royal College of Surgeons elected him FRCS; the University of Edinburgh conferred upon him the honorary degree of LLD, and the University of Dublin that of ScD. He was for many years Dean of the Medical Faculty at University College, and throughout his active career he was in constant request as an examiner in anatomy at numerous universities and examining boards throughout England and Wales.
He married in 1884 Jenny, the eldest daughter of Aug Klingberg, of Stockholm, who survived him with two daughters. He died at his home, 19 St John's Road, Harrow, Middlesex, on Jan 15th, 1930, and was buried at Highgate Cemetery.
Thane was a man of encyclopaedic anatomical knowledge, and was one of the British representatives at the Basle conference where a new anatomical nomenclature was evolved which did not meet with his approval. In 1850 G Viner Ellis (qv) succeeded Jones Quain, the first Professor of Anatomy at University College, and in 1877 Thane succeeded Ellis. Ellis's conception of teaching anatomy was an insistence upon the exact observation of fact and a clear and restrained expression of what he exposed by dissection, for he regarded an interest in the subject as outside the aims of a teacher. Without sacrificing any of the discipline of precise observation and lucid expression, Thane made the study of human anatomy a humane occupation and threw into his teaching the whole force of his personality. He became keenly interested in his pupils individually, and from 1874-1914 kept a detailed students' register, written in a careful hand, with red ink for failures and purple ink for successes. In regard to rules and regulations he was a martinet, and was intolerant of smoking, yet his class was orderly, not from fear but from a real desire on the part of his pupils to stand well in his sight.
He edited Ellis's Anatomy and was for many years responsible for the purely anatomical portions of Quain's Anatomy. Here his powers of lucid description, combined with brevity and informed by his extensive knowledge, made the successive issues examples of what may be done by a competent editor.

Born Berkhamsted; died Harrow. Professor of Anatomy, UCL 1877-1919. Knighthood 1919. Honorary degrees from Dublin and Edinburgh.

Publications

External Publications

Publications:
Edited Ellis's Demonstrations of Anatomy, 8vo, London, 1887 and 1890.
Edited Jones Quain's Elements of Anatomy, 9th and 10th ed, 8vo, London. Appendix to Jones Quain's Elements of Anatomy - "Superficial and Surgical Anatomy" (with R J GODLEE), 10th ed, 8vo, 1896

House Publications

Related Material Details

RAI Material

Other Material