William Square

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William Square
FRCS
File:Square, William.jpg
Born 1813
Died 1891
Residence 26 Portland Square, Plymouth
Occupation medical
Society Membership
membership Ordinary Fellow
left 1873.12.30 resigns
elected_AI 1871.10.20
societies Royal College of Surgeons




Notes

Office Notes

House Notes

proposed 1871.07.03

Notes From Elsewhere

Born at Kingsbridge, South Devon, on April 28th, 1813. He was educated at a private school at Tavistock and at Crediton Grammar School. He entered St Bartholomew's Hospital in 1838, being a fellow-student of Sir James Paget (qv). After further study in Paris, he settled at Plymouth in partnership with Edmund Rendle, and in 1840 was elected Surgeon to the South Devon and East Cornwall Hospital. He held the post for thirty-five years and was succeeded by his eldest son, William Square (qv). He was also for thirty-two years Surgeon to the Royal Eye Infirmary.
He was successful as a surgeon, and published a paper on the "Removal of Loose Cartilage from the Knee-joint by Puncturing the Capsule with a Tenotome and Squeezing out the Cartilage into the Subcutaneous Tissue" in the London Medical Review (1861-2, 162). He also published an "Address on Ophthalmic Surgery: its Progress and Present Position" in the British Medical Journal (1860, 715, etc).
He became a Member of the Plymouth Town Council in 1881, was Chairman of the Sanitary Committee and a Poor Law Guardian. He refused the office of Mayor several times. He was an ardent admirer of Shakespeare, and occasionally lectured on his works. His carrier pigeons were known throughout the country. He was an advocate of temperance, and his lecture, "The Medical Aspects of the Temperance Question", was circulated by the Temperance League.
He died after a long illness at 22 Portland Square, Plymouth, on Sept 17th, 1891, leaving a widow and thirteen children; the eldest son, William Square (qv), and another son, James Elliot Square, FRCS, practised with him.

Publications

External Publications

a paper on the "Removal of Loose Cartilage from the Knee-joint by Puncturing the Capsule with a Tenotome and Squeezing out the Cartilage into the Subcutaneous Tissue" in the London Medical Review (1861-2, 162). He also published an "Address on Ophthalmic Surgery: its Progress and Present Position" in the British Medical Journal (1860, 715, etc).

House Publications

Related Material Details

RAI Material

Other Material