Open main menu

historywiki β

William M. Ord

William M. Ord
Ord, William M..jpg
Born 1834
Died 1902
Residence Brixton Hill, S.
Occupation medical
Society Membership
membership ASL ordinary fellow
left 1869.01.05 resigned
elected_ASL 1865.05.02
clubs Athenaeum Club

Contents

Notes

Office Notes

House Notes

Notes From Elsewhere

one key actor in the introduction of Myxoedema, William Miller Ord (1834-1902).

William Miller Ord (September 23, 1834 – May 14, 1902) was a British medical scientist. He was a surgeon at St. Thomas Hospital in London.[1][2]
In 1879 he described Ord's thyroiditis

William Ord was born at Brixton Hill, the son of George Ord,F.R.C.S, and his wife Harriet, daughter of Sir James Clark, a London merchant. He received a grounding in the classics at King’s College School and then entered St. Thomas’s Hospital as a medical student. There he gained the Cheselden medal for surgery and the Treasurer’s medal. After qualifying in 1855 and holding house appointments at St. Thomas’s, he joined his father in general practice. A few years later, however, he established himself as a consultant. He returned to Guy’s in 1870 as lecturer on comparative anatomy and was elected assistant physician in 1871, becoming physician after another six years. While on the staff, he lectured on physiology and medicine; and, as dean of the Medical School for two periods (1865-66 and 1876-88), he was responsible for a marked revival in its prosperity.
Ord was associated with Gull in his classic work on myxoedema and, indeed, gave the condition its present name. It was the subject of his Bradshaw Lecture at the Royal College of Physicians in 1898. A Censor of the College, he was secretary of its committee which prepared the second edition of the Nomenclature of Diseases issued in 1880. He also wrote a valuable paper on The Influence of Colloids on Crystalline Form (1879). He was president of the Medical Society of London in 1885. An eloquent and scholarly teacher who based his instruction on careful preparation, Ord was a man of many parts, well read in literature and military history and well versed in botany, geology and folklore. He married first, in 1859, Julia, daughter of Joseph Rainbow of Norwood, by whom he had two daughters and a son, and secondly, Jane, daughter of Sir James Arndell Youl, by whom he had two daughters. He died at Salisbury, two years after retiring.

Member of the Athenaeum Club from 1887

Publications

External Publications

Title ‪THE CLIMATES AND BATHS OF GREAT BRITAIN‬
‪Author‬ ‪W. M. ORD, M.D.
‪Published‬ 1895

Collected Works or Francis Sibson, by William M. Ord

• On Myxoedema, a term proposed to be applied to an essential condition in the cretinoid infection observed in middle aged women. Transactions of The Medical - Chirurgical Society Of London 1878; 61: 57
• Report of a committee of the Clinical Society of London nominated December 14, 1883, to investigate the subject of myxoedema. Trans. Clin. Soc. Lond. 1888; 21 (Suppl)

House Publications

Related Material Details

RAI Material

Other Material