Bramwell, Sir Byrom, (18 Dec. 1847–27 April 1931), late President, Royal College of Physicians, Edinburgh; Consulting Physician, Edinburgh Royal Infirmary; Consulting Medical Officer, Scottish Union and National Insurance Company; late Government Medical Referee for Scotland; late President, Association of Physicians of Great Britain and Ireland; Hon. President, Royal Medical Society; Foreign Corresponding Member, Neurological Society of Paris, German Neurological Society, and Philadelphia Neurological Society; Hon. Member, Société des Medécins Russes de Petrograd, American Neurological Society, Northumberland and Durham Medical and Clinical Societies, Sunderland Medical Society, and Manchester Medical Society

Copeman, Sydney Arthur Monckton, (21 Feb. 1862–11 April 1947), Medical Officer, retired, Ministry of Health; ex-Member LCC (Hampstead); formerly Member Hampstead Borough Council (late Chairman Public Health and other Committees); late Senior Medical Inspector HM Local Government Board; Vice-President (late President), Epidemiological Section, Royal Society of Medicine; late Member of Council, Royal College of Physicians, London, and Zoological Society; Member of Faculty of Medicine, and Chairman of Board of Studies in Hygiene, University of London; Emeritus Lecturer on Public Health, Westminster Hospital; Knight of Grace, Order of St John of Jerusalem and Member of Chapter-General of the Order; Lt-Col in charge of Hygiene Department, Royal Army Medical College, 1916–17; late Divisional Sanitary Officer, 2nd London Division, Territorial Force; TD; Chadwick Lecturer in Hygiene, 1914; late Examiner in Public Health and in Forensic Medicine and Toxicology, University of Bristol; Examiner in Public Health, Royal College of Physicians; Examiner in Hygiene and Public Health, University of Leeds; in State Medicine, University of London, and in Public Health, Royal College of Surgeons, England; Milroy Lecturer, 1898, Royal College of Physicians, London; Research Scholar and Special Commissioner, British Medical Association; Government Delegate to Germany, France, Austria, Switzerland, Belgium, and USA in connection with investigations undertaken for Home Office, Board of Trade, Local Government Board, and Ministry of Health; Member of various Departmental Committees; Member of Livery, Apothecaries Company and Freeman of City of London; Joint Founder (1891) of Medical Research Club; Buchanan Gold Medallist, Royal Society of London, 1902; Cameron Prizeman, University of Edinburgh, 1899; Fothergillian Gold Medallist, Medical Society of London, 1899; Jenner Medallist, Royal Society of Medicine, 1925; invented Glycerinated Lymph, officially adopted, 1898, and now in general use in this and other countries for anti-smallpox vaccination; Gold Medallist, International Faculty of Sciences, 1938; Hon. Fellow Hunterian Society, 1938; joint patron of living of Hadleigh, Essex


1986 ◽  
Vol 79 (4) ◽  
pp. 194-199 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mary Warnock

Opening remarks by the President, Sir John Walton: The Lloyd Roberts Lecture is one of the major events of the Society year. It is given in rotation at the invitation of the Royal College of Physicians of London, the Medical Society of London and the Royal Society of Medicine, and this year it is our turn. For those of you who do not know who Lloyd Roberts was — he died in 1920, at which time he was the Consulting Obstetric Physician, a very modern term indeed, to Manchester Royal Infirmary because, although he practised throughout his professional life as an obstetrician and gynaecologist, he was also a Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians of London and was particularly interested in medical aspects of obstetrics and gynaecology. He was one of that long line of medical polymaths who distinguished British medical affairs in the last century and in the early part of this century in that he had a major interest in literary matters. Quite apart from publishing his very well known Students' Guide to the Practice of Midwifery, he also published a revised edition of Sir Thomas Browne's Religio Medici, and was responsible for writing a major work on The Scientific Knowledge of Dante. A great collector of art treasures, including a specially fine collection of mezzotints, glass and books, he was in many, many ways a man of outstanding breadth of interest and culture. One of the most interesting things that was said about Lloyd Roberts in a very long obituary after he died was that, even if he had died thirty years earlier, his biography would have had a very large sale. Hospital work done, he was to be found by midday standing, always standing, compact, alert, close cropped, by his consulting room fire with a glass of milk warming in the fender and, amongst the instruments on the mantelpiece, there were walnuts, which he cracked at intervals with explosive violence. These served for lunch. One of his most famous quotes, which apparently has always been remembered, was that he used to say he was not a consultant but ‘a general specialist, with a leaning towards women’, and his definition of gynaecology was ‘anything either curable or lucrative’. But everyone said that he was a born healer and it did people good merely to see him, so that he was clearly one of the most notable members of our profession of the day. Now, who could we have chosen better than Baroness Warnock to deliver this year's Lloyd Roberts Lecture? Educated at Lady Margaret Hall, subsequently Fellow and Tutor of Philosophy at St Hugh's College and then later Headmistress of Oxford High School for six years, she has chaired many special enquiries of particular interest to this profession, such as the Committee of Enquiry into Special Education. She served on the Advisory Committee on Animal Experiments as Chairman until recently and we know very well of her work in chairing the Committee of Enquiry into Human Fertilization and Embryology. She has also found the time to write widely on Existentialism, Imagination and Education, and other topics. Now, if there has been an occasion when simultaneously a husband and wife have been respectively Head of House, one in Oxford and the other in Cambridge, then as a very new boy at Oxford it is not something which I personally have been aware. Interest in education makes it particularly fitting that she should have chosen tonight, following upon the lecture given in this series some fifteen years ago by Lord James of Rusholme, to talk about ‘Another ten years in education’.


1995 ◽  
Vol 41 ◽  
pp. 298-307

Malcolm Milne was born on the 22 May 1915 at Woodley, Cheshire, the younger of the two sons of Alexander Milne, a pharmacist, and Clare Lilian ( née ). He went to Bradbury Council School and then to the Stockport School, where he was awarded a State Scholarship. These were highly competitive and coveted, since they covered the major costs of a university education. Therefore, he was enabled to enter Manchester University Medical School and in 1936 received first-class honours in his B.Sc. degree; subsequently in 1939 he also qualified M.B. Ch.B. This of course coincided with the start of the 1939-45 war, and after a short appointment as a house physician in the Manchester Royal Infirmary he joined the Royal Army Medical Corps in 1940. His initial training was at Burghwallis in Yorkshire and then Hemel Hempstead in Hertfordshire. Before joining the Eighth Army he married Mary Thorpe, the only daughter of Mathias and Annie Thorpe ( née Sykes) in June 1941. He then embarked on an adventurous army career which took him to Egypt, Libya, Tunisia (where in 1943, he was mentioned in dispatches), Italy and Austria. In short, the hardest of all routes to fulfil Churchill’s wish to attack ‘the soft underbelly of the Italo-German Axis’. Douglas Black (later knighted and President of the Royal College of Physicians), his old friend and colleague, tells me that he must have been the only medical officer in the Army, and almost certainly the only soldier, to take Hall’s Algebra to North Africa for his moments of leisure reading. He always had an interest in mathematics, and especially statistical methods, but clearly more as a stimulus or relaxation, since his subsequent career was not marked by much use of mathematics. If his early or subsequent influences had been epidemiological his story might have been different, but Bradford Hill and Doll had not yet made their impact on medical thought.


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