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Arthur Gamgee

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Cause of death
  
Pneumonia

Spouse
  
Mary Louisa Clark

Nationality
  
British

Parents
  
Joseph Gamgee

Occupation
  
Physiologist

Name
  
Arthur Gamgee


Born
  
11 October 1841 (
1841-10-11
)
Florence, Province of Florence, Italy

Resting place
  
Arnos Vale Cemetery, Bristol, England 51°26′06″N 2°33′54″W / 51.435°N 2.565°W / 51.435; -2.565

Alma mater
  
University of Edinburgh

Known for
  
Founder of the Edinburgh Veterinary Review

Died
  
May 29, 1909, Paris, France

Education
  
University College School, University of Edinburgh

Residence
  
Edinburgh, United Kingdom

Prof Arthur Gamgee FRS FRSE (11 October 1841 – 29 May 1909) was a British biochemist.

Contents

Life

Arthur Gamgee was the youngest of eight children of Joseph Gamgee, an Edinburgh-born veterinarian and pathologist and his wife Mary Ann West. He was born in Florence, Italy, where his father had a practice nearby in Leghorn. His family moved back to England when he was fourteen years old. He was educated at University College School in London and at the University of Edinburgh, graduating with an MD in 1862. For his thesis, Contributions to the Chemistry and Physiology of Foetal Nutrition, he was awarded a gold medal. He did postgraduate studies in both Heidelberg and Leipzig in Germany.

In 1867 he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh his proposer being Sir Andrew Douglas Maclagan.

He was made lecturer on physiology at Surgeon's Hall and Physician to the Royal Hospital for Sick Children. In 1873 he was appointed Professor of Physiology at the Royal Manchester School of Medicine. He was also Physician to the Manchester Hospital for Consumption. In 1872 he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society and delivered its Croonian Lecture in 1902. Manuscript notes of Gamgee's physiology lectures from both Edinburgh and Manchester survive as part of the Manchester Medical Manuscripts Collection held by special collections at the University of Manchester with the reference MMM/19/1.

From 1884 to 1886 he was Fullerian Professor of Physiology and Comparative Anatomy at the Royal Institution of Great Britain; he did not serve the full three years of the Fullerian appointment because he resigned his chair in 1886 to take up private practice. He was also the author of A Text-book of the Physiological Chemistry of the Animal Body: including an account of the chemical changes occurring in disease, published in 1880.

Arthur Gamgee was fluent in French, German, and Italian.

On 29 March 1909, he died of pneumonia during a visit to Paris. He was buried in the family vault in Arnos Vale Cemetery, Bristol.

Family

He married Mary Louisa Clark in 1875.

He was the brother of John Gamgee and Joseph Sampson Gamgee and uncle of D'Arcy Thompson.

References

Arthur Gamgee Wikipedia