Medical and Chirurgical Society of London - Presidents

Presidents

  • 1906 John Warrington Haward
  • 1904 Richard Douglas Powell
  • 1902 Alfred Willett
  • 1900 Frederick William Pavy
  • 1898 Thomas Bryant
  • 1896 William Howship Dickinson
  • 1894 Jonathan Hutchinson
  • 1892 Sir Andrew Clark (died 1893)
  • 1890 Timothy Holmes
  • 1888 Edward Henry Sieveking
  • 1886 George David Pollock
  • 1884 George Johnson
  • 1882 John Marshall
  • 1881 Andrew Whyte Barclay
  • 1879 John Eric Erichsen
  • 1877 Charles West
  • 1875 James Paget
  • 1873 Charles James Blasius Williams
  • 1871 Thomas Blizard Curling
  • 1869 Sir George Burrows
  • 1867 Samuel Solly
  • 1865 James Alderson
  • 1863 Richard Partridge
  • 1861 Benjamin Guy Babington
  • 1859 Frederic Carpenter Skey
  • 1857 Sir Charles Locock
  • 1855 Caesar Henry Hawkins
  • 1853 James Copland
  • 1851 Joseph Hodgson
  • 1849 Thomas Addison
  • 1847 James Moncrieff Arnott
  • 1845 William Frederick Chambers
  • 1843 Edward Stanley
  • 1841 Robert Williams
  • 1839 Sir Benjamin Collins Brodie
  • 1837 Richard Bright
  • 1835 Henry Earle
  • 1833 John Elliotson
  • 1831 Sir William Lawrence
  • 1829 Peter Mark Roget
  • 1827 Benjamin Travers
  • 1825 George Birkbeck
  • 1823 John Abernethy
  • 1821 John Cooke
  • 1819 Sir Astley Paston Cooper
  • 1817 William Babington
  • 1815 Henry Cline
  • 1813 Sir Gilbert Blane
  • 1810 Sir Henry Halford
  • 1808 Matthew Baillie
  • 1805 William Saunders

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Famous quotes containing the word presidents:

    A president, however, must stand somewhat apart, as all great presidents have known instinctively. Then the language which has the power to survive its own utterance is the most likely to move those to whom it is immediately spoken.
    J.R. Pole (b. 1922)

    Governments can err, Presidents do make mistakes, but the immortal Dante tells us that divine justice weighs the sins of the cold-blooded and the sins of the warm-hearted in different scales. Better the occasional faults of a Government that lives in a spirit of charity than the constant omission of a Government frozen in the ice of its own indifference.
    Franklin D. Roosevelt (1882–1945)

    Our presidents have been getting to be synthetic monsters, the work of a hundred ghost- writers and press agents so that it is getting harder and harder to discover the line between the man and the institution.
    John Dos Passos (1896–1970)