Alexander Stuart (scientist)
Alexander Stuart FRS FRCP (1673–1742) was a British natural philosopher and physician.
He was born in Aberdeen, Scotland.
He graduated from Marischal College in 1691 with an MA and became a ship's surgeon, serving on the London from 1701 to 1704 and on the Europe from 1704 to 1707.[1] While at sea he kept records of his operations and sent specimens of new creatures to Hans Sloane, with several reports on such animals being published in the Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society.
After returning to land in 1708 he started a medical degree at Leiden University, and he graduated on 22 June 1711.[1] He served as a doctor for the British Army for a bit but returned to England. He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1714,[2] and in 1719 he became the first doctor to practice at Westminster Hospital, transferring to St George's Hospital in 1733. In 1728 he became a physician-in-ordinary for Caroline of Ansbach[citation needed] and was elected a Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians the same year. He retired in 1736.
In 1738 he gave the first Croonian Lecture of the Royal Society, and in 1740 he was awarded the Copley Medal by the same institution. He delivered the Croonian Lecture again in 1740.[1]
Despite the money he was earning as physician-in-ordinary he was heavily in debt when he died on 15 September 1742.
References
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- Articles with unsourced statements from April 2013
- 1673 births
- 1742 deaths
- People from Aberdeen
- Fellows of the Royal Society
- Fellows of the Royal College of Physicians
- Recipients of the Copley Medal
- 18th-century Scottish medical doctors
- 17th-century Scottish people
- 18th-century Scottish people
- Alumni of the University of Aberdeen
- Physicians-in-Ordinary