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Archive for January, 2010

John Addington Symonds 1807 – 1871

John Addington Symonds senior 1807 – 1871, MD Edinburgh 1828, FRCP, FRSE, was a British orthodox physician, Vice President and President of the British Medical Association, Physician at the Bristol General Hospital, Secretary to the Cholera Commission in Bristol, Lecturer in Forensic Medicine at Bristol Medical School, President of the Public Health Section of the Social Science Congress in Bristol in 1853, and a prolific medical writer, and a major figure in medicine at this time,

At a time when orthodox physicians were proclaiming they would not be seen even talking to a homeopath,  Symonds was a ’secret’ patient of homeopath James Manby Gully, Continue Reading »

Apollinaris Victor Jagielski 1853 – 1920

Apollinaris Victor Jagielski ?1853 – 1920 MD Berlin, was a German orthodox physician, Physician to the Prussian Army, who converted to homeopathy and practiced in Britain, where he was awarded MRCP, and FRCP, FBHS, MBMS, Physician at the Middlesex Hospital, Physician at the Margaret Street Infirmary, Governor of the London Homeopathic Hospital, and an advocate of electrotherapeutic baths, Superintendant and Resident Physician to the Royal York Bath Company,

Jagielski practiced at 8, Weymouth Street, and at 14 Dorset Square, and at York Place Regents Park,

Jagielski was present at the 8th International Homeopathic Congress in 1911, Continue Reading »

Robert Lee 1793 – 1877

Robert Lee 1793 – 1877 was a British orthodox physician, Member of the Edinburgh College of Surgeons, Licentiate of the Royal College of Physicians of London, Fellow of the Royal Society, Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians, Governor General of the Crimea and the Russian provinces around the Black Sea, Physician to the British Lying in Hospital, Lecturer on Midwifery in the Webb Street School of Anatomy and Medicine, Regius Professor of Midwifery at the University of Glasgow, Lecturer on Midwifery and the Diseases of Women at St George’s Hospital, Physician to Lady Caroline Lamb (mistress of Lord Byron), Domestic Physician to Prince Woronzow,

At a time when orthodox physicians were proclaiming they would not be seen even talking to a homeopath,  Robert Lee was a ’secret’ patient of homeopath James Manby Gully, Continue Reading »

Ralph Barnes Grindrod 1811 – 1883

Ralph Barnes Grindrod 1811 – 1883 MD 1831, was a British orthodox physician who, though proclaiming his absolute antagonism towards homeopathy, nevertheless worked alongside the homeopaths in the Malvern Hydrotherapy Establishment, where he closely observed the work of James Manby Gully and set out to expose the many allopathic practitioners who ’secretly’ came to the spa for homeopathic treatment,

Grindrod was an activist in the Temperance Movement, and of the plight of seamstresses, and he was a colleague of Robert Owen,

Grindrod practiced at Townshend House, Malvern, and he was a member of the Geological Society, and a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society, and he was also a Mason, founding the Lodge Semper Fidelis No. 529, ‘consecrated at Townshend House, the establishment of one of the water cure doctors, Ralph Barnes Grindrod, in December 1867‘. Continue Reading »

Jerome David Salinger 1919 – 2010

Jerome David Salinger 1919 – 2010 was an American author, best known for his 1951 novel The Catcher in the Rye, as well as his reclusive nature. His last original published work was in 1965; he gave his last interview in 1980.

Salinger was an advocate of homeopathy, and in a typed letter signed by J. D. Salinger dated March 28, 1981 he describes his successful use of homeopathic powders to heal his knee, and his daughter Margaret Salinger, wrote a book about her family, Dream Catcher, noting that her father typically spent several hours each day studying homeopathic medicine, ‘his beloved homeopathy‘,

Salinger often used homeopathy to treat his own family and friends,

Salinger worked for counter intelligence during World War II and saw a concentration camps for himself.

Salinger’s experiences in the war affected him emotionally. He was hospitalized for a few weeks for combat stress reaction after Germany was defeated, and he later told his daughter: “You never really get the smell of burning flesh out of your nose entirely, no matter how long you live.” … After Germany’s defeat, Salinger signed up for a six month period of “Denazification” duty in Germany for the CIC. Continue Reading »

The Margaret Street Infirmary for Consumption

The Margaret Street Infirmary at 26 Margaret Street, West London, originally a Parish Workhouse, and also used as a Dead House for the Poor, was inaugurated in 1847 as a Tuberculosis Hospital, staffed with homeopaths and allopaths,

1847 – the hospital was founded, for the medical relief of poor persons suffering from consumption and diseases of the chest,

1887 – Edmund Becket Lord Grimthorpe, Chairman of the Governing Body, proposed homeopaths and homeopathic supporters as nominees to the Hospital, and the Board of the Hospital clearly stated that homeopaths were not ineligible, and John Beckett, John Roberson Day, Kenneth William Millican, and Charles Lloyd Tuckey, were duly appointed,

1887 – The Margaret Street Infirmary was in the nature of a Dispensary, with an arrangement whereby the physicians visited patients in their own homes.

1887 – The British Medical Journal reported that the Medical Staff of the hospital had resigned in protest at a Resolution of the Board to allow homeopaths to ‘take and hold office‘ at the hospital, a complete victory for homeopathy, (7 actually did resign),

1888 – Following the resignation of the outraged medical staff at the Margaret Street Infirmary, and election was held to fill the vacant posts, and homeopaths Apollinaris Victor Jagielski and J Marsh (on the staff at the London Homeopathic Hospital), were appointed shortly therafter,

1908 – The Margaret Street Hospital, or ‘The Infirmary for Consumption’, 26 Margaret Street (Cavendish Square) London W1, was founded in 1847 and known as ‘Margaret Street Hospital for Consumption and Diseases of the Chest’ until 1908. The old structure was demolished many years ago and the site is now occupied by a modern office block. The only known photos of the façade of this edifice are in the Margaret Street Hospital 1898 Report, London Metropolitan Archives, Call No. SC/PPS/093/36, p. 27.

Kenneth William Millican 1853 – 1915

Kenneth William Millican 1853 – 1915, BA Cantab, MRCS England 1879, LRCP Edinburgh 1880, Assistant Editor of The Lancet, was a British orthodox physician with ‘friendly connections‘ to homeopathy, Physician at the Margaret Street Infirmary, who also wrote for the Monthly Homeopathic Review, Vice President of the American Homeopathic Ophthalmological, Otological and Laryngological Society,

Millican was summarily dismissed from his post at the Queen’s Jubilee Hospital by the allopathic community due to his ‘liberal views towards homeopathy‘, which caused a great storm of debate about homeopathy in The Times, which spread around the World, the whole affair was written up in John Henry Clarke’s Odium medicum and homeopathy. Continue Reading »

Thomas Spencer Wells 1818 – 1897

Sir Thomas Spencer Wells 1818 – 1897, MRCS in 1841, FRCS in 1844, 1st Baronet, Surgeon of the Samaritan Free Hospital for Women, Hunterian Professor of Surgery and Pathology at the Royal College of Surgeons of England, Editor of the Medical Times and Gazette, President of the Royal College of Surgeons of England, Surgeon to Queen Victoria’s household,

At a time when orthodox physicians were proclaiming they would not be seen even talking to a homeopath,  Spencer Wells was a ’secret’ patient of homeopath James Manby Gully, (note that Queen Victoria was also a patient of James Manby Gully), Continue Reading »

Booth Eddison 1809 – 1859

Booth Eddison 1809 – 1859, FRCS, Member of the College of Surgeons in Edinburgh and a Member of the Society of Apothecaries in London, he was appointed as a Resident Surgeon at the General Hospital in Nottingham, President of the British Medical Association,

At a time when orthodox physicians were proclaiming they would not be seen even talking to a homeopath, Booth Eddison was a ’secret’ patient of homeopath James Manby Gully, Continue Reading »

Francis Bellamy 1816 – 1867

Francis Bellamy ?1816 – ?1867,  MRCS England 1843, LSA 1837, was a British orthodox physician, Surgeon to the Langport Union, Assistant Surgeon to the Cholera Hospital, Jersey, Member of the Provincial Medical and Surgical Association, who converted to homeopathy, Surgeon to the Guernsey Homeopathic Dispensary, Member of the Hahnemann Medical Society, a Medical Witness examined before Anthony Ashley Cooper 7th Earl of Shaftesbury’s Committee on the subject of the Administration of Poor Law Medical Relief,

Bellamy was introduced to homeopathy by John Ozanne, and he was influential in spreading homeopathy in Guernsey and in France, and eventually in Sydney Australia, where he  eventually emigrated,

Bellamy submitted cases and articles to various homeopathic publications,

Bellamy practiced at 2, Clifton, Guernsey,

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