Charles Ernest Lakin

Charles Richard Box FRCS FRCP (1878–1972) was an English physician, surgeon, pathologist, and anatomist.[2][3]

Charles Ernest Lakin
Born(1878-02-23)23 February 1878
Died2 May 1972(1972-05-02) (aged 94)
NationalityBritish
OccupationPhysician, pathologist, and dermatologist[1]
Known forPresidency of the Medical Society of London (1938)

Biography

After education at Carter’s School and the Wyggeston Grammar School for Boys, Leicester, Charles Ernest Lakin entered in 1896 the Middlesex Hospital Medical School. He qualified in 1901 MRCS, LRCP. He graduated in 1902 MB BS (Lond.) and in 1903 MD.[2] For some years Lakin was a demonstrator of anatomy and a clinical assistant in the skin department at the Middlesex Hospital and also a clinical assistant at the Hospital for Sick Children, Great Ormond Street.[1] He was also curator of the Middlesex Hospital's pathological museum and wrote its history in 1908. In 1908 he qualified MRCP. From 1904 to 1912 he performed all the autopsies at the Middlesex Hospital. There in 1912 he was appointed assistant physician and lecturer in morbid anatomy. He later also joined the London Fever Hospital's staff and became advisory physician to London's Royal National Throat, Nose and Ear Hospital. During WWI he served in the RAMC as pathologist at the Addington Park War Hospital, although he continued his civilian appointment as consultant physician at the Middlesex Hospital. During WWII Lakin moved to Mount Vernon Hospital, Northwood, London, and continued there at least until 1950.[2]

Lakin ... habitually wore a black swallow-tail coat, a wing collar, boots and pince-nez. ... After retirement in the early 1950s he moved to West Stow Hall near Bury St. Edmunds, an historic house bought by the Croftes family in 1485 from the Abbey of Bury St Edmunds. ... Lakin remained a bachelor ...[2]

He collected antique furniture with zeal, and at his home in West Stow Hall he had a wonderful copy of Gainsborough's Blue Boy, an original portrait of James II as a young man, beautiful furniture, and Elizabeth writings on the walls.[3]

Awards and honours

  • 1905 — elected FRCS
  • 1916 — elected FRCP
  • 1932 — Lumleian Lecturer on The Borderlands of Medicine
  • 1934 — Lettsomian Lecturer on Disturbances of the Body Temperature
  • 1938 — President of the Medical Society of London with Presidential Address on Lettsom's England
  • 1943 — Annual Orator to the Medical Society of London with Annual Oration on Outside the Textbooks
  • 1947 — Harveian Orator on Our Founders and Benefactors

Selected publications

gollark: And the computer science conspiracies, the mathematics conspiracies, the astronomy conspiracies, the entomology conspiracies, the etymology conspiracies, the rock climbing conspiracies, the nutritionist conspiracies... are we just going to ignore those?
gollark: #karens-corner-of-coronavirus-tales maybe?
gollark: Given the US government's ability to mess up everything it touches, I don't think government-paid government-run healthcare would be the best of ideas. But the insurance system is also quite terrible. There's probably an alternative possibly-better way.
gollark: You can't easily go around controlling spread neatly to just people who accept a 0.5% or whatever risk of death (which is still quite bad).
gollark: That doesn't, in itself, make it bad. It's bad because you're, well, killing someone.

References

  1. "Lakin, Charles Ernest (1878–1972)". Plarr's Lives of the Fellows, Royal College of Surgeons of England.
  2. "Charles Ernest Lakin". Royal College of Physicians, Lives of the Fellows, Munk's Roll, Vol. VI.
  3. "C. E. Lakin, M.D., F.R.C.S., F.R.C.P.". Br Med J. 2 (5814): 659. 10 June 1972. doi:10.1136/bmj.2.5814.659.
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