Archibald Inglis

Archibald Inglis FRCSEd (1 December 18011889) was a 19th-century Scottish surgeon who served as President of the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh for the period 1853 to 1855. He was a keen amateur botanist and chaired the Edinburgh Botanical Society.

Life

33 Albany Street, Edinburgh

He was born on 1 December 1801[1] at Post House Stair on Parliament Close off the Royal Mile in Edinburgh the son of Dr Andrew Inglis (d.1834) and grandson of Dr William Inglis.[2] His house was remodelled and readdressed as 16 Parliament Square following the rebuilding of the law courts in Edinburgh.

His father served as President of the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh from 1808 to 1810. His grandfather had served twice in this same role: 1782-1784 and 1790-1792.

Inglis studied medicine at the University of Edinburgh from around 1817 to 1821, gaining his doctorate (MD) in 1824.

His family home was destroyed in the Great Fire of Edinburgh in 1824. His family then relocated to a then-new townhouse at 11 Albany Street in Edinburgh's New Town.[3] Inglis inherited the house on his father's death in 1834, and lived there for most of his life.[4]

He was a member of the Medico-Chirurgical Society of Edinburgh from 1827[5] In 1853 he succeeded James Scarth Combe as President of the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh. He was succeeded in turn in 1855 by Dr Andrew Wood.

He lived his later years at 33 Albany Street and died there in 1889. He is buried in Dean Cemetery.[6]

Family

He married Isabella Weir (1813-1877), daughter of Major James Weir and brother of Dr Thomas Graham Weir.[7] They had at least eight children. Their son James Weir Inglis (1839-1901) died in Florida,[8] and their third born son, Archibald, emigrated to Canada (d.1937).[9]

gollark: Not just "chemistry would be slightly different" or something.
gollark: To some extent, sure, but I think some of it is "if this physical constant was wrong stars wouldn't work" and such.
gollark: Complete omnipotence is logically incoherent anyway.
gollark: Ongoing memetics campaigns.
gollark: Some things are apparently quite precisely tuned for human life, but that doesn't say anything because if they were not precisely tuned for human life there would be no human life observing that they are precisely tuned for human life.

References


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