William Farquharson (surgeon)

Dr William Farquharson FRSE PRCSE FRCPE FSAS (1760-1823) was a senior Scottish surgeon during the Scottish Enlightenment. He served as President of the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh 1806-8 and President of the Harveian Society in both 1796 and 1805.

Life

He was born in Balfour, Aberdeenshire in 1760 the son of Alexander Farquharson of Balfour (b.1716) and his wife Margaret Davie of Newmill.[1]

In 1790 he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh. His proposers were James Gregory, James Russell and Robert Kerr. [2]

In 1795 he was a Crown Witness at the trial and imprisonment of Sir Archibald Gordon Kinloch of Gilmerton for the murder of his half-brother Sir Robert Kinloch at Gilmerton House. The trial was judged by Lord Braxfield. Farquharson’s testimony focussed upon Kinloch’s mental state on two previous occasions, each tended by Dr Farquharson (the second being in Haddington jail). As one of the oddest of British judgements, although Kinloch was sentenced to life imprisonment on 15 July, Dr Farquharson offered to hold him securely in his own home rather than in prison, and the judge accepted this on 17 July.[3] His house at this time was at Worlds End Close on the Royal Mile.[4] However, Farquharson disappears from the Post Office Directories for several years; presumably to hold Kinloch in a less urban environment. This was a very considerable personal sacrifice. He rematerialises in Edinburgh following the death of Kinloch in 1800. He then lives at 16 St James Square.[5]

In 1807 he is noted as donating 5 guineas towards the new Edinburgh Lunatic Asylum.[6]

His final Edinburgh address was 2 Elder Street in the First New Town.[7]

He died in Edinburgh on 25 January 1823.

Family

He was married twice and had two sons: Joseph Canvin Farquharson (who became a banker) and Francis Farquharson of Finzean (1802-1876)

gollark: You could say it about lots of things. Dealing with dangerous dangers is sensible as long as the cost isn't more than, er, chance of bad thing times badness of bad thing.
gollark: Probably.
gollark: Oh, and, additionally (I thought of and/or remembered this now), knowing your actions are monitored is likely to change your behavior too, and make you less likely to do controversial things, which is not very good.
gollark: i.e. demonstrate that they can actually function well, enforce the law reasonably, have reasonable laws *to* enforce in the first place, with available resources/data, **before** invading everyone's privacy with the insistence that they will totally make everyone safer.
gollark: Reduced privacy in return for more safety and stuff might be better if governments had a track record of, well, actually doing that sort of thing effectively.

References

  1. http://www.thepeerage.com/p40410.htm#i404093
  2. Biographical Index of Former Fellows of the Royal Society of Edinburgh 1783–2002 (PDF). The Royal Society of Edinburgh. July 2006. ISBN 0 902 198 84 X.
  3. The Trial of Sir Archibald Gordon Kinloch for the Murder of Sir Francis Kinloch his Brother-German, 1795
  4. Edinburgh and Leith Post Office Directory 1795
  5. Edinburgh and Leith Post Office Directory 1804
  6. Scots Magazine and Edinburgh Literary Miscellany, vol70, p.12
  7. Edinburgh and Leith Post Office Directory 1822-23
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