- Edwin Lankester
Edwin Lankester MRCS, MD, FRS (23 April 1814-30 October 1874) was an English surgeon and naturalist who made a major contribution to the control of
cholera in London: he was the first public analyst in England.Life
Edwin Lankester was born in 1814 in Melton, near Woodbridge in
Suffolk , to 'poor but clever parents' according to his sonE. Ray Lankester (Lester 1995). His father was a builder.Edwin married Phebe Pope in 1845, daughter of a former mill-owner. She was 19 at the time of marriage, became a botanist and microscopist, published books for children and wrote natural history articles. They had a total of eleven children of which eight survived, four boys and four girls.
Thomas Henry Huxley became a close friend of the family, and visited often.John Stevens Henslow , Darwin's tutor, was also a family friend. A born teacher, he introduced Edwin's son Ray to the delights of fossil collecting.E.B. Ford , the ecological geneticist, said of Edwin: "Lankester was a close personal friend of Darwin's and was so deeply impressed by him that he was determined that one of his sons should become a great biologist, He named all three of his sons suitably: Forbes, Ray and Owen!" (p.338 in Mayr and Provine). But, alas for this excellent story, Edwin had another son, his second, whom he named Rushton. Rushton emigrated toJava , married, and raised a family, the only one of Edwin's offspring to do so. The lack of productivity in this otherwise capable family was distinctly unusual at that time.Career
Apprenticed at first to a Mr. Ginney, a surgeon of Woodbridge, in 1832 he became Assistant to Thomas Spurgin of
Saffron Walden . Spurgin raised £300 to enable Edwin to study medicine and science from 1834-7 at the newUniversity College London . He attended lectures byJohn Lindley (botany) andRobert Edmund Grant (zoology) — to whose post Edwin's eldest sonE. Ray Lankester succeeded in 1875. Grant had been one of Darwin's tutors at Edinburgh. Edwin's friends at UCL includedWilliam Jenner andWilliam Benjamin Carpenter .Edwin could not afford a complete degree course, so qualified as
MRCS and Licentiate of theSociety of Apothecaries . In 1837 he moved toDoncaster to become resident medical attendant and science tutor to the Woods family of Campsall Hall, recommended by Lindley. The Woods family were "indifferent to religion and fervent Owenites" as he mentioned in a letter home.Robert Owen actually visited Campsall Hall, and Lankester described the event in his diary.In 1839 Lankester left the Woods and travelled to
Heidelberg to take his M.D., which he got in six months. Back in London, he befriendedEdward Forbes and Arthur Henfrey, the botanist. He practised medicine and wrote articles on botany, medicine and surgery for thePenny Cyclopaedia . He contributed to the Biographical Dictionary, and wrote for other journals. As time went by, he became ever more fully absorbed in natural history.In 1841 his study of sulphur
bacteria (then the 'glairine of sulphurous waters') was noteworthy, as was his microscopic examination ofdrinking water . His book the "Aquavivarium" (1856) had a great vogue. He co-founded the important "Quarterly Journal of Microscopical Science" (QJMS) in 1853, and co-edited it withGeorge Busk , and later with his son Ray. "Half-hours with the microscope" (1857) was a best-seller, reprinted until 1918.Edwin Lankester was President of the
British Association for 25 years, and the founder of the Biological Section of the BA. He was present at the infamous Wilberforce-Huxley encounter in 1860. He was the first Secretary of theRay Society , with his wife as Assistant Secretary. In 1845 he was President of the Royal Microscopical Society, and that same year he was elected aFellow of the Royal Society . Twenty years later he became the first President of the Quekett Microscopical Club.Cholera
The cause of London's
cholera outbreaks had been identified byJohn Sutherland (1808–1891) and Dr John Snow (1813-1858; author of the famous map of water pumps nearBroad Street ) the matter was not decided until Lankester established a committee to look into the latest outbreak. The Committee's report (1854) had sections written by Snow and the ReverendHenry Whitehead , a localcurate . They reached the conclusion that the outbreak was attributable to the use of impure water from the well in Broad Street.In 1866, twelve years after the event, Dr. Lankester wrote "The Board of Guardians met to consult what ought to be done. Of that meeting, the late Dr. Snow demanded an audience. He was admitted and gave it as his opinion that the pump in Broad Street, and that pump alone, was the cause of all the pestilence. He was not believed: not a member of his own profession, not an individual in the parish believed that Snow was right. But the pump was closed nevertheless and the plague was stayed."
Lankester later became the first
Medical Officer of Health for theSt. James's district , the area where the outbreak occurred. It still took years before the public authorities acted to ensure the purity of water supply; Snow had been dead for over 30 years when the Chief Medical Office of Health at last acknowledged that his work on the transmission of cholera was one of the most significant medical discoveries of the 19th century.Lankester's interest in this (beyond simple humanity) came through his microscopical examination of water, which is even today one of the standard tests of drinking water quality.
Sources
*English, Mary P. "Victorian Values: The Life and Times of Dr Edwin Lankester M.D., F.R.S." Biopress, Bristol 1990. ISBN 0-948737-14-X
*Lankester, Edwin. "The Aquavivarium". 1856.
*Lankester, Edwin. "Half-hours with the microscope". 1857.
*Lester, Joe "E. Ray Lankester: the making of modern British biology" (edited, with additions, by Peter J. Bowler). BSHS Monograph #9. 1995.
*Mayr, Ernst and Provine, William B. (eds) "The evolutionary synthesis". Harvard 1980; 2nd ed 1998.
*Snow, John. "On the mode of communication of Cholera". Churchill, London 1855.
*Vinten-Johansen, Peter et al. Cholera, chloroform, and the science of medicine: A Life of John Snow. Oxford 2003.
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.