- Thomas Southwood Smith
Thomas Southwood Smith (
December 21 ,1788 -December 10 ,1861 ), Englishphysician and sanitary reformer, was born atMartock ,Somerset shire.While a medical student in
Edinburgh he took charge of aUnitarian congregation. In 1816 he took his M.D. degree, and began to practice at Yeovil, Somerset, also becoming minister at a chapel in that town, but removed in 1820 toLondon , devoting himself principally to medicine.In 1824 he was appointed physician to the
London Fever Hospital , and in 1830 published "A Treatise on Fever", which was at once accepted as a standard authority on the subject. In this book he established the direct connection between the impoverishment of the poor and epidemic fever. He was frequently consulted in fever epidemics and on sanitary matters by public authorities, and his reports onquarantine (1845),cholera (1850),yellow fever (1852), and on the results of sanitary improvement (1854) were of international importance. He died inFlorence and is interred there in theEnglish Cemetery of Florence , his tombstone sculpted byJoel Tanner Hart .His granddaughters were Miranda and
Octavia Hill .Southwood Smith was a dedicated
utilitarian , and a close friend ofJeremy Bentham . He had a particular interest in applying his philosophical beliefs to the field of medical research. In 1827 he published "The Use of the Dead to the Living", a pamphlet which argued that the current system of burial was a wasteful use of bodies that could otherwise be used for dissection by the medical profession.On 9 June 1832, Southwood Smith carried out the highly controversial public dissection of
Jeremy Bentham (who had died 3 days earlier) at the Webb Street School of Anatomy in London. In a speech before the dissection, Southwood Smith argued that:"If, by any appropriation of the dead, I can promote the happiness of the living, then it is my duty to conquer the reluctance I may feel to such a disposition of the dead, however well-founded or strong that reluctance may be".
Southwood Smith's lobbying helped lead to the 1832 Anatomy Act, the controversial legislation which allowed the state to seize unclaimed corpses from workhouses and sell them to surgical schools. While this act is widely credited with ending the practice of grave robbery, it has also been condemned as highly discriminatory against the poor.
References
*1911
Further reading
* Cook GC. Thomas Southwood Smith FRCP (1788–1861): leading exponent of diseases of poverty, and pioneer of sanitary reform in the mid-nineteenth century. "J. Med. Biog." (2002) 10(4): 194–205
External links
*worldcat id|lccn-n86-850511
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