- William Guybon Atherstone
William Guybon Atherstone
27 May 1814 Nottingham , England -26 March 1898 )Grahamstown , Cape Province, medical practitioner, naturalist andgeologist , one of the pioneers ofSouth Africa ngeology and a member of the Cape Parliament.He arrived in South Africa with his parents as
1820 Settlers . His father, Dr John Atherstone, was appointed District Surgeon ofUitenhage in 1822. William, a young man of wide interests and outstanding ability, received his first training at Dr James Rose Innes's academy inUitenhage , being at first apprenticed to his father and then serving as Assistant-Surgeon in the Sixth Frontier War 1834-1835. In 1836 he studied medicine in Dublin and was admitted as M.R.C.S. the following year, obtaining anM.D. inHeidelberg , Germany in 1839, returning to Grahamstown in the same year and joining his father in practice. He carried out research in lung-sickness, horse-sickness and tick-borne fever and was in 1847 the first surgeon outside Europe and America to perform an amputation using an anaesthetic. In 1839 his interest was aroused ingeology , and from that date he devoted the leisure resulting from a long and successful medical career to the pursuit of geologicalscience .In 1857 he published an account of the rocks and
fossils ofUitenhage (the latter described more fully by R Tate, "Quart. Journal Geol. Soc.", 1867). He also studied many fossilreptilia from theKarroo beds, and sent specimens to theBritish Museum . These were described by SirRichard Owen .Atherstone's identification, in 1867, with the help of
Peter MacOwan and HG Galpin, of a crystal found at De Kalk nearHopetown , as adiamond led indirectly to the establishment of thediamond industry of South Africa. He encouraged the workings atJagersfontein , and he also called attention to the diamandiferous pipe at Kimberley. He was partly responsible for the foundation of the Grahamstown library, botanical garden and, in 1855, the Albany Museum.He travelled widely in the eastern Cape,
Namaqualand and theTransvaal , collecting minerals, fossils, plant specimens and seeds, sending material to Hooker at Kew. He was a friend ofAndrew Geddes Bain of pass-building fame. He was made F.R.C.S. in 1863 and F.G.S in 1864. He represented Grahamstown as Member of Parliament from 1881-1883 whence he was elected to the Legislative Council where he served until 1891.He is commemorated in the genus "Atherstonea" Pappe and in the names of various fossil reptiles. He was one of the founders of the Geological Society of South Africa at
Johannesburg in 1895. He died at Grahamstown, onMarch 26 ,1898 .See the obituary by T Rupert Jones, "Natural Science", vol. xiv. January 1899).
Family
*father: John Atherstone *25 January 1793
Nottingham , England. He died in 1853 at Table Farm,Grahamstown
*mother: Elizabeth Damant *c1785. She died at Table Farm,Grahamstown She married John Atherstone in 1811 in St John's, Westminster, London, England.
*siblings:
#John Craddock Atherstone.
#William Guybon Atherstone
#Catherine Damant Atherstone
#Elizabeth Atherstone was born in 1817.
#Emily Atherstone
#John Frederick Korsten Atherstone
#Bliss Ann Atherstone
#Caroline AtherstoneReferences
*1911
*"Botanical Exploration in Southern Africa" - Mary Gunn & LE Codd (Balkema 1981)
*"The Story of the British Settlers of 1820 in South Africa" - H.E. Hockly (Juta & Co. 1948)
* [http://www.tantrem.com/tremaine/pafg16.htm#736 Atherstone family]
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