List of Broderip scholars

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The Broderip scholarship of the Middlesex Hospital is named for Francis Broderip, a large benefactor to the hospital in 1871. [1] [2]

Recipients of the scholarship include:

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Sir William Gilliatt was an English gynaecologist at the Middlesex Hospital and King's College Hospital, London.

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Francis Broderip was a solicitor of Lincoln's Inn, art collector, and philanthropist. In 1866 he gave £20,000 of Brazilian bonds to the Middlesex Hospital, London, on condition that the gift was kept secret during his lifetime. He also endowed the Law Society's Broderip Prize of a gold medal to a promising young lawyer. In 1987 the Broderip Ward was opened at the Middlesex Hospital, the first ward dedicated to the care and treatment of people affected by HIV/AIDS in the United Kingdom.

Roger William Gilliatt was a British professor of neurology at the National Hospital, Queen Square, where he specialised in the peripheral nervous system. He was a recipient of the Broderic scholarship of the Middlesex Hospital. His father was Sir William Gilliatt, the Queen's gynaecologist.

Sir Edward Grainger Muir, was a British pathologist and colorectal surgeon. He was a recipient of the Broderip scholarship of the Middlesex Hospital and later held appointments at King's College Hospital, the Queen Victoria Hospital, and the King Edward VII's Hospital for Officers, where he was on the list of honorary medical staff. He was president of the Royal College of Surgeons, the Medical Society of London, the Harveian Society, and of the Proctological Section and Section of Surgery of the Royal Society of Medicine, London. Muir was appointed surgeon to the British Royal Household in 1954, and surgeon to the Queen in 1964. Shortly before his death he was made Serjeant Surgeon. He was knighted in 1970.

Charles Arthur Morris (1860–1942), was a British surgeon to the King Edward VII's Hospital for Officers during the Boer War in South Africa. In 1914 he was on the list of honorary medical staff at the hospital, compiled by Sister Agnes, with whom he was good friends, and served at the hospital during the First World War.

Alfred Milne Gossage, was a British physician and dean of Westminster Hospital. He was an author in Garrod, Batten and Thursfield's Diseases of Children and Latham and English's System of Treatment. In 1908, he coined the term woolly hair after observing it in 18 members in three generations of a European family. He received the CBE in 1920.

References

  1. Shaw, C. D.; Winterton, W. R. (1983). The Middlesex Hospital: The names of the wards and the stories they tell (PDF). Hertford: Stephen Austin and Sons Ltd. p. 14.
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