Francis Graham Crookshank Explained

Francis Graham Crookshank (1873, Wimbledon – 27 October 1933, Wimpole Street, London) was a British epidemiologist, and a medical and psychological writer, and Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians.

Crookshank was educated at University College London and trained in medicine at University College Hospital.[1] His work attempted to combine medicine with the individual psychology of Alfred Adler, along with eugenics and Nietzsche's philosophy of the will.[2] [3]

His 123-page scientific racist publication The Mongol in our Midst (1924) was both popular and controversial in both England and the United States. In 1931, Crookshank published a "greatly enlarged and entirely rewritten" 524-page edition "with numerous illustrations," with responses to critics and additional theories and claims.[4] That work incorrectly associated the disorder now known as Down syndrome with the admixture of Asian and European "blood".[5]

Crookshank died in 1933 at his house in Wimpole Street, Westminster, from suicide.

Works

Notes and References

  1. Francis Graham Crookshank, M.D. Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease. 79. 122. 10.1097/00005053-193401000-00086. 1934. 220554998.
  2. Thomson, Mathew (2006) Psychological subjects: identity, culture, and health in twentieth-century Britain, Oxford University Press,, p. 86.
  3. Book: Becoming yellow : a short history of racial thinking. Keevak, Michael. 2011-01-01. Princeton University Press. 9780691140315. 713342093.
  4. Book: Crookshank, Francis. The Mongol in Our Midst: A Study of Man and His Three Faces. Kegan Paul, Trench, Trubner & Co.. 1931. London.
  5. Howells, John G. and Osborn, M. Livia (1984) A reference companion to the history of abnormal psychology, vol. 1, Greenwood Press,, p. 217.