Harvey Club of London explained

The Harvey Club of London
Type:Medical Society
Purpose:Education
Leader Title:President
Leader Name:Paul Cooper
Founder:James W. Crane
Founding Location:London, Ontario
Website:The Harvey Club of London
Location:The University of Western Ontario, London, Ontario

The Harvey Club of London is the oldest currently active medical club in Canada.[1] It was founded by Drs. James W. Crane and C.M. Crawford in 1919 in London, Ontario. The club was initially founded as a way for practicing physicians to stay abreast of new developments in biomedical sciences, analogous to the modern concept of continuing medical education, a function that it continues to perform with annual presentations of papers. The club also provides academic and financial support to students at the medical school of Western University.[2]

Origins

In response to a number of requests to have a medical refresher course, Dr. James W. Crane and others founded the Harvey club in 1919, at the end of the first World War. Annual dinner meetings were held initially at Tecumseh house in London, Ontario, where members would present papers. The club was named after William Harvey, renowned English physician and physiologist, famous for the detailed description of the systemic circulation as a closed circuit.[3]

In addition to presentations, the club briefly published papers into a locally distributed journal, The Bulletin of Harvey Club, which was republished in the Canadian Medical Association Journal.[4] More commonly, papers presented at the Harvey Club are published in other journals.[3] [5] [6]

The motto of the club is "Dii laboribus omnia vendunt" which is Latin for "the Gods sell everything for effort". It may originate from epigrams published in 1666 by Antoine-Ferdinand Van Vlaenderen. Members of the club personify William Harvey, as a physician scientist, by using the appellation “Harvey”, when addressing each other at meetings. The gavel used at meetings is made of wood from Harvey House in Folkestone, Kent. A toast to William Harvey is given at the club’s annual Harvey Oration dinner on April 1, Harvey's birthday. The club president replies to the toast with a speech in which he impersonates Harvey.[7]

The Harvey Club Today

The Harvey Club meets four times a year to present papers related to developments relevant to medicine related to the sciences, humanities, and world events.The club provides a scholarship for medical students studying at Western University. The Harvey Club of London Prize is awarded to the medical student with the best paper presented on the history of medicine. The award has a financial component, and the name of the recipient is engraved on a silver plate.[8]

Notable Members

Source:[9]

Honorary Members

Source:[19]

Other notable medical associations named after William Harvey

The Harveian Society of Edinburgh was founded in 1782 by Dr Andrew Duncan.[20] [21] The Society holds an annual Festival in honour of Harvey in either the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh or the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh. At the annual Festival, an oration is given by the President to commemorate Harvey's life and work.

The Harveian Society of London is a medical society founded in 1831 based in The Medical Society of London, Chandos Street, in Cavendish Square.

The Royal College of Physicians of London holds an annual lecture, established by William Harvey in 1656, called the Harveian Oration.

The Harvey Society, founded in 1905, is based in New York City and hosts an annual lecture series on recent advances in biomedical sciences.

References

  1. Book: A century of medicine at Western : a centennial history of the Faculty of Medicine, University of Western Ontario. Barr, Murray Llewellyn. 1977. University of Western Ontario. 0919534007. London. 4045914. registration.
  2. Web site: Harvey Club of London. 2019-03-11.
  3. McAlister. Vivian C.. 2007. William Harvey, Fabricius ab Acquapendente and the divide between medicine and surgery. Canadian Journal of Surgery. 50. 1. 7–8. 0008-428X. 2384247. 17391608.
  4. Spence. E.. 1922. Bulletin of Harvey Club, London. Canadian Medical Association Journal. 12. 7. 493–494. 0008-4409. 1524496. 20314159.
  5. McKellar. Shelley. April 2016. Dr. William Waugh (1851–1936): promoter of change in nineteenth century medical education and practice. Canadian Journal of Surgery. 59. 2. 143–144. 10.1503/cjs.002416. 0008-428X. 4814289. 27007095.
  6. Western University. 1939-03-01. UWOMJ Volume 9, No 3, March 1939. University of Western Ontario Medical Journal.
  7. Web site: Harvey Club of London, Our History and Activities . 2022-03-15.
  8. Web site: The Harvey Club of London Prize - Harvey Club of London Prize Winners - Western University. www.schulich.uwo.ca. 2019-02-17.
  9. Harvey Club fonds, Western Archives AFC 39 - 3/1, 39 - 3/2, 39 - 3/3, https://www.lib.uwo.ca/files/archives/archives_finding_aids/AFC%2039%20-%20Harvey%20Club.pdf
  10. Web site: Order of Canada citation Charles George Drake . 2022-03-15.
  11. Web site: Order of Canada citation Murray Barr . 2022-03-15.
  12. Web site: Order of Canada citation Robert Laing Noble . 2022-03-15.
  13. Web site: Order of Canada citation Douglas Bocking . 2022-03-15.
  14. Web site: Order of Canada citation Ramsay Willis Gunton . 2022-03-15.
  15. Web site: Order of Canada citation Cecil Rorabecl . 2022-03-15.
  16. Web site: Order of Canada citation William Wall . 2022-03-15.
  17. Web site: Order of Canada citation Vivian McAlister . 2022-03-15.
  18. Web site: Order of Canada citation M. Lee Myers . 2022-03-15.
  19. Harvey Club fonds, Western Archives AFC 39 - 1/4 https://www.lib.uwo.ca/files/archives/archives_finding_aids/AFC%2039%20-%20Harvey%20Club.pdf
  20. Book: Minute Books of the Harveian Society. Library of the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh.
  21. Book: Watson Wemyss, Herbert Lindesay. A Record of the Edinburgh Harveian Society. T&A Constable, Edinburgh. 1933. en.