Hugh James (1750–February 1797) was a Scottish physician and surgeon.
Hugh James was the son of William James Hugh and Jane Senhouse. Born into a Scottish family, well-established in Jamaica, Hugh James became well known as a physician on the island. He may have studied and practiced medicine in Edinburgh before returning to Jamaica, as one Dr. Hugh James of Edinburgh recommended future revolutionary Jean-Paul Marat for a medical degree at St. Andrews University in 1775. He was elected as a member to the American Philosophical Society in 1785.[1] Along with William Buchan, he recommended Jean-Paul Marat for a medical degree from St. Andrews.[2]
In 1787, back in Jamaica, he served as Physician General for Cornwall County in the Jamaican militia. James earned a name for himself testing new and innovative treatments, including the use of yellow cinchona bark as a treatment for fever. He suffered and survived a bout of yellow fever himself, a disease not uncommon in Jamaica in those days. James’ familiarity with the disease in his correspondence indicates an intimate knowledge of the sickness and its treatments and remedies.[3]
He married his second wife Elizabeth Williams, on June 8, 1794 in Westmoreland. The name of his first wife is not known. From his first marriage, he had four children: Marion, Jane Susanna, William John, and Hugo. With Elizabeth, he had three more children: Hugo, Cordelia, and Eliza.[4]
He died of a fever and dysentery not long after purchasing a plantation in Westmoreland Parish, Jamaica.