James Wardrop | |
Birth Date: | 1782 |
Birth Place: | Torbane Hill, Linlithgowshire |
Burial Place: | Bathgate Old Kirk |
Occupation: | Surgeon and ophthalmologist |
Father: | James Wardrop (1738-1830) |
Mother: | Marjorie |
Relatives: | Andrew Wardrop |
Dr James Wardrop or Wardrope FRSE FRCSEd FRCS (1782–1869) was a Scottish surgeon and ophthalmologist.
Wardrop was born on 14 August 1782, the youngest son of James Wardrop (1738-1830) and his wife, Marjory Marjoribanks, at Torbane Hill, near Linlithgow, West Lothian, but at four years of age moved with the family to live in Edinburgh where he attended the High School, and then St Andrews University. In 1800 he was apprenticed to a leading firm of surgeon apothecaries in Edinburgh, which included Benjamin Bell, James Russell and his great uncle Andrew Wardrop, former president of the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh,[1] and in 1801 was appointed House Surgeon at Edinburgh Royal Infirmary.
He trained in London from 1801 under John Abernethy and Astley Cooper, then, from 1803 undertook further studies in Paris before moving to Vienna, where he joined his friend John Wishart studying ophthalmology under Georg Joseph Beer, one of the most celebrated eye surgeons in Europe. He was admitted a Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh in 1804 and worked at the Public Dispensary and set up in surgical practice specialising as an ophthalmic surgeon. In 1807 he became assistant curator of Surgeons' Hall Museum under Professor John Thomson and was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh in 1808, upon the proposal of Andrew Wardrop, Alexander Keith of Dunnottar and James Russell.[2] In 1805 he was elected a member of the Aesculapian Club.[3] In 1808 he was sharing a large Georgian house in Edinburgh's First New Town at 4 South Hanover Street.[4]
Wardrop moved to London, where he worked as an ophthalmic surgeon from 1809 to 1869. He was awarded his doctorate (MD) by his alma mater, St Andrews University, in 1834. He taught surgery from 1826 at the Aldersgate Street medical academy with Sir William Lawrence and Frederick Tyrrell, and published surgical treatises.[5] Wardrop was early appointed Surgeon-in-Ordinary to the Prince Regent. This annoyed his rivals in London, and he found the doors of the large hospitals closed to him. In retaliation he founded the West London Hospital for Surgery near the Edgware Road, and invited general practitioners to watch him operate. Further royal honours came, but he declined a baronetcy (in lieu of royal fees) and moved out of royal circles. His social gifts, a knowledge of horses and marriage to a wife with aristocratic connections, brought him popularity.[6]
Wardrop became a Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons of England in 1843.[7] He died at Charles Street off St James Square, London on 13 February 1869.[8] On his death he was buried in Bathgate Old Kirk.
In 1809, Wardrop published Observations on Fungus Haematodes or Soft Cancer in which he for the first time described as an entity a pediatric eye cancer now known as retinoblastoma;[9] and, unknowingly, a uveal melanoma that he helped to enucleate and that later metastasized to the liver.[10]
Wardrop was associated with Thomas Wakley in the founding of The Lancet in 1823, for which he first wrote savage articles and, later, witty and scurrilous lampoons in his column 'Intercepted Letters'. The letters, under the pseudonym "Brutus", were thinly disguised as by leading London surgeons, revealing their nepotism, venality and incompetence. There was enough truth in them to make the parodies sting.
In 1813 Wardrop married Margaret, daughter of Col. George L. Dalrymple of East Lothian and the widow of Captain Burn. They had four sons and a daughter.