Honorific Prefix: | The Right Honourable |
The Lord Horder | |
Office7: | Member of the House of Lords Lord Temporal |
Term Start7: | 23 January 1933 |
Term End7: | 13 August 1955 Hereditary Peerage |
Predecessor7: | Peerage created |
Successor7: | The 2nd Lord Horder |
Birth Name: | Thomas Jeeves Horder |
Birth Date: | 1871 1, df=y |
Birth Place: | Shaftesbury, England |
Death Place: | Steep, England |
Alma Mater: | University of London |
Occupation: | Physician |
Thomas Jeeves Horder, 1st Baron Horder, (7 January 1871 – 13 August 1955) was a British physician best known for his appointments as physician-in-ordinary to Kings Edward VII, George V, and George VI, and extra physician to Queen Elizabeth II. He was also the chosen physician of three prime ministers. He was knighted in 1918, made a baronet in 1923 and raised to the peerage in 1933.
Thomas Jeeves Horder was born on 7 January 1871, the son of draper Albert Horder, in Shaftesbury, Dorset. Jeeves was his mother's maiden name. He was educated privately, and at the University of London and St Bartholomew's Hospital, London.[1]
Horder began his career at St Bartholomew's Hospital, where his first junior post was under Samuel Gee.[2] When still quite young, Horder successfully made a difficult diagnosis on King Edward VII which made his reputation.[1] In 1908 he was appointed as the first physician to the Cancer Hospital, later known as the Royal Marsden Hospital.[3] [4]
His patients included every British monarch from Edward VII to Elizabeth II (except Edward VIII).[1] They also included two prime ministers, Ramsay MacDonald and Bonar Law,[1] and labour leader Hugh Gaitskell.
He was involved in many official committees including advising the Ministry of Food during World War II.[1] After the war he opposed many of Aneurin Bevan's plans for a national health service and may have helped modify some of those less palatable to the medical profession.
He held the positions of Deputy Lieutenant County of Hampshire; Extra Physician to the Queen (formerly Extra Physician to King George VI); and Consulting Physician to St Bartholomew's Hospital (1912–1936). Knighted in 1918, he was created a Baronet in Bonar Law's resignation honours list (issued on 25 May 1923). He was raised to the peerage as Baron Horder, of Ashford in the County of Southampton on 23 January 1933.
Horder served as president of the British Eugenics Society from 1935 to 1949.[5] [6] He was president of the Cremation Society of Great Britain from 1940 to his death in 1955.
He was president of The Peckham Experiment in 1949.[7]
In 1954, Horder opened the Overdale Crematorium in Bolton.[8] [9] [10]
In 1902, Horder married Geraldine Rose Doggett (1872–1954),[1] of Newnham Manor, Hertfordshire, whose maternal grandfather was James Smith Rose of Arley House, Bristol, who in 1873 was the Mayor of Totnes. Their son was the publisher Mervyn Horder (1910–1997). Their daughter Joy Horder married Edward Cullinan, chief physician at St Bartholomew's Hospital; their son was British architect Edward Cullinan. Endowed with abundant health and vitality to the end [?]; he was succeeded in his title by his son.
Escutcheon: | Per chevron Argent and Sable bezantée in chief a male griffin passant of the second. |
Crest: | Issuant from a rock Proper a demi-male griffin Sable. |
Motto: | Health And A Day[11] |
He lived for many years at Steep near Petersfield, Hampshire, where he died on 13 August 1955.[1]
"...a study of two distinguished English physicians, Thomas Horder and Walter Langdon Brown ... one of these I deem patrician: the world of aristocracy, privilege, deference, tradition, genteel leisure pursuits, face-to-face social relations and charitable service. The other was professional or meritocratic: the world of citizenship, rationally driven progress, impersonal social relations and expert opinion." (p. 421)