Thomas Morton (1813–1849) was an English surgeon.
Born 20 March 1813 in the parish of St. Andrew, Newcastle upon Tyne, he was the youngest son of Joseph Morton, a master mariner, and brother of Andrew Morton the portrait painter. He was apprenticed to James Church, house-surgeon to the Newcastle Infirmary, and then in 1832 became a medical student at University College, London.[1]
Admitted a member of the Royal College of Surgeons of England on 24 July 1835, Morton was appointed house-surgeon at the North London Hospital under Samuel Cooper, unusually being reappointed when after one year of office. In 1836 he was made demonstrator of anatomy jointly with Mr. Ellis, a post he held for nine years. In 1842 he became assistant surgeon to the hospital, the first student of the college to join the staff.[1]
In 1848 Morton was appointed full surgeon to the hospital on the resignation of James Syme. He was also surgeon to the Queen's Bench prison in succession to Cooper, his father-in-law. He was a candidate for the professorship of surgery at University College when James Arnott was appointed.[1]
Morton committed suicide on 29 October 1849, at his house in Woburn Place, London.[1]
Morton's works were:[1]
They were illustrated by his brother Andrew Morton,[1] and lithographed by William Fairland.[2]
Morton married Mary Ann, the only daughter of Samuel Cooper, the author of the Surgical Dictionary,[1] and they had one daughter.[3]
He is buried with his brother Andrew on the west side of Highgate Cemetery.
Attribution