Golding Bird
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Golding Bird (born December 9, 1814 in Norfolk, England; died October 27, 1854 in Tunbridge Wells) was a British medical doctor.
Bird was educated at a private school in London. He apprenticed in a pharmacy.
He became a great authority in kidney diseases.
He is buried in Woodbury Park Cemetery, Tunbridge Wells.
[edit] Works
- Elements of Natural Philosophy; being an experimental introduction to the study of the physical sciences (John Churchill, London, 1839)
- Lectures on Electricity and Galvanism, in their physiological and therapeutical relations, delivered at the Royal College of Physicians, in March, 1847 (Wilson & Ogilvy, London, 1847)
- Lectures on the Influence of Researches in Organic Chemistry on Therapeutics, especially in relation to the depuration of the blood, delivered at the Royal College of Physicians (Wilson & Ogilvy, London, 1848)
- Urinary Deposits, their diagnosis, pathology and therapeutical indications (John Churchill, London, 1844)
- Case of Internal Strangulation of Intestine relieved by operation (From Transactions of the Royal Medico-Chirurgical Society), with John Hilton (Richard Kinder, London, [1847])