Joseph Kidd (1824-1918)

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Joseph Kidd, physician to Disraeli, homeopath, doctor, and author.

[edit] Biography

Joseph Kidd was born in Limerick, Ireland, on 15 February 1824, one of at least fifteen children of Thomas Keane Kidd, a merchant. After medical training locally and in Dublin he moved to London to join the Homoeopathic Hospital, and then almost immediately returned to Ireland to help victims of the Potato Famine. Returning to London he established successful practices in Blackheath and the City of London. In 1850 he married Sophia McKern, a childhood friend, with whom he had eight children, including Percy Marmaduke Kidd, the eldest. Sophia died in 1872, and in 1875 Kidd married Frances Octavia Rouse, with whom he had another seven children. He continued working until 1912, when he was nearly 90 years old and died aged 94 on 20 August 1918, in Hastings, Sussex.

Among his descendants are:

  • Eric Leslie Kidd, cricketer, Director of Guinness Ltd.
  • Ronald Kidd, co-founder and Director of The National Council for Civil Liberties (now called Liberty).

[edit] Publications

Among his published writings are:

  • Homaeopathy in Acute Diseases, Narrative of a Mission to Ireland During the Famine of 1847_ (London, 1849)
  • Directions for the Homaeopathic Treatment of Cholera (London, 1866)
  • The laws of Therapeutics, a Sketch (London, 1878)
  • Heart Disease and the Nauheim Treatment (London, 1897)
  • Heart Disease and the Nauheim Treatment, With a New Chapter 2nd ed. (London, 1898)
  • 'The Engadine - summer and winter. An account of its lifestyle, its people, etc.', in The Nineteenth Century (1888)

[edit] Sources

  • Dorothy McCall, When That I Was (London: Faber and Faber, 1952)
  • Walter Kidd, Joseph Kidd 1824 - 1918: Limerick, London, Blackheath: A Memoir (privately printed, 1920, revised 1983)
  • Francis Treuherz, Homoeopathy in the Irish Potato Famine (London: Samuel Press, 1995) (Available online at http://www.homeoint.org/books/treuherz/index.htm)