Robert William Smith (12 October 1807, Dublin – 28 October 1873) was an Irish surgeon and pathologist who described Smith's fracture in his 1847 book,[1] the first important book on fractures by an Irish author.[2]
Robert William Smith studied medicine in his native Dublin, receiving his Licentiate of the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland in 1832. He received his M.D. from Trinity College, Dublin in 1842, and became a Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland in 1844. He became the first Professor of Surgery at Trinity College in 1847,[3] and a member of the Royal Irish Academy in 1849. He worked as surgeon to the Hospital for the Mentally Ill, Sir Patrick Dun's Hospital and Richmond Hospital, Dublin and taught surgery and forensic medicine at the Richmond Hospital. He cofounded the Dublin Pathological Society in 1838 with Abraham Colles, Sir Dominic Corrigan and William Stokes.[4]
Robert Smith published on a wide variety of subjects, particularly the pathology of surgical diseases, congenital joint dislocations and neuroma. In his 1847 book A Treatise on Fractures in the Vicinity of Joints and on Certain Forms of Accidental and Congenital Dislocations he corrected Colles's description of the Colles' fracture, stating that:
Smith also described his own eponymous fracture in the same chapter. In his Treatise on the Pathology, Diagnosis and Treatment of Neuroma[5] he described neurofibromatosis 33 years before von Recklinghausen.[6]