Francis Graham Crookshank

File:Francis Graham Crookshank

Francis Graham Crookshank (1873, Wimbledon – 27 October 1933, Wimpole Street, London) was a British epidemiologist, and a medical and psychological writer, and Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians.

Crookshank was educated at University College London, and trained in medicine at University College Hospital.[1] His work attempted to combine medicine with the individual psychology of Alfred Adler, along with eugenics and the Nietzsche's philosophy of the will.[2][3]

His 123-page scientific racist publication The Mongol in our Midst (1924) was both popular and controversial in both England and the United States. In 1931, Crookshank published a "greatly enlarged and entirely rewritten" 524-page edition "with numerous illustrations," with responses to critics and additional theories and claims.[4] That work associated the disorder now known as Down syndrome with the admixture of Asian with European "blood".[5]

Crookshank committed suicide in 1933,[2] dying at his house in Wimpole Street, London.[1]

Works

References

  1. 1 2 "Francis Graham Crookshank, M.D.". Journal of nervous and mental disease. 79: 122.
  2. 1 2 Thomson, Mathew (2006) Psychological subjects: identity, culture, and health in twentieth-century Britain, Oxford University Press, ISBN 0199287805, p. 86.
  3. 1962-, Keevak, Michael, (2011-01-01). Becoming yellow : a short history of racial thinking. Princeton University Press. ISBN 9780691140315. OCLC 713342093.
  4. Crookshank, Francis (1931). The Mongol in Our Midst: A Study of Man and His Three Faces. London: Kegan Paul, Trench, Trubner & Co.
  5. Howells, John G. and Osborn, M. Livia (1984) A reference companion to the history of abnormal psychology, vol. 1, Greenwood Press, ISBN 0313242615, p. 217.
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