Thomas Denman (physician)

Dr Thomas Denman

portrait by William Skelton
Born 1733[1]
Bakewell, Derbyshire
Died 1815[1]
London
Education Bakewell grammar school
Occupation Physician
Parent(s) John

Thomas Denman, the elder, M.D. (17331815) was an English physician. He was the second son of John Denman (or Thomas[2]), an apothecary born at Bakewell, Derbyshire, on 27 June 1733. After a career in naval medicine he made a considerable amount of money in midwifery. The phenomenon of Denman's spontaneous evolution, by which a spontaneous impaction of the shoulder of a foetus resolves a difficult transverse delivery during childbirth, is named after him.[3] He used his authority to support inducing premature labour in cases of narrow pelvis and other conditions in England (where the mother's life is imperiled by delivery at the full-time).[1]

Biography

Denman was educated at Lady Manners School. He came to London in 1753, and began to study medicine at St George's Hospital. He entered the medical service of the Royal Navy as a surgeon's mate, and in 1757 became a surgeon. Attached, till 1763, to the ship HMS Edgar, when, on the conclusion of peace, he left the service. He then continued his medical studies, and attended the lectures on midwifery of Dr. William Smellie, one of the best observers and most original writers on this field of medical study, and to whose instruction the future distinction of Denman was in part due. He graduated from medical training at Aberdeen 13 July 1764, and began practice as a physician at Winchester. He got so little to do that he returned to London and tried to re-enter the navy, but failed to get an appointment. He obtained, however, the post of surgeon to a royal yacht, the duties of which did not often take him away from London, while the retainer of £70 a year was an important addition to his income. He lectured on midwifery, and continued to do so for fifteen years. In 1769 he was elected physician accoucheur to the Middlesex Hospital, and held the post till his large practice forced him to give it up in 1783. In that year he was admitted a licentiate in mid-wifery of the College of Physicians.[1]

In 1791, having accumulated a considerable fortune, he bought a country house at Feltham in Middlesex. He never gave up practice altogether, but limited it to consultations.

He was the first physician whose authority made the practice general in England of inducing premature labour in cases of narrow pelvis and other conditions, in which the mother's life is imperilled by the attempt to deliver at the full-time.[1]

There are three volumes of the Diaries of John Knyveton edited by Ernest Gray, published between 1937 and 1946, that are clearly based on the life of Thomas Denman, although they do not state this. The first volume has inaccuracies with regards to dates for some events but a quick analysis of the two later volumes reveals that Denman and Knyveton are the same person. Although some of the dates are incorrect, there are fewer inaccuracies than in the first volume. [4]

Family

Denman died at his town house in Mount Street, London, 26 November 1815, and was buried in the St. James' Church in Piccadilly. His wife was Elizabeth, daughter of Alexander Brodie, who survived him till 1833. Thomas had an elder brother who was also a doctor and published a book called Treatise on Buxton Water, he married an heiress. When he died he left his wealth to Thomas's son.[2] His eldest son, Thomas Denman the younger became Chief justice of England, one of his two daughters married Dr. Matthew Baillie, the pathologist, and the other Sir Richard Croft, M.D.[1] Croft was trained by Denman and eventually committed suicide as a result of losing a princess's child.

Major publications

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Dictionary of National Biography now in the public domain
  2. 1 2 History of the Village of Stoney Middleton By Thomas E. Cowen (1910) accessed 14 November 2007
  3. online medical dictionary accessed 20 November 2007
  4. Ernest Gray and the Diaries of John Knyveton, M.D. accessed 19 October 2013
  5. The symptoms are accurately described, but Denman failed to discover their pathological nature, and though he had noted that calomel was sometimes useful he was criticised for not noting that mercury was considered to be a cure. His biography noted that Sir William Jenner, speaking at a royal commission in 1867, stated that he had told a clinical assistant who failed to prescribe Mercury that he was guilty of the death of the patient.

Further reading


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