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Thomas Michael Greenhow
British doctor (1792–1881)
British doctor (1792–1881)
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Thomas Michael Greenhow MD MRCS FRCS (5 July 1792 – 25 October 1881) was an English surgeon and epidemiologist.
Career

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Greenhow was the second son of Edward Martin Greenhow, an army surgeon from North Shields. He was a medical graduate of the University of Edinburgh and became MRCS (London) in 1814, having been a surgery student at London's Guy's and St Thomas's Hospitals.
Greenhow spent much of his working life in Newcastle. He and fellow surgeon Sir John Fife are recorded together in 1827 as being Eminent Persons of Newcastle and Gateshead. Greenhow's surgical inventions were heralded by London surgeons in the 1830s. Debrett's records that Greenhow was a Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons of England, having become, in 1843, one of the original 300 fellows.
Greenhow worked in all areas of surgery and had a particular interest in obstetrics and gynaecology; in 1845, he controversially published detailed accounts regarding his views on the gynaecological status of Harriet Martineau, who was both his patient and sister-in-law.
Greenhow was a pioneer in the establishment of the Durham University and in 1855 was a lecturer at the Newcastle's Medical College, in connection with Durham University. He and Sir John Fife founded what would become the Newcastle University College of Medicine. The two men also founded Newcastle's Eye Infirmary. Greenhow worked as the senior surgeon at the Newcastle Infirmary, later renamed the Royal Victoria Infirmary, for many years and was instrumental in its expansion in the 1850s. While working there, he trained John Snow. Greenhow and Snow both advocated for the usage of chloroform when performing major surgery and undertook "dedicated research" to end the London cholera pandemic. Greenhow's son, surgeon Henry Martineau Greenhow, reported in The Lancet his father's surgical success involving chloroform.
Greenhow and his nephew, physician Edward Headlam Greenhow, undertook much research into medical hygiene and public health, publishing papers throughout the 1850s warning of further impending cholera pandemics. The archives of King's College London hold an 1866 letter from E. H. Greenhow concerning the 1849 cholera breakout in Manchester, with which both men were greatly involved. The Lancet records that at a meeting in 1855 of the Epidemiological Society of London, John Snow responded to a paper being read out by Edward Headlam Greenhow in which the research of his uncle, Thomas Michael Greenhow, concerning the 1831–32 cholera epidemic in Tynemouth was outlined. On 6 May 1856, Thomas Greenhow delivered a lecture on this topic at his alma mater, St Thomas' Hospital, where Snow was working as an anaesthetist. In October 1856, Edward Headlam Greenhow became Lecturer on Public Health at St Thomas'.
Thomas Greenhow retired to Leeds in 1860, dying there on 25 October 1881 at Newton Hall.
Family
Greenhow's first wife was Elizabeth Martineau (1794–1850), who succumbed to tuberculosis after producing four children. She was a daughter of Thomas Martineau and Elizabeth Rankin, of the prosperous, socially reformist Martineau family, mainly based in Birmingham. His wife's siblings included the religious philosopher James Martineau and the sociologist and political theorist Harriet Martineau. Greenhow's sister Sarah (1801–1891) married George Martineau (1792–1857), cousin of his wife Elizabeth.
Greenhow's first child Her eldest son's first daughter was Olive Christiana Middleton (née Lupton), the great-grandmother of Catherine, Princess of Wales.
Greenhow's first son and second child, Edward Meadows Greenhow, (1822–1840) died at the age of 18. His second son, Henry Martineau Greenhow (1829–1912), He joined the Indian Medical Service spending his entire career in British India, and rising to surgeon major. He married Jessie, daughter of Thomas Lombe Taylor. Their son Wilfred Harry Greenhow (1872–1950) went to Marlborough College and Exeter college, Oxford MA. Wilfred's daughter Anita Diana (1917–1991) married Walter Julian Algernon Boyle, grandson of Henry Boyle 5th Earl Shannon. Greenhow's third and youngest son, Judge William Thomas Greenhow (1831–1921) received his Bachelor of Laws at Somerset House at King's College London in 1853. He married his second cousin Marion, eldest daughter of Charles Martineau. They had a daughter, Mabel.
In 1854 at Leeds' Mill Hill Chapel, Greenhow married his second wife, Anne (1812–1905), daughter of William Lupton, the father-in-law of Greenhow's daughter Frances Lupton.
References
References
- (28 May 2020). "The Duchess of Cambridge's Ancestor Would Have Led The Fight Against Covid 19". Daily Telegraph.
- (2016). "Royal College of Surgeons - Plarr's Lives of the Fellows: Greenhow, Thomas Michael (1792 - 1881)". Royal College of Surgeons.
- (1891). "The Monthly Chronicle of...".
- (1956). "Newcastle Medical Journal: The Journal of the Newcastle Upon Tyne and Northern Counties Medical Society, Volume 25". The Society.
- (1843). "London, Volumes 5-6". C. Knight & Company.
- (1956). "Newcastle Medical Journal: The Journal of the Newcastle Upon Tyne and Northern Counties Medical Society, Volume 25". The Society.
- (1827). "History, directory, and gazetteer of the counties of Durham and Northumberland". W. Parson.
- (1834). "The Medical Quarterly Review". Oxford University.
- (1896). "Debrett's Illustrated House of Commons, and the Judicial Bench". Dean & son.
- (2015). "Thomas Michael Greenhow". The Royal College of Surgeons of England.
- (1995). "The Durham University Journal, Volume 87". University of Durham.
- (2016). "Royal College of Surgeons - Plarr's Lives of the Fellows: Greenhow, Thomas Michael (1792 - 1881)". Royal College of Surgeons.
- (1992). "Harriet Martineau, first woman sociologist". Berg.
- (29 April 2011). "Literary Celebrity, Gender, and Victorian Authorship, 1850–1914". Rowman & Littlefield.
- (1855). "The Ecclesiastical gazette, or, Monthly register of the affairs of the Church of England". Oxford University.
- (2015). "Thomas Michael Greenhow". The Royal College of Surgeons of England.
- Bettany, G. T.. (2004). "Fife, Sir John (1795–1871), surgeon and politician". Oxford University Press.
- Gosden, Peter. (2004). "Lupton [née Greenhow], Frances Elizabeth (1821–1892), educationist". Oxford University Press.
- (2003). "Cholera, Chloroform, and the Science of Medicine: A Life of John Snow". Oxford University Press.
- "Cholera, Chloroform, and the Science of Medicine : A Life of John Snow".
- (28 May 2020). "The Duchess of Cambridge's Ancestor Would Have Led The Fight Against Covid 19". Daily Telegraph.
- (14 July 1849). "Case in Surgery, Having Been Placed Under The Influence Of Chloroform – The Lancet". J. Onwhyn.
- (1855). "Cholera in Tynemouth (1831–32) .....The London Lancet". Burgess, Stringer & Company.
- (1852). "Cholera from the east. A letter [paper] addressed to Mayor of Newcastle-upon-Tyne James Hodgson, etc". E. Charnley.
- (1965). "Public health in the nineteenth century". E. & S. Livingstone.
- (2019). "Letter from E. Headlam Greenhow (1814–1888), Apr 1866 relating to a 1849 report on cholera – College Archives » The Collection –". King's College London.
- (2015). "Thomas Michael Greenhow". The Royal College of Surgeons of England.
- "Cholera Online, 1817 to 1900" "Disease Outbreaks" – History of the cholera in Manchester, in 1849: as reported to the Registrar ..... Author(s): Greenhow, T. M. (Thomas Michael), 1791–1881". U.S. National Library of Medicine.
- Greenhow, E. Headlam. (1855). "The London Lancet – Epidemiological Society, paper read by E. Headlam Greenhow on the cholera [epidemic] in Tynemouth (1831–32)....". Burgess, Stringer & Company.
- "The National CV of Britain: A non-PC history of Britain". Edfu books.
- (15 May 2017). "Water-Supply and Public Health Engineering". Routledge.
- (1856). "Association medical journal: 1856". Provincial Medical and Surgical Association.
- (1849). "Dislocation of the Hip-Joint – Reduced under the Influence of Chloroform. T. M. Greenhow, September 1, 1849". Provincial Medical and Surgical Journal.
- "Newcastle Infirmary Time Line 1801–1849". Newcastle University.
- "Newcastle Infirmary Time Line 1850–1888". Newcastle University.
- (21 April 1866). "Chloroform". The British Medical Journal.
- (1855). "Cholera in Tynemouth (1831–32) .....The London Lancet". Burgess, Stringer & Company.
- "Elizabeth Greenhow (Martineau)".
- (2015). "Thomas Michael Greenhow". The Royal College of Surgeons of England.
- (April 2011). "Ancestry of Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge". New England Historic Genealogical Society.
- Fox-Davies, Arthur Charles. (1902). "Armorial Families: A Directory of Gentlemen of Coat-armour, Showing which Arms in Use at the Moment are Borne by Legal Authority". T.C. & E.C. Jack.
- Gosden, Peter. (2004). "Lupton [née Greenhow], Frances Elizabeth (1821–1892), educationist". Oxford University Press.
- (28 May 2020). "The Duchess of Cambridge's Ancestor Would Have Led The Fight Against Covid 19". Daily Telegraph.
- (1859). "The Court Journal and Fashionable Gazette". William Thomas.
- Entry in Plarr's Lives of the Fellows Online, a biographical register of the Fellows of the [[Royal College of Surgeons]] of England, written by its librarian Victor Plarr (1863–1929), and hosted by the College [http://livesonline.rcseng.ac.uk/biogs/E002047b.htm]
- (1871). "Medical Times". J. & A. Churchill.
- (1910). "The Solicitors' Journal and Weekly Reporter". Alexander and Shepheard, printers.
- (1952). "Marlborough College Register: 1843-1952". The College.
- "Online Catalogue for Westminster School's Archive & Collections".
- (1934). "A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Peerage and Baronetage, the Privy Council, Knightage, and Companionage".
- (1853). "The Popular Educator, Volume 3". John Cassell.
- (1896). "Debrett's Illustrated House of Commons, and the Judicial Bench". Dean & son.
- (3 June 1854). "Weddings...At Mill Hill Chapel, Thomas Michael Greenhow, Esq., of Newcastle-upon-Tyne, to Anne, 2nd daughter of the late Wm. Lupton, Esq., of Leeds.". Leeds Intelligencer Yorkshire, England.
- (1881). "British Medical Journal, Volume 2". British Medical Association.
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