HEAD, HENRY
TitleHEAD, HENRY
ReferenceMS-HEADH
Date
1891 - 1909
Creator Henry (Sir) (1861-1950) Head
Admin history: Sir Henry Head (1861-1940) was born in Stoke Newington, London, on 4 August 1861. He entered Trinity College, Cambridge in 1880. He graduated BA in Natural Sciences in 1884, with first class honours. He spent the next two years at the German University in Prague under the direction of Ewald Hering, working on the physiology of respiration. Head returned to Cambridge to study physiology and anatomy, and went to University College Hospital in London for his clinical work. He qualified MB in 1890, and MD in 1892.
Head obtained junior positions at University College Hospital, the City of London Hospital for Diseases of the Chest (later renamed the City of London Hospital for Diseases of the Heart and Lungs), the National Hospital, Queen Square, and the County Mental Hospital, Rainhill, Liverpool. He was appointed registrar at the London Hospital in 1896, and was elected assistant physician four months later. He subsequently became physician, and then consulting physician to the Hospital. In 1897 he was awarded the Moxon Medal by the Royal College of Physicians, for his research into clinical medicine. Head became a fellow of the Royal Society in 1899. The following year he became a fellow of the Royal College of Physicians, and in 1901 delivered the Goulstonian Lectures to the College.
In 1903 he made observations on the sensory changes following section and regeneration of the radial and external cutaneous nerves. He published the results in 'Brain' in 1908. In the same year he was awarded the Royal Medal of the Royal Society for his work on neurology. He was also awarded the Marshall Medal of the Royal Medical and Chirurgical Society for his original research. He was editor of 'Brain' from 1910-25, and also wrote a number of articles for Sir Thomas Clifford Allbutt's 'A System of Medicine'. In 1911 he delivered the Croonian Lectures at the Royal College of Physicians.
During the First World War, 1914-18, Head was civilian consultant to the Empire Hospital for Officers, Vincent Square, where officers suffering from wounds to the nervous system were sent. He and his colleague George Riddoch produced a series of papers on the effects of gross injuries to the spinal cord. This work was important in laying the foundations for the management of traumatic paraplegia, which Riddoch developed during the Second World War.
In 1920 he was president of the Section of Neurology at the annual meeting of the British Medical Association held at Cambridge, and in the same year was elected an honorary fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge. The results of his self-experiments on sensation between 1903 and 1907, which were previously published in 'Brain', along with other articles by Head and five of his colleagues were published in 'Studies in Neurology' (1920). In 1921 he delivered the Royal Society's Croonian Lecture. Head's last important publication was 'Aphasia and Kindred Disorders of Speech'. It appeared in two volumes in 1926, and was based on the examination of a large number of men suffering from gunshot wounds to the brain.
In 1927 he was knighted. His other honours include receiving honorary degrees from the universities of Edinburgh and Strasbourg. Head died at Reading on 8 October 1940. He left the greater part of his fortune to the Royal Society, for the advancement of medicine.
Sources:
'Lives of the Fellows of the Royal College of Physicians of London, Vol. IV, 1826-1925', compiled by G.H. Brown (London, 1955) [Munk's Roll Vol.IV pp.421-2]
'Dictionary of National Biography, 1931-1940', L.G. Wickham Legg (ed.) (London, 1949) [DNB, 1949, pp.410-12]
'Henry Head: The Man and His Ideas', Russell Brain, 'Brain', Vol. 84, Part IV, 1961, pp.561-66
'The Legacy of Henry Head', C.S. Breathnach, 'Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine', Vol. 84, February 1991,
Production date 1891 - 1909
Scope and ContentHead's papers, 1891-1909, consist of his casebooks of patients with Herpes Zoster, with sketches and photographs, chiefly from Head's work at the London Hospital, 1891-1909, and his casebooks of patients with various diseases, with sketches and charts, from his work at the City of London Hospital for Diseases of the Heart and Lungs, Victoria Park, 1894. They also include the casebook of Alfred Walter Campbell, detailing pathological examinations of patients with Herpes at the Rainhill County Mental Hospital, with references to a number of Head's cases, 1898.
Extent11 items
LanguageEnglish
Archival historyPart of the collection was presented to the College by Head on 19 May 1926 (MS335-336).
Persons keyword Alfred Walter Campbell
SubjectHerpes, Herpes Zoster
Levelfonds
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