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Baillie,
Matthew
(1762-1823)
Matthew
Baillie was born at Shotts, Lanarkshire, on 27 Oct. 1762. His
father (James) was the minister of the parish, and was afterwards
Professor of Divinity at Glasgow. His mother (Dorothea) was a
sister of the great anatomists, William and John Hunter. Joanna,
the poetess, was Matthew's sister. Baillie went to the grammar
school of Hamilton, and thence to the University of Glasgow. He
came to London at the age of eighteen, and lived at William Hunter's
house. Baillie entered Balliol College, Oxford, and worked hard
there at the studies of the place but his more valuable education
was carried on in Windmill Street in the vacations. A lecture-theatre
and museum adjoined Dr. William Hunter's house, and in them Baillie
attended public lectures, which his uncle supplemented by instruction
whenever he and his nephew were together. He taught Matthew how
to observe, communicated to him his own love of science, and set
him an example of lucid exposition. Following an apprenticeship
with his Uncle William in London, Baillie was appointed physician
to St. George's Hospital. At age 36, he left St. George's, ceased
writing and lecturing, and spent the rest of his life in private
medical practice.
Baillie's
most significant work, The Morbid Anatomy of Some of the Most
Important Parts of the Human Body, was published in 1793. It established
morbid anatomy as an independent science. Baillie gave the first
clinical descriptions of gastric ulcer and chronic obstructive
pulmonary emphysema and presented one of the clearest descriptions
ever written on the pulmonary lesions of tuberculosis.
Baillie
served as physician extraordinary to King George III, but he accepted
rich and poor alike as patients. He was the last and most famous
owner of the gold-headed cane, the coveted symbol of excellence
among London physicians.
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