Henry Revell Reynolds

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Henry Revell Reynolds

Henry Revell Reynolds (born September 26, 1745 , † October 22, 1811 ) was an English doctor .

Life

Reynolds was born to John Reynolds one month after his father's death in Laxton , Nottinghamshire and raised by his maternal great-uncle, Henry Revell of Gainsborough , Lincolnshire. He was sent to Beverley Grammar School and from there went to Lincoln College, Oxford on March 17, 1763 . He moved to Trinity College in Cambridge and graduated from Cambridge with a doctorate in medicine in 1773 after further studies in Edinburgh .

He first practiced in Guildford , Surrey , and there married Miss Wilson in April 1770. He was advised to settle in London and in the summer of 1772 he moved into a house on Lamb's Conduit Street. On September 30, 1773 he was admitted to the nomination of the Royal College of Physicians and on September 30, 1774 elected a fellow . He was one of the college's censors in 1774, 1778, 1782, 1784, 1787 and 1792, and was its registrar from 1781 to 1783. He did not print his speeches. He was later elected physician to Middlesex Hospital on July 13, 1773 and resigned in 1777 when he was elected physician to St Thomas' Hospital . This lasted until 1783 when he had to resign as his private practice took up extensive time.

In 1788 he was asked personal physician of George III to be.

He died on October 22, 1811 in his home in Bedford Square, London, and was buried in St. James's Cemetery on Hampstead Road. He was very associated with the Royal College of Physicians . In his own practice he was known for his great caution.

literature

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Norman Moore: Reynolds Henry Revell . In: Dictionary of National Biography, 1885-1900 . Volume 48 ( wikisource.org [accessed January 9, 2020]).
  2. Inspiring Physicians | RCP museum. Retrieved January 9, 2020 .