The Gordon Museum of Pathology is a medical museum that is part of King's College London in London, England. It is one of the largest pathology museums in the world and is the largest medical museum in the United Kingdom.[1] Its primary function is to train medical, dental, biomedical and healthcare students and professionals to diagnose diseases.
Established | 1905 |
---|---|
Location | London, United Kingdom |
Coordinates | 51°30′10″N 0°05′23″W / 51.502800°N 0.089629°W |
Type | Medical, University museum |
Curator | William Edwards |
Website | [1] |
History
editThe Gordon Museum was opened in 1905 at King's Guy's Campus as a result of a donation by British lawyer Robert Gordon, and was intended to be a teaching resource devoted purely to human material.[2]
A number of specimens and other medical-related objects have been collected since 1802, and were initially gathered by the first Medical Curator Thomas Hodgkin. These formed the basis of the museum in the first Medical School opened in 1826. In 1829, the museum contained approximately 3000 exhibits, and by 1861, the London Journal of Medicine reported that "the Museums are on a scale which entitles them to rank among the first of our national collections."[2]
Collections
editThe Gordon Museum holds a collection of approximately 8000 pathological specimens, artefacts, models and paintings,[3] and the earliest specimens are from circa 1608.[2] The Museum contains many human specimens that have impacted on the development of medical studies, including Astley Cooper’s ligation of the abdominal aorta, and the original specimens of kidneys, adrenal glands and lymph nodes which led Thomas Hodgkin, Thomas Addison and Richard Bright to describe the medical conditions that bear their names.[1][3]
The Museum also houses a number of historic collections and artefacts, for example Joseph Lister's antiseptic spray, and Thomas Hodgkin's stethoscope that was the first to be used in England.[4] The Joseph Towne's anatomical and dermatological wax models and Lam Qua's pre-operative tumour paintings are as well displayed in the museum.[5]
The museum is home to the mummified remains of Alan Billis, a former taxi driver who agreed to be mummified as part of research into ancient Egyptian practices.[6]
Key people
editCurators
edit- Thomas Hodgkin, British physician, pioneer in preventive medicine (1825-1837)
- Thomas Wilkinson King, regarded by some as the 'Father of Endocrinology'[7] (1837-1847)
- John Birkett (1851-1852)
- Samuel Osborne Habershon, English physician (1853-1856)
- Walter Moxon (1865-1873)
- Charles Hilton Fagge, English physician (1873-1882)
- James Goodhart, English physician and paediatrician (1882-1887)
- George Newton Pitt (1887-1889)
- Lauriston Elgie Shaw (1889 -1904)
- John Fawcett (1904-1913)
- Robert Davies Colley (1913-1946)
- Keith Simpson, English forensic pathologist (1946-1965)
- Sigiberto Jose De Navasquez (1965-1970)
- John Maynard (1970-1996)
- Sebastian Lucas (1996-2003)
- William Edwards (2003–present)
Artist in residence
edit- Eleanor Crook, anatomical modeller and sculptor (2007–present)
References
edit- ^ a b "About the Gordon Museum". Gordon Museum of Pathology. Retrieved 22 October 2015.
- ^ a b c "The history of the Gordon Museum". Gordon Museum of Pathology. Retrieved 22 October 2015.
- ^ a b "The Gordon Museum collection". Gordon Museum of Pathology. Retrieved 22 October 2015.
- ^ "The Gordon Museum collection Artefacts". Gordon Museum of Pathology. Retrieved 22 October 2015.
- ^ "The Gordon Museum collection Models and paintings". Gordon Museum of Pathology. Retrieved 22 October 2015.
- ^ Gunther, Matthew (22 February 2017). "Why I mummified a taxi driver". Chemistry World. Retrieved 1 November 2024.
- ^ "Dr. T. W. King (1809–47)". Nature. 159 (4037): 365. 1947. doi:10.1038/159365a0.
External links
edit- Gordon Museum home page on King's College London website
- About the Gordon Museum on YouTube