SIBSON, FRANCIS
TitleSIBSON, FRANCIS
ReferenceMS-SIBSF
Date
c.1840 - c.1860
Creator Francis (1814-1876) Sibson
Admin history: Francis Sibson (1814-1876) was born on 21 May 1814 at Cross Canonby, Cumberland (now Cumbria). At the age of fourteen he was apprenticed to John Lizars, surgeon and anatomist. He received his diploma from the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh (LRCS) in 1831. He treated cholera patients during the 1831-32 epidemic, at Leith, Newhaven and Edinburgh. He then entered general practice for a short time at Cockermouth, Cumberland, before resuming his medical studies at Guy's and St Thomas's Hospitals in London. As part of his studies he spent some time, in 1833, in the pathology department of Guy's, where he became a friend and pupil of the curator Thomas Hodgkin, physician and philanthropist. Sibson qualified licentiate of the Society of Apothecaries (LSA) in 1835, and became resident surgeon and apothecary to the Nottingham General Hospital.
In 1843 he joined the Provincial Medical and Surgical Association (later the British Medical Association). In 1848 he left his position at Nottingham General Hospital and returned to London. He graduated MB and MD from London in the same year, and was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1849. It was also in 1849 that he became a member of the Royal College of Physicians and a Fellow in 1853.
Upon the foundation of St Mary's Hospital in 1851 he was appointed one of its first physicians. Sibson subsequently lectured on medicine at the hospital's medical school. He delivered the Goulstonian Lectures at the Royal College of Physicians in 1854. He authored the illustrated 'Medical Anatomy', which he published in sections (1855-69).
Sibson helped to carry into effect the new constitution of the British Medical Association (BMA) in 1856, and was an active member until his death. In 1861, and from 1864-66, he was chosen by the Metropolitan Counties Branch as a member of the General Council of the BMA. In 1865 Sibson was elected to the senate of London University, in which he opposed the admission of women to degrees. He also held the position of examiner in medicine. From 1866-69 Sibson served as president of the BMA's Council and on retirement from this office became vice-president of the Association for life. He was awarded the honorary degrees of MD by Dublin University in 1867, and LLD by Durham University in 1870.
In 1870 he delivered the Croonian Lectures at the Royal College of Physicians. The following year he retired from the active staff of St Mary's and became consulting physician. In 1873 at the BMA's annual meeting he presided over the Section of Medicine. The following year he proposed that a portion of the Association's funds be available for scientific research. In 1874 he delivered the College's Lumleian Lectures and held the office of censor, in the same year, and then curator of the museum. His last contribution to medical literature was his Harveian Lectures on Bright's Disease in relation to the heart and the arteries, in 1875.
He died suddenly, on 7 September 1876.
Sources:
'Lives of the Fellows of the Royal College of Physicians of London, 1826-1925', compiled by G.H. Brown (London, 1955) [Munk's Roll Vol.IV pp.72-3]
'Dictionary of National Biography', Vol. LII, Sidney Lee (ed) (London, 1897) [DNB, 1897, pp.186-87]
'Obituary - Francis Sibson', 'The Medical Times and Gazette', Vol. II for 1876 (London, 1876), p.450
'Obituary - Francis Sibson', 'British Medical Journal', Vol II 1876 (London, 1876), pp.446-48
Production date 1840 - 1860
Scope and ContentSibson's anatomical drawings, c.1840-c.1860, both pathological and clinical, watercolours and pen and ink sketches, many are labelled and annotated. Many were used to illustrate his 'Medical Anatomy, or, Illustrations of the Relevant Position and Movements of the Internal Organs' (1869) and various medical papers.
Extent382 items
LanguageEnglish
Archival historyThe collection was donated to the College by Mrs Sarah Mary Sibson, Sibson's widow, on 14 July 1877
SubjectAnatomical lllustration, Pathology
Levelfonds
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