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William Newman (surgeon)

William Newman (29 August 1833 – 3 December 1903) was an English surgeon who worked at the Stamford and Rutland Infirmary (now the Stamford and Rutland Hospital) for 40 years and had significant input into the design of the Infirmary's fever wards in the late 1870s.

Biography

Newman was born in Sheffield on 29 August 1833 the son of Robert Newman.[1] He trained in medicine at St Bartholomew's Hospital in London, later qualifying as an M.D., M.R.C.P. and F.R.C.S.[1][2] He held surgical positions at the Shrewsbury Hospital, Ancaster and Fulbeck in Lincolnshire.[1][2] In 1862 he settled in Stamford where he was in general practice and surgeon at the Stamford and Rutland General Infirmary for 30 years.[1] After retirement he remained as Consulting Surgeon for another 10 years.[1][2]

In his surgery he was an early practitioner of antiseptic and aseptic surgery and a specialist in abdominal surgery[2] and used x-rays for diagnostic purposes.[1][2] He pioneered sanitation[1] and published several works on surgery and public health following outbreaks of typhoid and scarlet fever in Stamford between 1868 and 1870.[2][3]

Newman's publication History of Stamford, Rutland and general infirmary outlined the design and construction of the new fever wards.[4] He had significant input into the design of the wards alongside the architect Edward Browning.[3] In 1876 he and Browning led the Infirmary's building committee producing plans for three new fever wards to be built as part of the Infirmary and not as separate hospitals; each block contained a square-shaped five-bed ward with beds around the walls.[3] Other design features credited to Newman included bathrooms and toilets opening off cross-ventilated lobbies, damp-proof courses, cellars, hot-air heating and ventilation, glazed brick interior walls and the use of glazed tile pictures.[3][5] The wards opened in January 1879.[5]

Apart from his medical practice he was a governor of Epsom College, a justice of the peace and served on the council of the Obstetrical Society of London and as vice-president of the surgical section of the British Medical Association.[2]

Newman died on 3 December 1903 at the Stamford Infirmary.[1][2]

Family

Newman's son Lieutenant Colonel E. A. R. Newman, who had served in the Indian Medical Service, was the first ophthalmologic surgeon at the Infirmary from 1925 until his retirement in 1935.[1][6]

Selected works

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i Rogers, A; Quinlan, J (1978). A short history of the Stamford and Rutland Hospital. Stamford: Friends of the Stamford Hospitals. pp. 16–18, 22. OCLC 500579935.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h "William Newman, M.D.Lond., F.R.C.S.Eng". British Medical Journal: 1620–1621. 19 December 1903.
  3. ^ a b c d Morrison, Kathryn A. (2015). The Fever Wards, Stamford Hospital, Uffington Road, Stamford. Research Report Series 97–2015. Historic England. ISSN 2059-4453.
  4. ^ Newman, William; Friends of Stamford Hospital (1879). "History of Stamford, Rutland and general infirmary". The story of Stamford Hospital: as told in the 19th, 20th and 21st centuries (published 2016). OCLC 1063629971.
  5. ^ a b "Stamford and Rutland Infirmary". Stamford Mercury. 17 January 1879. p. 4 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  6. ^ "North Luffenham". Grantham Journal. 28 March 1925. p. 11 – via British Newspaper Archive.