Colin Chisholm (medical writer)

Colin Chisholm M.D. (1755–1825) was a Scottish surgeon, medical writer and Fellow of the Royal Society.[1]

Life

edit

Chisholm served as a military surgeon to the British forces in the American War of Independence. After the war was over, he moved to practise medicine in Grenada; he went there in 1783, at the invitation of John Rollo.[2] In 1790 he visited Demerara, purchasing a cotton plantation. He also picked up an eye remedy from the Arawak Indians, based on a genus Bignonia root.[3]

In 1793 Chisholm was awarded the M.D. degree by King's College, Aberdeen. In 1795 he was made surgeon-general to the ordnance. Attached to Ralph Abercromby's expedition, he then spent five months in the Virgin Islands in 1797, and was promoted to inspector-general of hospitals.[2]

Chisholm retired on half-pay in 1800, moving to his estate in Demerara, where he spent three years growing cotton. Then he migrated back to Europe.[2] He settled in Bristol, where he had a good medical practice.[4]

Chisholm was elected a fellow of the Royal Society on 24 November 1808. His latter days were mainly spent in retirement on the continent. He died in Sloane Street, London, at the beginning of 1825.[4]

Works

edit

Besides papers in medical journals, including the Medical Repository, Andrew Duncan's Medical Commentaries, and Duncan's Annals of Medicine, Chisholm was the author of:[4]

  • An Essay on the Malignant Pestilential Fever introduced into the West India Islands from Boulam, on the coast of Guinea, as it appeared in 1793 and 1794, London, 1795 (second edition, much enlarged, 2 vols. London, 1801). This work on "pestilential fever" (a generic term—the disease is now recognised as yellow fever[5]) was based on Chisholm's experiences on Grenada in 1793. A ship, the Hankey, arrived carrying infectious disease presumed to be from Bolama, in what is now Guinea-Bissau. Chisholm gave an account, designed to identify the cause of disease in Grenada as contagion. The theory of contagious disease being contentious, there was criticism, and the second edition amplified the argument with the example of the American Yellow Fever Epidemic of 1793.[6] Subsequently, the term "Bulam fever" was applied to yellow fever, and William Pym wrote on it under that name in 1815.[5][7]
  • A Letter to John Haygarth, M.D., exhibiting further evidence of the infectious nature of the Pestilential Fever in Grenada ... and in America, London, 1809. A continuation of the debate on contagion, addressed to John Haygarth, with the full title naming Edward Miller, an American physician.[6]
  • A Manual of the Climate and Diseases of Tropical Countries: In which a Practical View of the Statistical Pathology and of the History and Treatment of the Diseases of Those Countries is Attempted to be Given (1822).[8] This work includes an endorsement of the "nitric acid" theory of treatment of Helenus Scott, based on hospital studied Chisholm had made at Martinico.[9]

The controversy on yellow fever continued well into the 19th century. Usher Parsons writing in 1836 denied it was contagious, and stated that quarantine was useless against it, while citing the views of Chisholm (on two kinds of yellow fever), Pym and James Fellowes, and believers in "contingent contagion".[10] James Ormiston McWilliam had his 1847 report on an outbreak at Boa Vista published by the UK Parliament.[11]

Family

edit

In 1794 Chisholm married Elizabeth Cooper in Inverness.[2] His daughter Janet (c. 1800–1890) married Thomas Waddington (1792–1869), a son of the cotton merchant William Waddington (1751–1818) who emigrated to France. William Henry Waddington was their son.[12]

Notes

edit
  1. ^ Royal Society database, Chisholm; Colin (1755–1825).
  2. ^ a b c d David Francis Clyde (1985). Health in Grenada. Vade-Mecum Press. p. 41. ISBN 0946836205.
  3. ^ David Francis Clyde (1985). Health in Grenada. Vade-Mecum Press. p. 33. ISBN 0946836205.
  4. ^ a b c Stephen, Leslie, ed. (1887). "Chisholm, Colin" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 10. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
  5. ^ a b Philip D. Curtin (1964). The Image of Africa: British Ideas and Action, 1780–1850. Vol.1. Univ of Wisconsin Press. p. 183. ISBN 978-0-299-83025-0. Retrieved 20 June 2013.
  6. ^ a b Christopher Charles Booth (1 January 2005). John Haygarth, Frs (1740–1827): A Physician of the Enlightenment. American Philosophical Society. pp. 124–6. ISBN 978-0-87169-254-2. Retrieved 20 June 2013.
  7. ^ William Pym (1815). Observations upon the Bulam fever, which has of late years prevailed in the West-Indies, on the coast of America, at Gibraltar, Cadiz, and other parts of Spain: with a collection of facts proving it to be a highly contagious disease. Callow. Retrieved 20 June 2013.
  8. ^ Colin Chisholm (1822). A Manual of the Climate and Diseases of Tropical Countries: In which a Practical View of the Statistical Pathology and of the History and Treatment of the Diseases of Those Countries is Attempted to be Given ... Retrieved 20 June 2013.
  9. ^ Hormoz Ebrahimnejad, ed. (2009). The Development of Modern Medicine in Non-Western Countries. Routledge. p. 37. ISBN 9780415447423.
  10. ^ Charles Samuel Stewart (1836). The Naval Magazine. United States Naval Lyceum. pp. 357–8. Retrieved 21 June 2013.
  11. ^ Milne, Lynn. "McWilliam, James Ormiston". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/17747. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  12. ^ S. Seikaly; R. Baalbaki; P. Dodd, eds. (c. 1991). Quest for Understanding. American University of Beirut. pp. 318–9.
Attribution

  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainStephen, Leslie, ed. (1887). "Chisholm, Colin". Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 10. London: Smith, Elder & Co.