William Robert Whatton FRS, FSA (17 February 1790, in Loughborough – 5 December 1835, in Portland Place) was a British surgeon and antiquarian.[1][2]
He was qualified MCRS on 11 March 1810. He served at Da Graça Hospital, Lisbon, treating the wounded from the Battle of Albuera. He treated the wounded from the Siege of Ciudad Rodrigo (1812), and the Siege of Badajoz (1812).
He was appointed resident to the Poorhouse, Manchester. On 15 September 1830 he attended William Huskisson, who had been struck by a train and died. He was elected staff of the Manchester Royal Infirmary in 1833.[3]
Works
edit- An address to the governors of the Royal Institution of Manchester, H. Smith, 1829; Kessinger Publishing, 15 January 2009, ISBN 9781104010119 [4]
- History of the Foundations in Manchester of Christ's College, Chetham's Hospital, and the Free Grammar School, Samuel Hibbert, John Palmer, William Robert Whatton, J. Greswell, Thomas Agnew and Joseph Zanetti, 1848, ASIN: B00AYV4TBG.
- History of the County Palatine and Duchy of Lancaster. William Robert Whatton, Edward Baines, BiblioBazaar, LLC, ISBN 9781143857317
References
edit- ^ "William Whatton". 217.169.56.135. Retrieved 27 July 2010.
- ^ Richard Wright Procter Memorials of Manchester Streets. T. Sutcliffe. 1874. p. 190. Retrieved 27 July 2010 – via Internet Archive.
- ^ William Brockbank The Honorary Medical Staff of the Manchester Royal Infirmary 1830-1948, Manchester University Press, 1965
- ^ An Address to the Governors of the Royal Institution of Manchester: Containing Proposals for Altering and Extending the Present Plan of the Instituti: Amazon.co.uk: William Robert Whatton: 9781104010119: Books. ASIN 1104010119.