In December 1825, he was elected member of the Royal College of Physicians of London, and appointed as physician to The London Dispensary and lecturer in morbid anatomy and curator of the Pathology Museum at Guy's Hospital Medical School.
In 1827 Thomas Hodgkin became the first lecturer on pathological anatomy in England. In 1837, having lost a position as assistant physician for Guy's Hospital to Benjamin Babington, he moved to St Thomas' Hospital. Disappointed and frustrated, in the following years he devoted increasing time to non-medical activities, such as geography, philosophy and ethnography. He helped to found the Ethnological Society in 1843. He also became active in the anti-slavery and in the aborigene protection movements (he founded the British and Foreign Aborigines Protection Society in 1837). In his late years, he became friend of Jewish businessman and philantropist Moses Montefiore, and travelled several times with him to the Near East. He died on his last journey to Palestine on April 5, 1866, and was interred in a Protestant church in Jaffa, then part of Palestine. He married Sarah Frances Scaife née Callow in 1850 and left no children.
He published as a book his Lectures on Morbid Anatomy in 1836 and 1840. His greatest contribution to the teaching of pathology, however, was made in 1829, with his two volumed work entitled The Morbid Anatomy of Serous and Mucous Membranes, which became a classic in modern pathology.
Hodgkin was one of the earliest defenders of preventive medicine, having published On the Means of Promoting and Preserving Health in book form in 1841. Among other early observations were the first description of acute appendicitis, of the biconcave format of red blood cells and the striation of muscle fibers.
1798 births | 1866 deaths | Hematologists | Quakers | English doctors | Alumni of King's College London | University of Edinburgh alumni | Londoners | Christians in science
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