Catalogue description Hodgkin, Thomas (1798-1866)

This record is held by Wellcome Collection

Details of MSS.5680-5686
Reference: MSS.5680-5686
Title: Hodgkin, Thomas (1798-1866)
Description:

The collection chiefly comprises material relating to the latter part of Hodgkin's life, the 1850s and 1860s, following his marriage to Sarah Frances Scaife. Included are items relevant to Hodgkin's marriage and personal life (his marriage certificate, letters to his wife, miscellaneous papers relating to him and his wife, papers related to the subsequent history of the Scaife family and a Hodgkin pedigree book); papers relating to Hodgkin's lobbying and philanthropic activities during the years of his marriage; and a memorandum on the relationship of religion and physiology, drafted during this late period of his life but based upon discussions with Samuel Tuke that took place in 1821, while Hodgkin was still a student.

Date: 1840-1979
Arrangement:

MS.5680 consists of the marriage certificate of Thomas Hodgkin and Sarah Frances Scaife. MS.5681 consists of a memorandum on the relationship of religion and physiology, drafted during this late period of his life but based upon discussions with Samuel Tuke that took place in 1821, while Hodgkin was still a student. MSS.5682-5683 consist of correspondence, of which MS.5682 is letters between Hodgkin and his wife and MS.5683 copies of letters sent by Hodgkin to various individuals on philanthropic and reforming topics. MS.5684 consists of miscellaneous papers relating to Hodgkin and his wife, including copies of correspondence relating to Hodgkin's illness and death. MSS.5685-5686 relate to the two families concerned, on a wider scale: MS.5685 consists of correspondence and papers of the Scaife family, including letters from Hodgkin but also material on the later history of the family, while MS.5686 consists of a Hodgkin family pedigree book brought up to date in manuscript up to 1936.

Related material:

In the Wellcome Library, collection PP/HO (papers of the Hodgkin and Howard families) includes the bulk of Thomas Hodgkin's papers.

 

Durham County Record Office holds Hodgkin family papers including material on Thomas Hodgkin (D/HO). Notes on the geology of Morocco are held at the University of Toronto Library. Letters are held at Friends House.

 

Correspondence with his nephew John Eliot Hodgkin is held by the British Library (Add. MS. 42502a); with Sir J.F.W. Herschel, by the Royal Society; and with the Royal Geographical Society, in the archives of that Society (p101).

 

Material relating to the apothecaries Glaisyer and Kemp of Hove, to whom Hodgkin was apprenticed, is held at East Sussex County Record Office: prescription books from 1818 to 1927, with gaps (SAS/ACC 1203, ACC 5809), and a history of the firm from 1823 to 1853 (ACC 6077/20/2).

Held by: Wellcome Collection, not available at The National Archives
Language: English
Creator:

Hodgkin, Thomas, 1798-1866, physician, pathologist and philanthropist

Physical description: 2 volumes and 5 files
Physical condition: Manuscript material: loose papers and bound volumes.
Immediate source of acquisition:

Purchased from John Wilson, 1989 (accession number 348205).

Custodial history:

These papers passed by descent down the Scaife family, descendents of Hodgkin's wife, until they were sold at Hunt's auctioneers, Taunton, by Professor Christopher Scaife in 1989.

Subjects:
  • Housing
  • Sanitation
  • Indigenous populations
  • Religion
  • Medical sciences
  • Charities
Unpublished finding aids:

Described in: Richard Palmer, Catalogue of Western Manuscripts in the Wellcome Library for the History & Understanding of Medicine: Western Manuscripts 5120-6244 (London: The Wellcome Library for the History & Understanding of Medicine, 1999).

Administrative / biographical background:

Thomas Hodgkin was born in London in 1798, the son of John Hodgkin (1766-1845), a private tutor. The family were strong Quakers and originated in Warwickshire. He trained in medicine at Edinburgh University, taking his M.D. in 1823. After travels in Europe he became Curator of the Medical Museum and Inspector of the Dead at Guy's Hospital, London. His pathological work led him to the first description of what is now known as Hodgkin's Disease in his honour. He left Guy's Hospital in following his failure, in 1837, to be appointed Assistant Physician and after a short period at St. Thomas's Hospital devoted himself to private practice and to his other interests. He had a keen interest in the world beyond Europe and in particular in the societies there that were threatened with cultural extinction by the spread of European commercial, political or cultural dominion; his works in this area included playing a moving role in the foundation and functioning of the Aborigines Protection Society.

 

In 1850 he married Sarah Frances Scaife, a widow, from Nottingham. The couple had no children of their own but there were two sons from her first marriage. He died in 1866 at Jaffa while on a journey with his friend Sir Moses Montefiore (1784-1885) to negotiate for better treatment for Jewish residents in Palestine.

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