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" William Withey Gull – A Biographical Sketch ( T. D. Acland ), Memoir II.
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William and Withey
Sir William Withey Gull, 1st Baronet of Brook Street ( 31 December 1816 – 29 January 1890 ) was a prominent 19th century English physician.
Because of his association with Sir William Withey Gull, Hinton has been indirectly associated with the murders of Jack the Ripper.
Lord Cave married Anne Estella Sarah Penfold Mathews, daughter of William Withey Mathews and sister of Sir Lloyd Mathews, in 1885.
Sir William Withey GullSir William Withey Gull ( 31 December 1816 – 29 January 1890 ) was physician-in-ordinary to Queen Victoria.
William and Gull
Characters who underwent these crude lobotomies ( including Sir William Gull played by Ian Holm ), were depicted with shaved heads and in vegetative states.
Victoria then instructs her royal physician Sir William Gull to impair Annie's sanity, which he does by damaging or impairing her thyroid gland.
Years later, and moments before his death, Gull has an extended mystical experience, where his spirit travels through time, observing the crimes of the London Monster, instigating or inspiring a number of other killers ( Peter Sutcliffe, Ian Brady ), causing Netley's death, as well as serving as the inspiration for both Robert Louis Stevenson's Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde and William Blake's painting " The Ghost of a Flea ".
While recuperating in England and receiving treatment from Sir William Gull, Muybridge took up the new field of professional photography sometime between 1861 and 1866.
They began their studies there two months behind the other cadets as Albert Victor contracted typhoid fever, for which he was treated by Sir William Gull.
Members included Tennyson, Gladstone, W. K. Clifford, W. G. Ward, John Morley, Cardinal Manning, Archbishop Thomson, T. H. Huxley, Arthur Balfour, Leslie Stephen, and Sir William Gull.
She was a woman of character, instilling in her children the proverb “ whatever is worth doing is worth doing well .” William Gull often said that his real education had been given him by his mother.
He invited him to go to Guy ’ s Hospital under his patronage and, in September 1837, the autumn before he was twenty-one, William Gull left his home and entered upon his life's work.
In 1871, as Physician in Ordinary to HRH the Prince of Wales, Dr. William Gull took the chief direction of the treatment of the Prince during an attack of typhoid fever.
After a week, with no sign of the fever abating, they diagnosed typhoid fever and sent for Gull on 21 November, and Sir William Jenner on the 23rd.
In recognition of his service, on 8 February 1872 William Gull was created the 1st Baronet of the Baronetcy of Brook Street.
Sir William Gull spoke out against this bias and led efforts to improve the prospects of women who wished to pursue careers in medicine.
In 1887, Sir William Gull suffered the first of several strokes at his Scottish home at Urrard House, Killiecrankie.
Sir William Gull was buried on Monday 3 February 1890 next to the grave of his father and mother in the churchyard of his childhood home at Thorpe-le-Soken, near Colchester, Essex.
The following persons were appointed as executors: his wife, Dame Susan Anne Gull, his son, Sir William Cameron Gull, of Gloucester Street, Portman Square ( the new baronet ), Mr. Edmund Hobhouse, and Mr. Walter Barry Lindley.
A jewelled snuffbox presented to Sir William Gull by the Empress Eugénie, widow of Emperor Napoleon III of France became an entailed heirloom, along with his presentation plate.
Sir William's daughter Caroline received £ 26, 000 in trust, while his son Sir William Cameron Gull received the sum of £ 40, 000 and all the real estate.
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