Dr John Francis SutherlandFRSEFRSS (1854–1912) was a Scottish physician, linked to senior civil service medical roles. His booklet "First Aid to Injured and Sick" was a best seller throughout the 20th century.
His first role was as Deputy Medical Officer on HMS Mars, a Royal Navy training ship in 1874. He then became Resident Medical Officer in the British Hospital in Paris, working with Sir John Rose Cormack, Edward Neech and Alan Herbert.[1]
In 1880 he gained his doctorate (MD) and entered a new role as Medical Officer to HM Prisons, living at 19 Roslea Drive in the Dennistoun district of Glasgow,[2] which was then a newly built tenemental flat. In 1897 he was promoted to Consulting Medical Officer for the newly constructed Barlinnie Prison. Working in this environment he gained a knowledge of insanity, inebriety and criminology. He served on the Committee for Habitual Offenders and Inebriates and did much to push for penal reform.[1]
In 1895 he moved to Edinburgh as Deputy Commissioner of Lunacy (based at Craig House) initially living at 4 Merchiston Bank Avenue[4] and later moving to 3 Moston Terrace in the Mayfield district.[5]
He died at 15 Rutland Square in Edinburgh's West End,[6] his home for his final years, in January 1912 aged 57.[7] He is buried with his ancestors at Kildary in Easter Ross.[8]
Family and Private Life
He was married to Jane MacKay, daughter of John MacKay of Caithness, a Free Church minister.[9] Their children were Halliday Sutherland,[8] Francis Sutherland and Joan Sutherland.[10] Halliday Sutherland's best-selling autobiography "The Arches of the Years" included recollections of his father in chapters entitled "The Terror of the Glen"[11] and "Death on the Moors".[12]