Henry BurtonFRCP (27 February 1799 – 10 August 1849) was a British physician and chemist, who identified that blue discolouration of gums, the eponymous Burton line, was a symptom of lead poisoning.
As the Cambridge Alumni Database identifies,[4] some sources, including the entry for Henry Burton in the Royal College of Physicians’s Lives of the Fellows,[5] incorrectly state that Henry Burton was the son of one ‘John Burton’. This is incorrect: he was the son of the aforementioned James Burton.[4][1][2]
In September 1825, he became Professor of Chemistry at St Thomas' Hospital,[4][5][1] where he became Senior Physician. He was appointed Censor of the Royal College of Physicians in 1838 and later Consiliarius.[4][5] He is famous for his discovery that a blue line on the gums, the eponymous Burton line, was a symptom of lead poisoning.[5][8][9]
Marriage
Henry Burton married Mary Elizabeth, who was the daughter of William Poulton of Maidenhead, at St. George's, Bloomsbury, in 1826.[2] She died in 1829, without issue, and Henry did not remarry.[3][2] Henry lived at 41 Jermyn Street, London,[4] and 58 Marina, St. Leonard's-on-Sea.[3][2]