Henry Dewar of Lassodie MD FRSE (1771–1823),[1] originally Henry Frazer or Fraser, was a Scottish minister turned physician, known as a writer.[2]
Life
His father was John Frazer, minister of the Associate Church at Auchtermuchty, in Fife, Scotland; his mother was Margaret Erskine. He became minister of the Associate Church at Saltcoats in Ayrshire, in 1796, but within months inherited an estate through his mother, at Lassodie, Beath, in the Fife coalfield. The inheritance required that he changed his name to Dewar: it originated with his great-grandfather Ralph Erskine and his first wife Margaret Dewar. At this point Dewar left the ministry.[1][3][4]
In his later life he lived at 37 Nicolson Street in Edinburgh's South Side.[17] The house stood immediately opposite Surgeons' Hall but was demolished in the late 19th century to make way for a small department store.
He died on 18 January 1823 and was buried in St Cuthbert's Churchyard on the following day. The grave lies in the north extension facing St John's church.
Works
Dewar engaged in an embittered controversy[18] with Thomas Trotter[19] on the chemistry of choke damp and fire damp. Trotter had proposed "oxygenated muriatic gas" (i.e. hydrochloric acid) as a fumigant.[20] As far as chemistry went, both their theories were inaccurate. Dewar was a friend of the Newcastle physician John Clark, and Trotter's criticism of Clark has been given as one possible reason for the personal attacks included with the scientific and practical arguments Dewar gave.[21] A scale or chemical slide rule mentioned by Thomas Charles Hope as "Dr. Dewar's" has been considered to be unpublished work of Henry Dewar.[22]
An inquiry into the principles by which the importance of foreign commerce ought to be estimated (1808) was an economic pamphlet. It was taken to be a comment on the Continental System, and a reply to William Spence. Spence's Britain Independent of Commerce (1807) had come under heavy criticism. Dewar was somewhat sympathetic to Spence's positive views of autarky.[23][24]
Dewar wrote an early paper on what was then called "double consciousness", now diagnostically identified with dissociative identity disorder. It is considered that Dewar was alluding to the celebrated case of Mary Reynolds of Pennsylvania, which was published in 1816 by Mitchill.[25][26] He wrote in 1817 on a smallpox outbreak at Cupar, giving statistics showing the effectiveness of vaccination.[27]
He married Helen Margaret Spence (1800-1870), an American from Philadelphia, in May 1809.[30] They had six children[31][32][33] including James Dewar, Donald William Dewar (1825-1851), Dr Henry Andrew Dewar (1812-1861), Mary Dewar (1810-1869) (who married Dr Gilman Kimball).[34]
Notes
^ abcErskine Beveridge, A Bibliography of Works relating to Dunfermline and the West of Fife (1901), p. 60 note 3; archive.org.
^ abEdward Mansfield Brockbank, Sketches of the Lives and Work of the Honorary Medical Staff of the Manchester Infirmary, from its foundation in 1752 to 1830 when it became the Royal Infirmary (1904), pp. 214–5; archive.org.
^Observations on diarrhoea and dysentery, particularly as these diseases appeared in the British campaign of Egypt in 1801 (London, 1805)
^Catherine Kelly, Medicine and the Egyptian Campaign: The Development of the Military Medical Officer during the Napoleonic Wars c. 1798–1801; PDF, p. 334.
^Complete list of the members & officers of the Manchester Literary and Philosophical Society, from its institution on 28 February 1781, to 28 April 1896 (1896), p. 22; archive.org.
^Memoirs of the Wernerian Natural History Society, vol 3, p.539
^Edinburgh and Leith Post Office Directory, 1820-1
^A letter to Thomas Trotter, M.D : occasioned by his proposal for destroying the fire and choak damps of coal mines
^A Proposal for Destroying the Fire and Choak-Damps of Coal Mines…Addressed to the Agents and Owners of Coal Works (Newcastle: J. Mitchell, 1805); and his "second address".
^Ebenezer Erskine Scott, The Erskine-Halcro genealogy: the ancestors and descendants of Henry Erskine ... his wife, Margaret Halcro of Orkney, and their sons (1895), pp. 41–2; archive.org.