Sir John Halliday CroomFRSEPRCPE PRCSE (15 January 1847 – 27 September 1923) was a Scottish surgeon and medical author. He served as President of the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh.
Life
He was born in the manse at Sanquhar in south-west Scotland on 15 January 1847, the son of Janet (née Halliday) and Rev. David Murray Croom of the United Presbyterian Church. The family moved to Edinburgh around 1855, where his father preached at the Lauriston Place church. In 1860, they were living at 1 Upper Gilmore Place in the Tollcross district.[1] He attended the Royal High School in Edinburgh and studied medicine at the University of Edinburgh, graduating MD in 1882.[2] He also studied in London and Paris.[3]
A manuscript copy of lectures given by Croom and Lackie on midwifery and gynaecology taken down by a student survives as part of the Manchester Medical Manuscripts Collection, held by special collections at the University of Manchester.[6]
He died of congestion of the lungs at home in Edinburgh on 27 September 1923. He was buried in Dean Cemetery on Saturday 29 September. The grave lies towards the western end of the main east-west path, on its south side.
Publications
Minor Gynaecological Operations and Appliances (1883)
He married Anna Isabella Walker in 1875. She died in 1898. They had one son, Dr David Halliday Croom FRCPE (1877-1859) and three daughters. David married Eleanor Addey Blair Cunynghame, daughter of the surgeon Robert James Blair Cunynghame. David's son, named Sir John Halliday Croom, in his grandfather's honour was born in Edinburgh on 2 July 1909. He was knighted in 1973 by Queen Elizabeth II, and is best remembered as author of the Croom Report of 1969: a report on the future of medical training and studies in Scotland. He served as President of the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh 1970-73.[15]
His eldest daughter had married Dr A J Beattie but happily also took on Croom’s domestic duties, so it was a double blow when she also died, in 1913.
His brother was the civil engineer, James Murray Croom (d.1918).
References
^Edinburgh and Leith Post Office Directory 1860-61