John William Turner MD FRSE (1790–19 November 1835) was a 19th-century Scottish physician who served as Professor of Surgery at the University of Edinburgh.
In 1816, he took over the running of the New Town Dispensary. In 1820 he was living at 14 George Street in central Edinburgh.[3]
In 1821, he was appointed Professor of Surgery at the University of Edinburgh. He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh in 1833. His proposers were Sir Thomas Dick Lauder, and Sir J T Gibson Craig.[4]
On the evening of 25/26 October 1835, he was called out during a heavy storm to tend to a patient at Edinburgh Royal Infirmary on Drummond Street. He caught a severe cold and abandoned teaching on 12 November. The cold then developed into pneumonia.[6]
He died on 19 November 1835, aged 45. He is buried at Newbattle Churchyard in Midlothian, where his family had a country mansion. His position at the university was filled by Sir Charles Bell.
Publications
Dislocations of the Shoulder Joint (1812)
Observations on the Causes of the Sounds Produced by the Action of the Heart (1829)
^Kaufman, Matthew H. (1 January 2003). The Regius Chair of Military Surgery in the University of Edinburgh, 1806-55. Clio Medica (Amsterdam, Netherlands). Vol. 69. pp. 1–361. ISBN978-9042012486. PMID12724023.