What is John Scott Burdon Sanderson's middle name?

Scott

What is John Scott Burdon Sanderson's full name?

John Scott Burdon-Sanderson

John Scott Burdon Sanderson nickname(s):

John Scott Burdon-Sanderson, Sir John Scott Burdon-Sanderson 1st Baronet, Sir John Scott Burdon-Sanderson

John Scott Burdon Sanderson date of birth:

December 21, 1828

How old was John Scott Burdon Sanderson when died?

76

Where was John Scott Burdon Sanderson born?

Newcastle upon Tyne, England, United Kingdom

When did John Scott Burdon Sanderson die?

November 23, 1905

Where did John Scott Burdon Sanderson die?

Oxford, United Kingdom

John Scott Burdon Sanderson body shape:

Average

What color are John Scott Burdon Sanderson's eyes?

Blue

What color is John Scott Burdon Sanderson's hair?

Salt and Pepper

Is John Scott Burdon Sanderson gay or straight?

Straight

What is John Scott Burdon Sanderson's ethnicity?

White

What is John Scott Burdon Sanderson nationality?

British

Where did John Scott Burdon Sanderson go to university?

University of Edinburgh

What is John Scott Burdon Sanderson's occupation?

Scientist

Short Biography

Sir John Scott Burdon-Sanderson, 1st Baronet, FRS, D.Sc. (21 December 1828 – 23 November 1905) was an English physiologist born near Newcastle upon Tyne, and a member of a well known Northumbrian family.BiographyHe received his medical education at the University of Edinburgh and at Paris. Settling in London, he became Medical Officer of Health for Paddington in 1856 and four years later physician to the Middlesex Hospital and the Brompton Consumption hospitals.When diphtheria appeared in England in 1858 he was sent to investigate the disease at the different points of outbreak, and in subsequent years he carried out a number of similar inquiries, e.g. into the cattle plague and into cholera in 1866. In 1871, he reported that Penicillium inhibited the growth of bacteria, an observation which places him among the forerunners of Alexander Fleming. He became first principal of the Brown Institution at Lambeth in 1871, and in 1874 was appointed Jodrell Professor of Physiology at University College London, retaining that post until 1882. When the Waynflete Chair of Physiology was established at Oxford in 1882, he was chosen to be its first occupant, and immediately found himself the object of a furious anti-vivisectionist agitation. The proposal that the university should spend a large amount of money providing him with a suitable laboratory, lecture rooms, etc., in which to carry on his work, was strongly opposed, by some on grounds of economy, but largely because he was an upholder of the usefulness and necessity of experiments upon animals. It was, however, eventually carried by a small majority (88 to 85), and in the same year the Royal Society awarded him a Royal Medal in recognition of his researches into the electrical phenomena exhibited by plants and the relations of minute organisms to disease, and of the services he had rendered to physiology and pathology. In 1885 the University of Oxford was asked to vote £500 a year for three years for the purposes of the laboratory, then approaching completion. This proposal was fought with the utmost bitterness by Sanderson's opponents, the anti-vivisectionists including E. A. Freeman, John Ruskin and Bishop Mackarness of Oxford. Ultimately the money was granted by 412 to 244 votes.In 1895 Sanderson was appointed Regius Professor of Medicine at Oxford, resigning the post in 1904. In 1899 he was created a Baronet, of Banbury Road in the Parish of Saint Giles in the City of Oxford. His attainments, both in biology and medicine, brought him many honours. He was Croonian Lecturer to the Royal Society in 1867 and 1877 and to the Royal College of Physicians in 1891. He gave the Harveian Oration before the College of Physicians in 1878, acted as President of the British Association at Nottingham in 1893 and served on three Royal Commissions: on Hospitals (1883), on Tuberculosis, Meat and Milk (1890), and on a University for London (1892).In February 1902 he received the honorary degree Doctor of Science (D.Sc.) from the Victoria University of Manchester, in connection with the 50th jubilee celebrations of the establishment of the university.He died in Oxford on 23 November 1905.