
George Pearson FRS (1751–1828) was a British physician, chemist and early advocate of
Jenner's cowpox vaccination.
Davies Gilbert
Davies Gilbert (born Davies Giddy, 6 March 1767 – 24 December 1839) was an English engineer, author, and politician. He was elected to the Royal Society on 17 November 1791 and served as President of the Royal Society from 1827 to 1830. He ...
, who was then President of the Royal Society, began his 1829 memoir (written anonymously) of Dr. Pearson thus:
:'THIS eminent physician, celebrated chemist, and amiable though singular individual has, at an advanced age, fallen under the stroke of his ancient but indomitable enemy.'
He continued:
:'Dr. Pearson was born at
Rotherham
Rotherham () is a large minster and market town in South Yorkshire, England. The town takes its name from the River Rother which then merges with the River Don. The River Don then flows through the town centre. It is the main settlement of ...
in Yorkshire.
is father, John, was an apothecary His grandfather Nathaniel, was for years Vicar of
Stainton, in that neighbourhood, and died in 1767 at the age of 88. His uncle, George after whom he was named, was a wine-merchant at
Doncaster
Doncaster (, ) is a city in South Yorkshire, England. Named after the River Don, it is the administrative centre of the larger City of Doncaster. It is the second largest settlement in South Yorkshire after Sheffield. Doncaster is situated i ...
for upwards of thirty years a member of the Corporation, and twice Mayor of the Borough
785 and 1793'
Pearson studied in Edinburgh, took his MD in 1771 and went to study for a year at
St. Thomas's Hospital
St Thomas' Hospital is a large NHS teaching hospital in Central London, England. It is one of the institutions that compose the King's Health Partners, an academic health science centre. Administratively part of the Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Fo ...
. He settled in Doncaster in 1777. In his six years there he became a close friend of
John Philip Kemble
John Philip Kemble (1 February 1757 – 26 February 1823) was a British actor. He was born into a theatrical family as the eldest son of Roger Kemble, actor-manager of a touring troupe. His elder sister Sarah Siddons achieved fame with him o ...
and analysed the water at
Buxton
Buxton is a spa town in the High Peak, Derbyshire, Borough of High Peak, Derbyshire, England. It is England's highest market town, sited at some above sea level.[St George's Hospital
St George's Hospital is a large teaching hospital in Tooting, London. Founded in 1733, it is one of the UK's largest teaching hospitals and one of the largest hospitals in Europe. It is run by the St George's University Hospitals NHS Foundatio ...]
on 23 February 1787, and was there for the next forty years. He was elected a
Fellow of the Royal Society
Fellowship of the Royal Society (FRS, ForMemRS and HonFRS) is an award granted by the judges of the Royal Society of London to individuals who have made a "substantial contribution to the improvement of natural knowledge, including mathematic ...
on 23 June 1791. (He served on the Society's Council in 1802 and in 1827, in which year he gave the
Bakerian Lecture
The Bakerian Medal is one of the premier medals of the Royal Society that recognizes exceptional and outstanding science. It comes with a medal award and a prize lecture. The medalist is required to give a lecture on any topic related to physical ...
, ''Researches to discover the Faculties of Pulmonary Absorption with respect to Charcoal'').
Davies went on:
:'Dr. Pearon was acknowledged by good judges, to be a sound Greek and Latin scholar. He was a hospitable landlord, a disinterested friend, and a very good-humoured and jocose companion : he abounded in anecdotes, which he took with excellent effect. He would often observe to his friends, that he knew he was growing old; but that he had made up his mind to die 'in harness.''
On Sunday 9 November 1828 he died at his home in George Street (9 St. George Street),
Hanover Square, in Davies' words: 'in consequence of a fall down stairs'.
He left two daughters; one, Frances Priscilla, married
John Dodson, DCL (and formerly M. P.), and the other, Mary-Anne, was, once again as Davies put it in 1828, single.
Pearson and the Royal Society
His first application to the Royal Society had been rejected on ballot 15 June 1786, when his neighbour and St. George's colleague
John Hunter (surgeon)
John Hunter (13 February 1728 – 16 October 1793) was a British surgeon, one of the most distinguished scientists and surgeons of his day. He was an early advocate of careful observation and scientific method in medicine. He was a teacher ...
had been his lead proposer.
For his second attempt in 1791 Pearson's proposers were
George Baker;
William Heberden; Robert Hallifax (Royal physician);
William Seward
William Henry Seward (May 16, 1801 – October 10, 1872) was an American politician who served as United States Secretary of State from 1861 to 1869, and earlier served as governor of New York and as a United States Senator. A determined oppo ...
;
John Gunning;
Andrew Kippis
Andrew Kippis (28 March 17258 October 1795) was an English nonconformist clergyman and biographer.
Life
The son of Robert Kippis, a silk-hosier, he was born at Nottingham. Having gone to Carre's Grammar School in Sleaford, Lincolnshire he pas ...
;
Thomas Bowdler
Thomas Bowdler, LRCP, FRS (; 11 July 1754 – 24 February 1825) was an English physician known for publishing '' The Family Shakespeare'', an expurgated edition of William Shakespeare's plays edited by his sister Henrietta Maria Bowdler. Th ...
;
James Keir
James Keir FRS (20 September 1735 – 11 October 1820) was a Scottish chemist, geologist, industrialist, and inventor, and an important member of the Lunar Society of Birmingham.
Life and work
Keir was born in Stirlingshire, Scotland, in ...
;
Maxwell Garthshore
Dr Maxwell Garthshore FRSE LRCP (28 October 1732 – 1 March 1812) was a Scottish physician and Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh.
Life
The son of the Rev. George Garthshore, fifty years a minister in Kirkcudbright, he was born there on 2 ...
;
James Carmichael Smyth;
Bp. Landaff;
George Staunton;
John Paradise;
William Young;
John Ash;
Tiberius Cavallo;
William Watson; Dr. (?) Gray;
John Gillies
John is a common English name and surname:
* John (given name)
* John (surname)
John may also refer to:
New Testament
Works
* Gospel of John, a title often shortened to John
* First Epistle of John, often shortened to 1 John
* Second E ...
.
Pearson and Smallpox Vaccination
Pearson was a very early advocate of smallpox vaccination and supporter of
Edward Jenner
Edward Jenner, (17 May 1749 – 26 January 1823) was a British physician and scientist who pioneered the concept of vaccines, and created the smallpox vaccine, the world's first vaccine. The terms ''vaccine'' and ''vaccination'' are derived ...
and published his early observations within months of the publication of Jenner's ''Inquiry''. Early in 1799 he helped to set up the Original Vaccine Pock Institute in London and started to distribute vaccine, some samples of which were contaminated with smallpox virus. This caused a rift with Jenner who thought his own work was being overshadowed. In turn, Pearson became envious of Jenner's growing reputation.
When Jenner petitioned Parliament for a financial reward in 1802, Pearson published a detailed account of his own contribution, together with evidence that Jenner did not ''discover'' vaccination, bringing attention to farmer
Benjamin Jesty and others who he maintained had prior claims. When Jenner sought a further Parliamentary grant in 1805, Pearson brought Jesty to London to visit the Original Vaccine Pock Institute to further his claim, with no success. By this time, although there was opposition to vaccination as such, Jenner's role in its introduction was firmly established and Pearson played little further part. However, his role in the introduction of smallpox vaccine was examined in detail much later when controversy arose over the origin of
vaccinia virus, the active constituent of smallpox vaccine.
[
]
No. 52 Leicester Square
For 20 years, between the ages of 34 and 54, from 1785–1805, Dr. Pearson lived at 52 Leicester Square
Leicester Square ( ) is a pedestrianised square in the West End of London, England. It was laid out in 1670 as Leicester Fields, which was named after the recently built Leicester House, itself named after Robert Sidney, 2nd Earl of Leicester ...
.
His predecessors there included Sir Paul Rycaut
Paul may refer to:
*Paul (given name), a given name (includes a list of people with that name)
* Paul (surname), a list of people
People
Christianity
* Paul the Apostle (AD c.5–c.64/65), also known as Saul of Tarsus or Saint Paul, early Chr ...
, the traveller, diplomat, and historian of Turkey, 1679-c. 1684; Justice Robert Perryman or Perrismore, 1704–11; Jacques Christophe Le Blon (Le Blond), painter, engraver and printer, 1734–5; Sir William Wolseley, of Wolseley, Staffordshire, fifth baronet, 1757– 1768; Vice-Admiral John Campbell, 1774–82. The house was demolished in the 1840s making way for New Coventry Street
Coventry Street is a short street in the West End of London, connecting Piccadilly Circus to Leicester Square. Part of the street is a section of the A4, a major road through London. It is named after the politician Henry Coventry, secretar ...
.
Pearson of Tyers Hill
As a result of his marriage to (probably his cousin) Frances Pearson, co-heir and daughter of Nathaniel Pearson (mayor of Doncaster, 1763) by his heiress (married 1743) wife Priscilla Rayney (died 1751), of Tyers Hill, George Pearson became involved with Tyers Hill a small estate near Ardsley, Darfield, Barnsley.
Priscilla Rayney, a first cousin, four times removed, of the first of the Rayney baronets, was daughter and co-heir of Alderman (mayor of Doncaster 1725) Thomas Rayney (d.1731?) by (married 1715) Frances daughter of Alderman John Fayram (Doncaster mayor, 1658).
Thomas Rayney was son of Henry Rayney (1614–1682) by (married 1650) Priscilla (1625–1682) daughter of William Wordsworth (c1590-1666), of Falthwaite, Silkstone
Silkstone is a village and civil parish in the Metropolitan Borough of Barnsley in South Yorkshire, England. It is situated in the foothills of the Pennines, between the towns of Barnsley and Penistone. The parish includes the village of S ...
, Penistone
Penistone ( ) is a market town and civil parish in the Metropolitan Borough of Barnsley, South Yorkshire, England, which had a population of 22,909 at the 2011 census. Historically in the West Riding of Yorkshire, it is west of Barnsley, ...
(who left three closes in Barnsley to Priscilla) by Helen Crosland. Henry Rayney was son of John Rayney of Tyers Hill by Anne, daughter of William Wentworth (1580–1635) of South Kirkby
South Kirkby is a town in the City of Wakefield in West Yorkshire, England which is governed locally by South Kirkby and Moorthorpe Town Council. The town forms half of the civil parish of South Kirkby and Moorthorpe. The parish has a population ...
, S. Yorks.
John Rayney's grandfather, Henry Rayney of Ferrymoor, had bought Tyers Hill from John Byron in 1569. The nearby Monk Bretton priory was dissolved on 30 November 1538.
Into the mid-twentieth century the heirs of Pearson and Rayneys were leasing Meltonfield and Parkgate seams of coal under Tyershill Farm and land at Cudworth, Darfield and Royston
Royston may refer to:
Places
Australia
*Royston, Queensland, a rural locality
Canada
*Royston, British Columbia, a small hamlet
England
*Royston, Hertfordshire, a town and civil parish, formerly partly in Cambridgeshire
*Royston, South Yorkshi ...
, (probably including the land at Ferry Moor (Ferrymoor) just west of Grimethorpe
Grimethorpe is a large village in the metropolitan borough of Barnsley in South Yorkshire, England. Historically within the West Riding of Yorkshire, it had a population of 4,672 at the 2011 census. Grimethorpe is located to the east of Barn ...
), to the Mitchell's Main Colliery Company Limited.
George Pearson's wife was a third cousin once removed of William Wordsworth
William Wordsworth (7 April 177023 April 1850) was an English Romantic poet who, with Samuel Taylor Coleridge, helped to launch the Romantic Age in English literature with their joint publication ''Lyrical Ballads'' (1798).
Wordsworth's '' ...
. Between 1775–1799 George Pearson's father, the apothecary, who owned Mosborough Hall, Sheffield, and his mother was Deborah daughter of George Smith by Mary, daughter of John Burnley of Moorgate, Rotherham, a butcher. George Smith is associated with property in Wortley; Tankersley; and Mortomley and High Green, Ecclesfield
Ecclesfield is a village and civil parish in the City of Sheffield, South Yorkshire, England, about 4 miles (6 km) north of Sheffield City Centre. Ecclesfield civil parish had a population of 32,073 at the 2011 Census. Ecclesfield wards ...
.
On Pearson's death the Tyers Hill property was inherited by Sir John Dodson, who had married Frances-Priscilla, Pearson's eldest daughter, on 24 December 1822, thus according to John Bateman, who derived his information from statistics published in 1873, John Dodson's son John George Dodson ( Lord Monk Bretton) had 181 acres of farmland in the West Riding
The West Riding of Yorkshire is one of three historic subdivisions of Yorkshire, England. From 1889 to 1974 the administrative county County of York, West Riding (the area under the control of West Riding County Council), abbreviated County ...
of Yorkshire, with a rental income worth 300 guineas per annum.
The arms of Pearson of Tyers Hill:
Shield: ''azure between two palets wavy ermine three suns or''.
Crest: ''out of a cloud, a sun''.
Three of his wife's great-nephews
* Rev. John Edward Jackson, FSA (1805–1891), antiquary, was born in Doncaster, the son of James Jackson, banker and sometime mayor of Doncaster (1795, 1803, 1814), and his wife, Henrietta-Priscilla, second daughter of Freeman Bower of Killerby Hall, near Scarborough and of Bawtry
Bawtry is a market town and civil parish in the City of Doncaster in South Yorkshire, England. It lies between Doncaster, Gainsborough and Retford, on the border with Nottinghamshire and close to Lincolnshire. The town is historically part of ...
, by (married 1777) Mary Pearson (d.1794).
* Charles Jackson (1809–1882), antiquary, brother of the above.
* Rev. Frederick Watkins, (1808–1888), son of Rev. Henry Watkins of Bamburgh (Barnborough/Barnburgh), Yorkshire and his wife Frances-Mary, elder daughter of Freeman Bower.
Wife's nephew
* Henry Bower, FSA, DL, (died 25 February 1842, aged 63), of Hall Gate, Doncaster. Formerly of Tickhill
Tickhill is a market town and civil parish in the City of Doncaster, South Yorkshire, England, close to the border with Nottinghamshire. At the 2001 census it had a population of 5,301, reducing to 5,228 at the 2011 Census.
Geography
It ...
, Doncaster. Only surviving son of Freeman Bower, by Mary Pearson, and last male representative of the younger branch of the Bowers of Bridlington. He was educated at Eton College and Emmanuel College, Cambridge. As a result of his superintendence and services as President of Doncaster's Public Library the supporters of that institution in 1841 ha
a portrait of him
by Henry William Pickersgill
Henry William Pickersgill RA (3 December 1782 – 21 April 1875) was an English painter specialising in portraits. He was a Royal Academician for almost fifty years, and painted many of the most notable figures of his time.
Biography
Born in ...
, RA painted and then placed in the library.
On 10 July 1798 Bower was appointed a Lieutenant in the Fifth West Yorkshire Militia, and then on 1 April 1808 he was promoted to Captain in the Doncaster Volunteer Infantry.[London Gazette, Issue 16163 published on 16 July 1808]
Selected works
*George Pearson, ''Observations and Experiments forinvestigating the Chymical History of the Tepid Springs of Buxton; intended for the improvement of Natural Science and the Art of Physic'', two vols., 8vo., J. Johnson, London, 1783.
*George Pearson, ''Directions for Impregnating the Buxton Waters with its own and other Gases, and for composing Artificial Buxton Water'', J. Johnson, London, 1785.
*George Pearson, ''An account of the preparation and uses of the phosphorated soda; being an abstract of a paper on that subject inserted in the Journal de Physique, August 1788'', London, 1789.
*George Pearson, ''Experiments and Observations on the Constituent Parts of the Potatoe-Root '' ic London, 1795.
*George Pearson, ''An Inquiry Concerning the History of the Cow Pox'', Johnson, London, 1798.
*George Pearson, ''Circular Letter on the Cow Pox''. ''Med. Phys. J.'' 1799. 2; 113–5.
*George Pearson, ''A Statement of the Progress in the Vaccine Inoculation. ''Med. Phys. J.'' 1799; 2; 213-25.
*George Pearson, ''An examination of the Report of the Committee of the House of Commons on the claims of remuneration for the vaccine pock inoculation, containing a statement of the principal historical facts of the vaccina'', J. Johnson, 1802.
*George Pearson, ''Researches to discover the faculties of pulmonary absorption with respect to charcoal'', Bakerian lecture, delivered to the Royal Society, 20 December 1827.
References
* 'Memoir of George Pearson, M.D., F.R.S.' by Davies Gilbert PRS, February 1829, pps. 129–132, in ''The Gentleman's Magazine'', vol. 99, edited by Sylvanus Urban, 1829.
* 'George Pearson MD, FRS (1751–1828): 'THE GREATEST CHEMIST IN ENGLAND'?', by Noel G. Coley, in ''Notes and Records of the Royal Society'', volume 57, 2003.
* 'Genealogical Memoranda relating to the family of Wordsworth' collected by Edwin Jackson Bedford, London, 1881.
* 'A genealogical and heraldic history of the extinct and dormant baronetcies of England', by J. and J. B. Burke, 1838.
{{DEFAULTSORT:Pearson
1751 births
1828 deaths
Alumni of St George's, University of London
People associated with St George's, University of London
19th-century English medical doctors
18th-century English medical doctors
Fellows of the Royal Society
Smallpox vaccines
People from Rotherham
People from Doncaster