
William Cheselden
'William Cheselden' (
October 19,
1688 -
April 10,
1752) was an
English surgeon and teacher of
anatomy and
surgery, who was influential in establishing surgery as a scientific medical profession.
Life
Cheselden was born at
Somerby,
Leicestershire. He studied
anatomy in
London under
William Cowper (1666-1709), and began lecturing anatomy in
1710. In
1713 he published his ''Anatomy of the Human Body'', which achieved great popularity and went through thirteen editions, mainly because it was written in
English instead of
Latin as it was customary. In 1718 he was appointed an assistant surgeon at
St Thomas' Hospital, (London), becoming full surgeon in the following year, and he was also chosen one of the surgeons to
St George's Hospital on its foundation in 1733. In
1710 he was admitted to the London
Company of Barber-Surgeons and he was elected as a Fellow of the
Royal Society in
1712.

A plate of ''Osteographia''. Source: NLM
In
1733 he published ''Osteographia or the Anatomy of Bones'', the first full and accurate description of the anatomy of human
skeletal system.
Cheselden retired from St Thomas' in 1738 and moved to the
Chelsea Hospital. His abode is listed as "Chelsea College" on the 1739
Royal Charter for the
Foundling Hospital, a charity for which he was a founding governor. In
1744 he was elected to the position of Warden of the Company of Barber-Surgeons, and had a role in the separation of the surgeons from the barbers and to the creation of the independent
Company of Surgeons in
1745, an organisation that would become later the famous
Royal College of Surgeons of England.
He died at
Bath in 1752.
Works
Cheselden is famous for the invention of the lateral
lithotomy approach to remove
bladder stones, which he first performed in
1727 and which had a short duration (minutes instead of hours) and a low
mortality rate (less than 10%). Cheselden had already developed in
1723 the suprapubic approach, which he published in 'A Treatise on the High Operation for the Stone''.
He also effected a great advance in
ophthalmic surgery by his operation of
iridectomy, described in
1728, for the treatment of certain forms of
blindness by the production of an artificial
pupil. Cheselden also described the role of
saliva in
digestion.
He attended Sir
Isaac Newton in his last illness, and was an intimate friend of
Alexander Pope and of Sir
Hans Sloane.
Source
★
★ R.H. Nichols and F A. Wray, ''The History of the Foundling Hospital'' (London: Oxford University Press, 1935), p. 353.
External links
★
William Cheselden (1666-1709). Surgical Tutor.
★
Cheselden, Wm: Osteographia or the Anatomy of the Bones. Scanned pages of the original work. Historical Anatomies in the Web. US National Library of Medicine.
★
William Cheselden Article from the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.