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Thomas Graham Balfour

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Thomas Graham Balfour (1813–1891) was a Scottish physician noted for his work with medical statistics.

Biography

Surgeon General Dr Thomas Graham Balfour (1813–1891) was a Victorian statistician and member of Florence Nightingale's inner circle.

He was MD of Edinburgh; FRS, 1859; Surgeon-General, Honorary Physician to Queen Victoria and compiler of the first four volumes of Statistics of the British Army.

He along with Dr John Sutherland were secretaries to the Sanitary Section of the International Statistical Congress in 1860, which was attended by Adolphe Quetelet, and to which Florence Nightingale submitted a paper.

Balfour was born in Edinburgh on 18 March 1813. He was son of John Balfour, a merchant of Leith, and his wife Helen, daughter of Thomas Buchanan of Ardoch. He was great-grandson of James Balfour, professor of moral philosophy at Edinburgh in 1754, and of Robert Whytt, a celebrated medical writer and professor of physiology at Edinburgh. He graduated M.D. at Edinburgh in 1834, and in 1836 entered the Army Medical Service and was immediately engaged in the production of the first four volumes of the '‘Statistics of the British Army,[1] reputed to be the most accurate and complete of their sort throughout Europe.[2]

From 1840 to 1848 he served as assistant surgeon in the Grenadier Guards. In 1857 he was appointed secretary to Sidney Herbert's committee on the sanitary state of the army, and in 1859 he became deputy inspector-general in charge of the new statistical branch of the army medical department, a post which he held for fourteen years. He was elected F.R.S. on 3 June 1858 and in 1860 a fellow of the Royal College of Physicians of London. In 1887 he was appointed honorary physician to the queen. He was placed on half-pay as surgeon-general in 1876, and in his forty years of service had done much to improve the sanitary condition of the forces. He was President of the Royal Statistical Society 1888-9 shortly after it had changed from the Statistical Society of London. He married in 1856 Georgina, daughter of George Prentice of Armagh, and had one son, Sir Graham Balfour. He died at Coombe Lodge, Wimbledon, on 17 Jan. 1891.[1]

References

  1. ^ a b Moore 1901.
  2. ^ Reznick, Jeffrey S. "Balfour, Thomas Graham (1813–1891), physician". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford University Press. Retrieved 9 August 2011.
Attribution

Wikisource This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainMoore, Norman Moore (1901). "Balfour, Thomas Graham". In Lee, Sidney (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography (1st supplement). London: Smith, Elder & Co.

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