Medical Society of London

  • Medical Society of London
Date:
1773-1992
Reference:
SA/MSL
  • Archives and manuscripts

About this work

Description

The archives of the Medical Society of London comprise constitutional records; minutes of Council, committee, general and ordinary meetings; membership records; financial and estate management records; records of books owned and lent by the society's library; Fothergillian Prize committee records and prize essays; and a small group of committee minutes, attendance books and other records generated by societies with which the Medical Society of London was associated (notably the Westminster Medical Society with which the society merged in 1850).

The majority of the records date from the early 19th century or later, although constitutional records, Council and ordinary meeting minutes, cash account books and library catalogues survive from the society's inception in 1773.

Publication/Creation

1773-1992

Physical description

67 boxes (181 volumes and 1 file)

Arrangement

By section as follows:

A. Constitution

B. Council

C. Committees

D. Meetings

E. Membership

F. Finance

G. Estate Management

H. Library

J. Fothergillian Prize

K. Other Societies

Acquisition note

The archives were given to the library at Wellcome Collection by the Medical Society of London in August 2009.

Biographical note

The Medical Society of London was founded in 1773 by the Quaker physician and philanthropist Dr John Coakley Lettsom (1744-1815) for physicians, surgeons and apothecaries who met to exchange medical news and confer about difficult cases. The first President was John Millar (1773-1775). As founder, president (1775-1776, 1784-1785, 1808-1811, 1813-1815), and benefactor Lettsom was the mainstay of the Society from 1773 until his death in 1815.

The first premises of the society were in Crane Court, off Fleet Street and close to the Royal Society. In 1787 Lettsom bought a house for the society in Bolt Court, opposite Samuel Johnson's house. In 1850 the society moved to Hanover Square after merger with the Westminster Medical Society. Finally, in 1873 the society acquired its present home in Chandos Street.

The Medical Society of London quickly reached prominence on the London medical scene. In July and August 1773, the society passed two laws which laid down that 'the Council of the Society shall consist of three physicians, three surgeons and three apothecaries, amd that the number of members of the Society shall be limited to thirty physicians, thirty surgeons and thirty apothecaries'. By 1789 there were 250 fellows with 50 overseas corresponding members from all over the world, including from St Petersburg, Jamaica, Milan, and Philadelphia.

A quarrel in 1805 caused some members of the Medical Society of London to leave and form the Medico-Chirurgical Society, but this did not divert the original society from its main purpose. Many other societies were formed in London on the Medical Society's model, for the study of special subjects, but none of these had a comparable influence.

When, in 1907, the Medico-Chirurgical Society joined with many other medical societies to form the Royal Society of Medicine, the Medical Society of London did not think it wise to join the new society but continued its original function: to provide a regular series of meetings, with discussions on every branch of medicine or surgery, for an audience of both general practitioners and specialists. Therefore, the society has been involved with most of the advances and controversies in medicine over the past two centuries.

The society meets fortnightly during the academic year, as it did in 1773. With the advance of medicine, so the nature of meetings has changed. Initially the emphasis was on current epidemics and the diseases of the poor; in the 19th century smallpox, cholera, and anaesthesia were popular topics; during the world wars of the 20th century Fellows were preoccupied by the medical challenges posed by war.

Not all meetings consisted of papers, discussions, and medical intelligence. Specimens, patients, and equipment (such as new instruments for military surgery or resuscitation apparatus from Paris) were also exhibited from time to time.

Since the 1990s lectures have diversified so as to appeal to an audience that includes guests and spouses as well as representatives of the many branches of the medical profession. Throughout, the society has been successful in organising meetings of interest to its broadly based membership.

Related material

At Wellcome Collection:

  • John Coakley Lettsom's own collection of papers, consisting of medical papers and pamphlets by him, newspaper cuttings relating to him, or subjects that interested him. Also letters from and to various correspondents, mainly in the medical profession (MSS.3245-3249, 5370 and 8684);
  • Numerous individual items relating to Lettsom (e.g. correspondence with him in the papers of other individuals, lecture notes written up by him). To find this material, please search the Archives and Manuscripts catalogue on the name Lettsom in the Any Text field.
  • The Medical Society of London retains a small collection of archives, mainly papers created by or relating to Dr John Coakley Lettsom:

    Three Lettsom letterbooks:

  • Volume including Lettsom's 'Recollections'
  • Volume of letters of JC Lettsom, c.1709, 1799, 1802
  • Volume of letters of JC Lettsom, c.1799-1815
  • 3 fascicule boxes of Lettsom material (available on microfilm at the Wellcome Library, reference AMS/MF/4/17):

  • Lettsom's Diary 1 January 1813 to 31 December 1814
  • Lettsom's original autograph MS of his autobiography
  • Lettsom - letter upon release of his slaves 1788
  • Deed of sale of Lettsom's slaves and sundry letters
  • Bound collection of letters to Lettsom and miscellaneous documents
  • Bound collection of documents including inventory of slaves, marriage certificate etc.
  • Bound collection of letters from Lettsom, mainly to Mr Nichols
  • Manuscript volume entitled 'Medical Memoirs vol. 1' (papers read by MSL members and Fellows and sent by corresponding members, 1774-1794)

    For queries regarding research access to this material, please contact: Commander Roger Ireland MBE ACIS, Registrar, Medical Society of London, 11 Chandos Street, London W1G 9EB, tel. 020 7580 1043, medicalsoclondon@btconnect.com.

    A substantial part of the Medical Society of London's library (about 10,000 volumes) was transferred on deposit to the Wellcome Library in 1967. The sale of these books to the Wellcome was finally agreed in 1984. Much of what remained with the Society was sold in 1971 to Jason Hannah, founder of the Canadian insurance company Associated Medical Services. These books are now in the Thomas Fisher Rare Books Library at the University of Toronto. Other books were sold at Sotheby's in 1970 and 1971. A few hundred are still held by the Society.

    Copyright note

    Any copyrights held by the Medical Society of London have been retained by the Society.

    Terms of use

    This collection has been catalogued and is available to library members. Some items have access restrictions which are explained in the item-level catalogue records.

    Ownership note

    The archives were kept at the Medical Society of London, 11 Chandos Street, London W1G 9EB prior to their transfer to the Wellcome Library in 2009.

    The Wellcome Library surveyed the records of the Medical Society of London in the 1990s as part of the Library's Medical Archives and Manuscripts Survey (click here for the survey reports). The following items were identified at the Medical Society of London during the survey but were not transferred to the Wellcome Library in 2009, and are presumed either to have gone missing since the survey or to have been mis-identified during the survey:

  • Legal documents including leases, receipts, insurance certificates etc., 18th-20th centuries (estate management records in SA/MSL/G cover 1882-1891 only)
  • Register of Medical Women, 1903-1920
  • Case studies, 1774-1779
  • Scrapbooks, c1883-1893 (empty paper wrapper found during survey)
  • Debentures, 1773-1895 (debentures in SA/MSL/F.5 cover 1884-1885 only)
  • Sectional Committee on Physiology minutes, 1853 (this volume in fact contains minutes of sundry committees - see SA/MSL/C/3/1/1)
  • The Medical Society of London retains a small collection of archives, mainly papers created by or relating to Dr John Coakley Lettsom:

    Three Lettsom letterbooks:

  • Volume including Lettsom's 'Recollections'
  • Volume of letters of JC Lettsom, c.1709, 1799, 1802
  • Volume of letters of JC Lettsom, c.1799-1815
  • 3 fascicule boxes of Lettsom material (available on microfilm at the Wellcome Library, reference AMS/MF/4/17):

  • Lettsom's Diary 1 January 1813 to 31 December 1814
  • Lettsom's original autograph MS of his autobiography
  • Lettsom - letter upon release of his slaves 1788
  • Deed of sale of Lettsom's slaves and sundry letters
  • Bound collection of letters to Lettsom and miscellaneous documents
  • Bound collection of documents including inventory of slaves, marriage certificate etc.
  • Bound collection of letters from Lettsom, mainly to Mr Nichols
  • Manuscript volume entitled 'Medical Memoirs vol. 1' (papers read by MSL members and Fellows and sent by corresponding members, 1774-1794)

    For queries regarding research access to this material, please contact: Commander Roger Ireland MBE ACIS, Registrar, Medical Society of London, 11 Chandos Street, London W1G 9EB, tel. 020 7580 1043, medicalsoclondon@btconnect.com.

    Languages

    Permanent link

    Identifiers

    Accession number

    • 1683