Sailing the British Empire : The Voyages of The Clarence, 1858-73Main MenuSailing the British Empire: The Voyages of the Clarence, 1858-73IntroductionThe Crew / AcknowledgmentsThe Provenance of Watson's LogAdditional Sources: Logs, Crew Lists, DiariesInside Lloyd's Register"Green's Celebrated Service"Details on owner of the ship at the time of our voyage, Richard Green.The Master Builder: William PileThe Master: Joseph Watson's BiographyA Mate's ProgressThe Career of Henry Berridge, First Mate of the ClarenceThe Crew of the Clarence in 1864An annotated crew listThe 18th HussarsThe Clarence and the Cyclone of 1864Origins of Indian Emigrants Aboard The ClarenceThe Surgeon-SuperintendantWages of indentured labourers in Demerara (1870-1900)The Clarence Sails to AustraliaMutiny! Violence and Resistance Aboard "Coolie Ships"Cholera: The Killer from CalcuttaSTSC 077, Fall 2015 First Year Seminar, University of Pennsylvaniab33a025deaa7595ed0079bfc9b77ea3cb14b8d08STSC 077, The University of Pennsylvania, fall 2015
Sir Thomas Watson
12015-12-20T08:00:16-08:00Ana Chisholm4ebee1a87627db2d336de88de17734d3dfc12dac62652Courtesy US National Library of Medicineplain2015-12-22T18:37:51-08:00Ana Chisholm4ebee1a87627db2d336de88de17734d3dfc12dac
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12015-12-07T12:18:54-08:00An Illustrious Uncle13Norman Moore, ‘Watson, Sir Thomas, first baronet (1792–1882)’, rev. Anita McConnell, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/28871, accessed 19 Oct 2015]plain2016-02-22T21:08:30-08:00Below is the handwritten document of Joseph Watson's III lineage, now held by the University of Pennsylvania's Rare Books & Manuscripts Division. This document revealed one eminent Victorian in the Watson family: Thomas Watson, a leading physician in the medical world of the nineteenth century. Sir Thomas Watson was born on March 7, 1792 at Montrath House, Broadhembury, Cullompton, Devon, the older brother of our captain's father Joseph. In 1811 Watson entered St John's College in Cambridge, graduating in 1815 with a BA. In 1816 Watson was elected a fellow, and then received his masters in 1818. The following year he began to study medicine at St Bartholomew's Hospital in London. Though he spent a year at the University of Edinburgh in 1820-1821, Watson returned to Cambridge to complete his studies, becoming an MD in 1825. Watson then married Sarah, daughter of Edward Jones of Brackley, Northamptonshire on September 15, 1825. Together, the couple lived in a house on Henrietta Street, Covent Garden, London. He established a practice nearby. In 1826 Watson was elected a fellow of the Royal College of Physicians in 1826. He then continued to become a professor of medicine, teaching at King's College, London. Watson was a remarkable physician, who not only established a thriving practice but also authored the leading English medical textbook of the mid-nineteenth century, Lectures of the Principles and Practice of Physic. In a career full of professional honors, one of the most notable was Watson's appointment as physician-extraordinary to Queen Victoria in 1859. He also was one of the physicians who took care of the prince consort on his deathbed. Thomas Watson was made a Baronet on June 27, 1866. He retired from medicine in 1870, and died on December 11, 1882. Unlike Joseph Watson, his nephew, Thomas Watson did have children; a son and a daughter. Bibliography: Norman Moore, ‘Watson, Sir Thomas, first baronet (1792–1882)’, rev. Anita McConnell, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/28871, accessed 19 Oct 2015]