SURGEON, SOLDIER, AND SCHOLAR: SIR ALEXANDER OGSTON, BACTERIOLOGIST &
ROYAL ARMY MEDICAL CORPS CO-FOUNDER A TALK BY DAVID RENNIE AS PART
OF THE SPECIAL COLLECTIONS EXHIBITION, "MEDICINE IN WARTIME"
HTTPS://WWW.ABDN.AC.UK/LIBRARY/EVENTS/12294/
[https://www.abdn.ac.uk/library/events/12294/]
ABERDEEN-born SIR ALEXANDER OGSTON, KCVO (1844-1929), is remembered
for his discovery of _Staphylococcus aureus_, better known today as
MRSA or hospital “superbug”. Ogston was also a pioneer of military
medicine, co-founding the Royal Army Medical Corps in 1898, and
serving as a surgeon in the Mahdist War, Boer War, and World War I.
Ogston’s career brought him into contact with Queen Victoria, Joseph
Lister, and Tsar Nicholas II, and his distinction was reflected in his
role as surgeon to the Royal Family and President of the British
Medical Association (1914).
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
DAVID RENNIE COMPLETED A PHD IN WORLD WAR I LITERATURE AT ABERDEEN
UNIVERSITY IN 2017. He is editing _Scattered Recollections: The
Autobiography of Sir Alexander Ogston_ for ABERDEEN University Press.
His essays on World War I writing have been accepted by _The Hemingway
Review_, _The F. Scott Fitzgerald Review_, and _The Cambridge History
of American Literature and Culture in the Great War_. He is currently
completing a monograph on U.S. World War I literature.
This talk is part of a series accompanying the exhibition "Medicine in
Wartime" at THE SIR DUNCAN RICE LIBRARY, which includes a selection
of ALEXANDER OGSTON'S journals, photographs and medals from the
University of ABERDEEN's Museums & Special Collections.
Talk attendees will have the opportunity to visit the exhibition
afterwards. https://www.abdn.ac.uk/library/events/12294/
[https://www.abdn.ac.uk/library/events/12294/]
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02/02/2018 Last update