Carr, John Walter (1862 - 1942)
by
 
Royal College of Surgeons of England

Asset Name
E003884 - Carr, John Walter (1862 - 1942)

Title
Carr, John Walter (1862 - 1942)

Author
Royal College of Surgeons of England

Identifier
RCS: E003884

Publisher
London : Royal College of Surgeons of England

Publication Date
2013-04-18

Subject
Medical Obituaries

Description
Obituary for Carr, John Walter (1862 - 1942), Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons of England.

Language
English

Source
Plarr's Lives of the Fellows

Full Name
Carr, John Walter

Date of Birth
5 June 1862

Place of Birth
London

Date of Death
29 September 1942

Place of Death
London

Occupation
Physician

Titles/Qualifications
CBE 1920
 
MRCS 24 October 1884
 
FRCS 9 June 1887
 
MB BS London 1885
 
MD 1887
 
LRCP 1884
 
FRCP 1901

Details
Born in London, 5 June 1862, the only child of John Carr, JP, chemist, and M A Bowers, his wife. He was educated at University College School and Hospital, winning an exhibition and gold medal in materia medica and pharmaceutical chemistry at the University of London intermediate examination. He was medical scholar of the Society of Apothecaries in 1885, and took first-class honours in medicine, surgery, and midwifery at the London MB examination. After studying the nervous system under Charlton Bastian at University College Hospital and the respiratory system at the Brompton Hospital under Douglas Powell, he was appointed assistant physician to the Victoria Hospital for Children, Chelsea, in 1889, becoming physician in 1897 and consulting physician in 1920. In 1893 he was appointed assistant physician to the Royal Free Hospital, ultimately becoming consulting physician and emeritus lecturer in medicine at the London School of Medicine for Women. During the four years' war he was physician to the hospital for officers in the Royal Free Hospital, and was created CBE for his services. He was an examiner at the Royal College of Physicians 1919-23 and also examined for the Conjoint Board, for the Society of Apothecaries, for Birmingham University, and for the State Register of Nurses. At the Royal College of Physicians he served on the council 1919-21 and as a Censor in 1926-27. He was president of the clinical section of the Royal Society of Medicine 1928-29, and president of the Medical Society of London in 1928, when he delivered the presidential address on "Medical ambitions and ideals", *Lancet*, 1928, 2, 753. He had previously addressed the Medical Society on "Life and problems in a medical utopia", *Lancet*, 1923, 1, 993. Walter Carr took the highest professional qualifications and was interested in every branch of pure medicine, though in later years his chief interest was in tuberculosis and diseases of the lungs. His most original contribution was made in his paper on "Non-tuberculous posterior basic meningitis in infants", in which he was the first to point out its relationship to cerebrospinal fever, as was subsequently confirmed. This was published in abstract only in *Proceedings of the Royal Medico-chirurgical Society, London*, 1897, 9, 110. Carr was a Freeman of the City of London and served in 1914 on the court of the Haberdashers' Company and as Master in 1929. He took an active interest in the Drapers' and Haberdashers' schools and served on the council of Epsom College. He was a strong walker both at home and in Switzerland. At the age of forty he was attacked by writer's cramp, and towards the end of his life was crippled by severe multiple arthritis. Carr married in 1895 Jessie, daughter of Walter Griffith of Streatham Hill. Mrs Carr died in 1937. He practised at 10 Cambridge Terrace and later at 10 Ferncroft Avenue, Hampstead, NW3, where he died on 29 September 1942, aged 80, survived by a son and three daughters, two of whom were married to medical men. Publications:- *The practitioner's guide*, with T. Pickering Pick, Alban Doran, and A Duncan. London, 1902. *How to live long*. London, 1916. "Diseases of the pleura and mediastinum". *Dictionary of practical medicine*. London, 1921. "Tuberculosis", in Thursfield and Paterson. *Diseases of children*, 1929.

Sources
*Lancet*, 1942, 2, 470, with portrait
 
*Brit med J*, 1942, 2, 500 and 711
 
Information given by Tyer and Terry, solicitors

Rights
Copyright (c) The Royal College of Surgeons of England

Collection
Plarr's Lives of the Fellows

Format
Obituary

Format
Asset

Asset Path
Root/Lives of the Fellows/E003000-E003999/E003800-E003899

URL for File
376067

Media Type
Unknown