Morson, Basil Clifford (1921 - 2016)
by
 
Sarah Gillam

Asset Name
E009286 - Morson, Basil Clifford (1921 - 2016)

Title
Morson, Basil Clifford (1921 - 2016)

Author
Sarah Gillam

Identifier
RCS: E009286

Publisher
London : Royal College of Surgeons of England

Publication Date
2016-11-21
 
2019-04-25

Subject
Medical Obituaries

Description
Obituary for Morson, Basil Clifford (1921 - 2016), Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons of England.

Language
English

Source
Plarr's Lives of the Fellows

Full Name
Morson, Basil Clifford

Date of Birth
13 November 1921

Date of Death
13 October 2016

Occupation
Pathologist

Titles/Qualifications
CBE 1987
 
VRD 1963
 
MRCS LRCP 1949
 
BM BCh Oxford 1953
 
DM 1955
 
MRCPath 1964
 
FRCPath 1968
 
FRCS 1972
 
MRCP 1973
 
FRCP 1979
 
Hon FRACS 1990

Details
Basil Morson was a consultant pathologist at St Mark’s Hospital, London and a pioneer of gastrointestinal pathology. He was born in Hampstead, London, one of three sons. His father, Albert Clifford Morson, was a urologist; his mother was Adela Frances Maud Morson née Phene. Through his father, he was related to the 19th century chemist Thomas Newborn Robert Morson, who co-founded the Pharmaceutical Society and pioneered the manufacture of drugs, particularly the opium group. Basil Morton was educated at Beaumont College, Berkshire and Wadham College, Oxford. He then served in the Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve as a sub lieutenant from 1943 to 1946, where he studied diving physiology. Following his demobilisation, he qualified in 1949 from the Middlesex Hospital Medical School with the conjoint examination. He held house surgeon posts at the Middlesex and the Central Middlesex hospitals, and subsequently became an assistant pathologist at the Bland-Sutton Institute of Pathology at the Middlesex Hospital. From 1952 to 1956 he was a morbid histologist at Mount Vernon Hospital, Northwood. He was then appointed as a consultant pathologist at St Mark’s and later became director of the research department there. He was also a senior lecturer in pathology at the Postgraduate Medical School of London, Hammersmith. From 1976, he was a consultant in pathology in the Royal Navy. He retired in 1986. In the 1960s, with Sir Hugh Lockhart-Mummery, he described the special features of colonic Crohn’s disease, and in 1967 demonstrated the histological appearances of dysplasia in ulcerative colitis. He also made significant contributions to the understanding of the adenoma carcinoma sequence. Following the introduction of endoscopy, he pioneered the pathological interpretation of endoscopic biopsies. With Ian Dawson, he wrote the influential first textbook on *Gastrointestinal pathology* (Oxford, Blackwell Scientific Publications, first edition 1972), popularly known as ‘Morson and Dawson’. He was president of the proctology section of the Royal Society of Medicine (from 1973 to 1974) and of the British Society of Gastroenterology (from 1979 to 1980), and treasurer and vice president of the Royal College of Pathologists. Outside medicine, he enjoyed gardening, ornithology, skiing and tennis. In 1950 he married Pamela Elizabeth Gilbert. They had a son, Christopher, two daughters, Caroline and Clare, and a grandson, Sevrin. They divorced in 1982 and he married Sylvia Dutton. He was predeceased by both wives.

Sources
*Colorectal Disease* Vol 19(1) Jan 2017 p.5
 
*Munk’s Roll* http://munksroll.rcplondon.ac.uk

Rights
Republished by kind permission of the Royal College of Physicians

Collection
Plarr's Lives of the Fellows

Format
Obituary

Format
Asset

Asset Path
Root/Lives of the Fellows/E009000-E009999/E009200-E009299

URL for File
381469

Media Type
Unknown