Alexander Hunter


Dr Alexander Hunter was a Scottish physician, known also as a writer and editor.

Life

Born in Edinburgh in 1729, he was eldest son of a prosperous druggist.
He was sent to the grammar school at the age of 10, and from the age of 15 until 21 attended the University of Edinburgh, studying medicine in the last three years. He spent the next year or two studying in London, in Rouen, and in Paris, and on his return to Edinburgh received his doctorate in 1753. After practising for a few months at Gainsborough, and a few years at Beverley, he was invited to York in 1763, on the death of Dr Perrot, and continued to practise there until his death in 1809.
In 1772 Hunter set to work to establish the York Lunatic Asylum. The building was finished in 1777, and Hunter was physician to it for many years. He was elected Fellow of the Royal Society in 1777, and a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh in 1792. His proposers for the latter were Dr Andrew Duncan, Daniel Rutherford, and Sir James Hall. He was also made an honorary member of the Board of Agriculture.
Hunter died in York on 17 May 1809, and was buried in the churchyard of St Michael le Belfrey, York.

Works

His first literary venture was a small tract in 1764, an ‘Essay on the Nature and Virtues of the Buxton Waters,’ which went through six editions. The last appeared in 1797 under the name of ‘The Buxton Manual.’ In 1806 he published a similar work on the ‘Waters of Harrowgate,’ York. He took an active part in founding the Agricultural Society at York in 1770, ‘and to give respectability to the institution, he prevailed on the members to reduce their thoughts and observations into writing.’ These essays, on the food of plants, composts, &c., were edited by him in four volumes, under the title of ‘Georgical Essays,’ and were so much valued as to be reprinted three times before 1803. His ‘New Method of Raising Wheat for a Series of Years on the Same Land’ appeared in 1796, York.
His continued interest in rural economy was shown in an elaborate illustrated edition, with notes, of John Evelyn's Sylva, 1776. In 1778 he edited Evelyn's Terra, and joined it to the third edition of the Sylva, 1801. In 1795 he addressed a pamphlet to Sir John Sinclair on ‘Outlines of Agriculture’. In 1797 he published ‘An Illustration of the Analogy between Vegetable and Animal Parturition,’ London.
He was author of a tract on the curability of consumption, extracted from a manuscript of William White of York, of which a French translation by A. A. Tardy appeared; and also of a cookery-book, called ‘Culina Famulatrix Medicinæ,’ first published in 1804, reprinted in 1805, 1806, and 1807, and finally in 1820 under the title ‘Receipts in Modern Cookery.’ A production of his old age, which became well known, was a collection of maxims called ‘Men and Manners; or Concentrated Wisdom.’ It reached a third edition in 1808; the last edition contains 1,146 maxims.

Botanical reference

Family

He was twice married: first, in 1765, to Elizabeth Dealtry of Gainsborough, by whom he had one daughter and two sons, and secondly, in 1799, to Anne Bell of Welton, near Hull, who survived him.