Thomas Michael Greenhow


Thomas Michael Greenhow MD MRCS FRCS was an English surgeon and epidemiologist.

Career

Greenhow was the second son of Dr Edward Michael Greenhow, an army surgeon of North Shields, Tynemouth. He was a medical graduate of the University of Edinburgh and became M.R.C.S. in 1814, having been a surgery student at London's Guy's and St Thomas's Hospital.
Greenhow spent much of his working life in Newcastle. He and fellow surgeon Sir John Fife are recorded together in 1827 as being Eminent Persons of Newcastle and Gateshead. Greenhow's surgical inventions were heralded by London surgeons in the 1830s. Debretts records that Greenhow was a Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons of England, having become, in 1843, one of the original 300 fellows.
Greenhow worked in all areas of surgery and had a particular interest in obstetrics and gynaecology; in 1845, he controversially published detailed accounts regarding his views on the gynaecological status of Harriet Martineau, who was both his patient and sister-in-law.
Greenhow was a pioneer in the establishment of the University of Durham and in 1855 was a lecturer at the Newcastle-Upon-Tyne's medical college, in connection with Durham University. He and Sir John Fife founded what would become the Newcastle University Medical School. The two men also founded Newcastle's Eye Infirmary. Greenhow worked as the senior surgeon at the Newcastle Infirmary, later renamed the Royal Victoria Infirmary, for many years and was instrumental in its expansion in the 1850s. While working there, he trained Dr John Snow. Greenhow and Snow both advocated for the usage of chloroform when performing major surgery and undertook "dedicated research" to end the London cholera pandemic. Greenhow's son, surgeon Henry Martineau Greenhow, reported in The Lancet his father's surgical success involving chloroform.
Greenhow and his nephew, physician Edward Headlam Greenhow, undertook much research into medical hygiene and public health, publishing papers throughout the 1850s warning of further impending cholera pandemics. The Lancet records that at a meeting in 1855 of the Epidemiological Society of London, Snow responded to a paper being read out by E. Headlam Greenhow in which the research of his uncle, Dr Thomas Michael Greenhow, concerning the 1831–32 cholera epidemic in Tynemouth was outlined. On 6 May 1856, Thomas Greenhow delivered a lecture on this topic at his alma mater, St Thomas' Hospital, where Snow was working as an anaesthetist. In October 1856, E.H.Greenhow became Lecturer on Public Health at St Thomas'.
Thomas Greenhow retired to Leeds in 1860, dying there on 25 October 1881 at Newton Hall.

Family

Greenhow's first wife was Elizabeth Martineau 1794–1850, who succumbed to tuberculosis after producing four children. She was a daughter of Thomas Martineau and Elizabeth Rankin, of the prosperous, socially reformist Martineau family, mainly based in Birmingham. His wife's siblings included the religious philosopher James and the sociologist and political theorist Harriet.
Greenhow's first child and only daughter, Frances, was born in 1821. She married into the Lupton family of Leeds, wealthy wool manufacturers and Unitarians, a branch of English Dissenters. She worked to open up educational opportunities for women, and, more prominently, their access to universities. His first son and second child, Edward Meadows Greenhow, died at the age of 18.
Greenhow's second son, Henry Martineau Greenhow, followed his father into medicine. He studied at University College, London, and by 1854 was a Member of the Royal College of Surgeons of England. He joined the Indian Medical Service spending his entire career in British India, and rising to surgeon major.
Greenhow's third and youngest son, Judge William Thomas Greenhow received his Bachelor of Laws at Somerset House at King's College, London in 1853.
In 1854 at Leeds Mill Hill Chapel, Greenhow married his second wife, Anne, daughter of William Lupton, the father-in-law of Greenhow's daughter Frances Lupton.

Legacy

In May 2020, the UK Daily Telegraph reported that had Greenhow been alive today, he would have "led the fight against Covid 19" and that his great-granddaughter was Olive Middleton née Lupton, a VAD nurse who was born in 1881 at the Potternewton Hall Estate where "the very wealthy" Greenhow had died that same year. Olive Middleton is the great-grandmother of Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge.