91³Ô¹ÏÍø

Person    | Male  Born 22/11/1813  Died 4/3/1862

James Robinson

Categories: Medicine

James Robinson

Pioneer of anaesthesia and dentistry. Our picture source gives much information about his life and the circumstances of his death.

He was born on 22 November 1813 in Southampton, Hampshire. On 12 October 1837 he married Ann Elizabeth Webster (1816-1872) at , Holborn, where the marriage register shows for some unknown reason his name as James Robinson Gardiner, a dentist of 3 Store Street, Bedford Square, Holborn, the son of Charles Robinson, a Captain in the Royal Navy. His wife was shown as living 14 Ely Place, Holborn, and the daughter of Ridley Manning Webster (1771-1840), an accountant. 

On 13 July 1849 he was appointed as surgeon dentist to H.R.H. Prince Albert. The 1861 census shows him as a surgeon dentist living at 5 Gower Street, Finsbury, London, with his wife together with a cook and two female house servants.

He died, aged 48 years, on 4 March 1862 in Kenton, Middlesex and was at Highgate Cemetery West, Swain's Lane, London, N6 6PJ. Probate records confirm his address remained as 5 Gower Street and that his will was proved on 7 April 1862 by the oaths of his widow, his brother-in-law Ridley Manning Webster of 1 River Walk Terrace, Islington and a George Frederick Hodgkinson of Waddon, Croydon, Surrey who were his executors, His effects were valued at under £8,000.

Credit for this entry to: Andrew Behan

Comments are provided by Facebook, please ensure you are signed in to see them

This section lists the memorials where the subject on this page is commemorated:
James Robinson

Commemorated ati

James Robinson

English Heritage James Robinson, 1813 - 1862, pioneer of anaesthesia and den...

91³Ô¹ÏÍø

Other Subjects

C. T. Osborn

C. T. Osborn

District Officer in the St John Ambulance Brigade, Metropolitan Corps, 1893-1939. Officer in the Order of St John.

Person, Emergency Services, Medicine, Politics & Administration

1 memorial
Rahere

Rahere

Founded St Bartholomew's Hospital and Priory in 1123, including the church of St Bartholomew the Great, following a vow made while sick on a pilgrimage to Rome. Prior to that he had been a courtier...

Person, Medicine, Politics & Administration

2 memorials
Receiving House

Receiving House

In 1774 a group of London doctors, concerned at the number of people who were mistakenly being given up for dead, wanted to promote new techniques of resuscitation. They decided to concentrate on d...

Building, Medicine, Tragedy

1 memorial
German Hospital

German Hospital

Opened with 12 beds in 1845. The local German community was very large at this time and nurses were recruited from Germany from the Kaiserworth Institute. Florence Nightingale was so inspired by th...

Building, Medicine

2 memorials
Lambeth NHS
1 memorial