Samuel Bedson

Sir Samuel Phillips Bedson, MD, FRCP, FRS (1 December 1886 - 11 May 1969) was a British micro-biologist who was Professor Emeritus of Bacteriology, University of London.[1]

He was born in Newcastle-upon-Tyne, the son of Peter Phillip Bedson, Professor of Chemistry in the University of Durham, and was educated at Abbotsholme School in Derbyshire. From there he went to Armstrong College, Newcastle-upon-Tyne, where he graduated B.Sc in 1907. In 1912 he was awarded MB BS by the University of Durham. He then studied microbiology at the Pasteur Institute in Paris and was awarded MD in 1914 for his thesis.

He started work studying blood platelets at the Lister Institute, but when World War I started enlisted in the Northumberland Fusiliers, was wounded at Gallipoli and evacuated home. In 1916 he was in France serving as a pathologist for the Royal Army Medical Corps. After the war he eventually resumed his work on platelets at the Lister Institute.

In 1924 he transferred to the study of Foot-and-mouth disease and in 1926 was awarded a Freedom Fellowship to study viruses at London Hospital, which in 1929 included a study of psittacosis. The causal micro-organisms of psittacosis are known as Bedsoniae as a result of his research. In 1934 he was appointed to the Goldsmiths Company’s Chair of Bacteriology at the London Hospital Medical College, from which he retired in 1952.

He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1935 [2] and was knighted in 1956.

After his retirement he ran until 1962 the virus unit of the British Empire Cancer Campaign in the Bland Sutton Institute of Pathology at the Middlesex Hospital.

He had married Dorothea Annie, the elder daughter of Henry Hoffert, a senior inspector of schools for the Board of Education. They had three sons.

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