Biographical details are given in: Memoir, Medical Times1849; 20: 34–5; memoir, Lancet1849; ii: 46–7; and Dictionary of National Biography. Certain errors in these accounts (noted below) have been pointed out to me by Dr Ian Gregg (to whom I am most grateful)
2.
EllisK.The Post Office in the 18th Century. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1958
3.
Recalled by ATT in A Journal of a Tour of England and Scotland 1823, unpublished but being edited by Dr Gregg
4.
LawrenceC.Ornate physicians and learned artisans. In: BynumWFPorterR, Eds. William Hunter and the Eighteenth-Century Medical World. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1985
5.
RosnerL.Medical Education in the Age of Imperialism. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 1991
6.
Memoir. Medical Times1849; 20: 34
7.
GrayJGuthrieD, Ed.). History of the Royal Medical Society. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 1952
8.
HuntingP.History of the Royal Society of Medicine. London: Royal Society of Medicine Press, 2001
9.
CopeZ.The Royal College of Surgeons of England. London: Anthony Blond, 1959
10.
ClarkeJFL. Autobiographical Recollections of the Medical Profession. London: JA Churchill, 1874
11.
Sloane Street was developed from the 1790s but rate books show that it was not fully occupied in 1800. In 1810, ATT gives his address as No. 23, in 1823 the rate books show him at No. 93, in 1826 also at No. 91, with coach house, stables and room over. None of these original houses is now standing
12.
Royal Humane Society. Annual Report, 1800
13.
Memoir. Medical Times1849; 20: 35
14.
BryanG.Chelsea in the Olden and Present Times. London: 1869: 160
15.
LoudonISL. The origins and growth of the dispensary movement in England. Bull Hist Med.1981; 65: 322–42
16.
GreggI.John Barnes' Tasmanian Ancestry. 2000: 19
17.
KatharineThomson In: Dictionary of National Biography
18.
SmartR.Keeper of Muniments, St Andrews University
19.
Account based upon Loudon I. Medical Care and the General Practitioner 1750–1850. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1986
20.
Report. London Medical Repository1814; 1: 572
21.
Ibid.: 522
22.
CopeZ (op. cit. ref. 9): 38
23.
WilliamsDI. The Obstetric Society of 1825. Med Hist1998; 42: 234–45
24.
Report of meeting. Lancet1826; ii: 768–9
25.
MerringtonWR. University College Hospital and its Medical School. London: Heinemann, 1978: 14
26.
ClarkeJFL (op. cit. ref. 10): 306–9
27.
BellotHaleUniversity College London 1826–1926. London: University of London Press, 1929
ThomsonAT. Report of an address. Lancet1836–7; i: 74–82
31.
Editorial. Lancet, July 1837: 593–4; BartripP.Themselves Writ Large. London: British Medical Journal Publications, 1996
32.
LoudonI (op. cit. ref. 19): 283–6
33.
Editorial. Lancet, December 1884: 343
34.
ThomsonAT, Ed. New Edition of Thomas Bateman's Atlas of the Delineations of Cutaneous Eruptions. London: Longman, 1829
35.
ThomsonAT. Some Observations on the Properties and Medical Employment of Ioduret and Hydriodate of Iron. London: Longman, 1834. For other papers see Memoir. Medical Times 1849; 20:35
36.
ThomsonAT. Two cases of hydrocephalus. London Medical Repository1814; 1: 264
37.
ThomsonAT. Retrospect of the progress of medical science. London Medical Repository1818; 9: 1818
38.
WilsonEJ. West London Nursery Gardens. London: Fulham and Hammersmith Historical Society, 1982: 383
39.
PorterR.The Greatest Benefit to Mankind. London: Harper Collins, 1997: 393
40.
HollowaySWF. The orthodox fringe. The origin of the Pharmaceutical Society of Great Britain. In: BynumWFPorterR, Eds. Medical Fringe and Medical Orthodoxy. London, Croom Helm, 1987
41.
Medical Directory. London: Churchill, 1847. See analysis by Loudon I (op. cit. ref. 19)