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Sir James McGrigor
Sir James McGrigor
Sir James McGrigor

Sir James McGrigor

Cromdale, Moray, Scotland, 1771 - 1858
About MeJames McGrigor
9 April 1771 – 2 April 1858
Military surgeon

Known as the father of British Army medicine, James McGrigor attended Marischal College, Aberdeen, before becoming a regimental surgeon. His outstanding qualities as a doctor and administrator saw him rise quickly through the ranks to become the Chief of Medical Staff of the Peninsula Army, under the command of the Duke of Wellington. He introduced the system of staged evacuation of sick and wounded men from the battlefield, a process which saved many thousands of lives.

In an innovative move, James set up temporary field hospitals near the front line to treat short-term casualties. At the same time, he established a number of relay stations for the staged movement of severe casualties to general hospitals. James’s method of staged evacuation still informs military practice today. Significantly he instructed that men who were ill be kept separate from the wounded, which helped to prevent the spread of disease. James also ensured for the first time that accurate reports were received about the numbers of wounded or sick, so that the generals knew how many men were fit for duty.

In 1816 he founded the Army Medical Friendly Society to provide help for widows of medical officers, and four years later the Army Medical Benevolent Society for assisting the orphans of medical officers.
Additional InfoImage attribution: Stipple engraving by J. Holl, 1839, after H. Room, CC BY 4.0 , via Wikimedia Commons
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Re-framing the Collection
James McGrigor, has two connections to chattel slavery. First, he was appointed Surgeon-General for the Duke of Wellington’s army during the Peninsular Wars. The Duke of Wellington was known for his pro-slavery views, frustrating the abolitionist movement at the time. 

The second more tangible link is the fact that McGrigor was ordered to form part of a force sent against the island of Grenada during Fedon’s Rebellion (a significant uprising involving a number of enslaved people fighting against British rule in Grenada).
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