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Alfred Swaine Taylor

Alfred Swaine Taylor (11 December 1806 in Northfleet, Kent – 27 May 1880 in London) was an English toxicologist and medical writer, who has been called the "father of British forensic medicine".[1][2] He was also an early experimenter in photography.[3]

Grave of Alfred Swaine Taylor in Highgate Cemetery (west side)

Career

Taylor studied medicine at Guy's Hospital and St Thomas's Hospital and was appointed Lecturer in Medical Jurisprudence at Guy's Hospital in 1831. In 1832 he succeeded Alexander Barry as joint Lecturer on Chemistry with Arthur Aitken. He published textbooks on medical jurisprudence and toxicology, contributed to the Dublin Quarterly Journal and medical periodicals, and edited the Medical Gazette. He was the main dissector of Lavinia Edwards's body, a woman who was determined to have been born male, and he wrote extensively about her.[4] He appeared as expert witness in several widely reported murder cases. He also developed the use of hyposulphate of lime as a fixing agent for photography.

He is buried at Highgate Cemetery.

Works

References

  1. ^ Rosenfeld, Louis, 'Alfred Swaine Taylor (1806–1880), pioneer toxicologist – and a slight case of murder',Clinical Chemistry 31:7 (1985)
  2. ^ Alfred Swaine Taylor. Royal College of Physicians of London (2009)
  3. ^ Taylor, Roger, Impressed by Light. British Photographs from Paper Negatives, 1840-1860, (Yale University Press, 2007), p.378.
  4. ^ Gonda, Caroline (2013). "Chapter 10: "An extraordinary subject for dissection": The strange cases of James Allen and Lavinia Edwards". In Mounsey, Chris (ed.). Developments in the histories of sexualities: In search of the normal, 1600-1800. Lanham, Maryland: Bucknell University Press. ISBN 9781611485004.

External links