William Lauder Lindsay

Dr William Lauder Lindsay FRSE FLS LRCS (1829-1880) was a Scottish physician and botanist. As a physician he largely worked in the field of mental health. As a botanist he specialised in lichens.

Life

The grave of William Lauder Lindsay, Dean Cemetery, Edinburgh

He was born on 19 December 1829 at 20 Gardners Crescent[1] in western Edinburgh the son of James Lindsay of HM Sasine Office (1804-1874), and his wife, Helen Baird Lauder.[2]

He was educated at the High School in Edinburgh (being dux of 1844) then studied Medicine at Edinburgh University receiving his doctorate (MD) in 1852. In 1853 he began working as an assistant physician at the Crichton Royal Asylum in Dumfries. In 1854 he moved to be Physician at the Murray Royal Asylum in Perth and held this role until 1879.[3]

In 1858 he was elected a Fellow of the Linnean Society (FLS) and in 1861 a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh. His proposer for the latter was John Hutton Balfour. The Society gave him the Neill Prize of 1859 for his work on lichens.[4]

In 1861 and 1862 he took an extended trip to New Zealand later winning a silver medal in the New Zealand Exhibition of 1865 for services to Botany. He also made several trips to northern Europe.

He died of exhaustion and malnutrition brought on by extreme dyspepsia[5] on 24 November 1880 at his home at 3 Hartington Gardens in Edinburgh. He was only 50. He is buried with his parents in Dean Cemetery in western Edinburgh. The grave lies on a short curved path in the south-west of the cemetery.

Publications

Lindsay was a regular contributor to the British Medical Journal,[6] other works include:

Family

In 1859 he married Elizabeth Reid, daughter of William Paterson Reid WS of Demarara. She died in 1863. They had one daughter, Marion Jane Lindsay, who married Dr Francis Haultain of Edinburgh.

His elder brother Wallace Lindsay (1827-1857) was also a physician, serving in the army.

References

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