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John Ivor Murray : ウィキペディア英語版
John Ivor Murray

Dr John Ivor Murray (1824–24 July 1903), known as Ivor, was a Scottish surgeon who practised in China, Hong Kong and then in Sebastopol in the Crimean War. He was notably adventurous, travelling through Borneo, collecting for the Natural History Museum in Edinburgh (now the National Museum of Scotland), and serving on scientific expeditions to China. He was President of the British Balneological and Climatological Society in 1900.〔
==Career==

Murray went to school at the Lycée Saint Louis, Paris and studied medicine at the University of Edinburgh. He became a Licentiate of the Royal College of Surgeons (L.R.C.S.) in Edinburgh. Although he had won a commission as an army surgeon, as a prize in the military surgery class, there was no job available, so he travelled out to Canton, China, where he ran the hospital during a period of civil unrest in 1846.〔(John Ivor Murray, M.D., F.R.C.S.EDIN. ), Obituary, The British Medical Journal, 8 August 1903, pages 339–340〕
Murray moved to Shanghai, China where he ran a large practice with another pioneering physician, George Rogers Hall of Rhode Island. Together, Murray and Hall opened a Seamen's Hospital with beds for twelve patients in Shanghai in 1852. Hall was as adventurous as Murray: Hall went on to collect the first ever shipment of Japanese plants to be sent to New England in 1861.〔(The First Japanese Plants for New England ), Stephen A. Spongberg, Arnoldia, Vol 50, No 3, 1990, pages 2–11〕 Murray sent a large number of specimens that same year to the Museum of Economic Botany in Edinburgh, including
Murray then moved to Hong Kong. In 1852 he paid for the first hospital for Europeans in Hong Kong. In 1854, on the outbreak of the Crimean War, he travelled directly to Sebastopol to work as a surgeon. He went on to assist in running the General Hospital at Balaclava. After travelling in Egypt, he returned to Scotland in 1856 to take his M.D. degree at Edinburgh, and became a Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons (F.R.C.S.Edin.) there. He was a notably effective Colonial Surgeon〔Peter Laurie, (Irregular Correspondence ), Hong Kong, 14 January 1860〕 in Hong Kong from 1858 to 1872. During his time the death rate among the European population in Hong Kong fell from the alarmingly high rate of 7.52% (at which rate, half the population would die within 9 years) to 2.92% per year: the recorded reason is improved sanitation, though improved surgery and medicine may also have contributed. From 1868 he also served as Inspector of Hospitals.〔 He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh in 1867.
Murray returned to Britain in 1872, intending to retire. However "owing to pecuniary losses"〔 he had to start working again, and moved to the seaside town of Scarborough, England, where he practised for fifteen years, retiring in 1890.〔 He was a founder member and then president of the British Balneological and Climatological Society, which advocated the health benefits of bathing.〔(Extract ). British Medical Journal, Vol 1 No 2058, 9 June 1900, page 140〕〔British Medical Journal, (An Address on the Hill Stations of India as Health Resorts ), Sir Joseph Fayrer, 9 June 1900, pages 1393–1387〕

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