Thomas Clifford Allbutt 

Thomas Clifford Allbutt
Thomas Clifford Allbutt
Thomas Clifford Allbutt
Born July 20, 1836(1836-07-20)
Dewsbury, Yorkshire
Died February 22, 1925 (aged 88)
Cambridge, Cambridgeshire
Nationality British
Fields medicine
Institutions University of Cambridge
Known for clinical thermometer

Sir Thomas Clifford Allbutt (July 20, 1836February 22, 1925) was a British physician and inventor of the clinical thermometer.

Born in Dewsbury, Yorkshire, he was the son of Thomas Allbutt, Vicar of Dewsbury and Susan Wooler. Sir Thomas had no children.

Allbutt's invention of the clinical thermometer was widely welcomed because, beforehand, patients were required to hold a one-foot-long thermometer in their hands which took about twenty minutes for an acceptable measurement to be taken of their body temperature.

Allbutt became regius professor of physic (an archaic word for medicine) at the University of Cambridge in 1892 and was knighted in 1907. He died in Cambridge, Cambridgeshire in 1925.

References

External links


Persondata
NAME Thomas Clifford Allbutt
ALTERNATIVE NAMES
SHORT DESCRIPTION medicine
DATE OF BIRTH 1836-07-20
PLACE OF BIRTH Dewsbury, Yorkshire
DATE OF DEATH 1925-02-22
PLACE OF DEATH Cambridge, Cambridgeshire
 This United Kingdom biographical article related to medicine is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.