James Parkinson
Template:Short description Template:Other people Template:Use British English Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox person James Parkinson Template:Post-nominals (11 April 1755 – 21 December 1824)<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> was an English surgeon, apothecary, geologist, palaeontologist, and political activist. He is best known for his 1817 work An Essay on the Shaking Palsy,<ref name="ShakingPalsy">Template:Cite book</ref> in which he was the first to describe "paralysis agitans", a condition that was later renamed Parkinson's disease by Jean-Martin Charcot.
Early life

James Parkinson was born on 11 April 1755 in Shoreditch, London, England. He was the son of John Parkinson, an apothecary and surgeon practising in Hoxton Square in London,<ref name="Goldman&Goetz2012"/> and the oldest of five siblings, including his brother William and his sister Mary Sedgwick.<ref name="DOMD2007">Template:Cite book</ref> In 1784, Parkinson was approved by the City of London Corporation as a surgeon.
On 21 May 1783, he married Mary Dale, with whom he subsequently had eight children; two did not survive past childhood. Soon after he was married, Parkinson succeeded his father in his practice in 1 Hoxton Square.
Politics
In addition to his flourishing medical practice, Parkinson had an avid interest in geology and palaeontology, as well as the politics of the day.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
Parkinson was a strong advocate for the underprivileged, and an outspoken critic of the Pitt government. His early career was marked by his being involved in a variety of social and revolutionary causes, and some historians think he most likely was a strong proponent for the French Revolution. He published nearly 20 political pamphlets in the post-French Revolution period, while Britain was in political chaos. Writing under his own name and his pseudonym "Old Hubert", he called for radical social reforms and universal suffrage.<ref name="PlayferHindle2008">Template:Cite book</ref>
Parkinson called for representation of the people in the House of Commons, the institution of annual parliaments. He was a member of several secret political societies, including the London Corresponding Society and the Society for Constitutional Information.<ref name="DOMD2007" /> In 1794, his membership in the organisation led to him being examined under oath before William Pitt and the Privy Council to give evidence about a trumped-up plot to assassinate King George III. He refused to testify regarding his part in the Popgun Plot until he was certain he would not be forced to incriminate himself. The plan was to use a poisoned dart fired from a pop-gun to bring the king's reign to a premature conclusion. No charges were ever brought against Parkinson, but several of his friends languished in prison for many months before being acquitted.
Medicine

Parkinson turned away from his tumultuous political career, and between 1799 and 1807, published several medical works, including a work on gout in 1805.<ref name = "Gout">Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> He was also responsible for early writings on ruptured appendix.
Parkinson was interested in improving the general health and well-being of the population. His writings on public health revealed a concern for the welfare of the people similar to that expressed in his political activism. He was also a crusader for the legal protection for the mentally ill, as well as their doctors and families.
In 1812, Parkinson assisted his son with the first described case of appendicitis in English, and the first instance in which perforation was shown to be the cause of death.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
He believed that any worthwhile surgeon should know shorthand, at which he was adept.
Parkinson's disease
Template:Main Parkinson was the first person to systematically describe six individuals with symptoms of the disease that bears his name. In An Essay on the Shaking Palsy<ref name="ShakingPalsy"/> (1817), he reported on three of his own patients and three persons whom he saw in the street.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> He referred to the disease that later bore his name as paralysis agitans, or shaking palsy.<ref name="Ali2013">Template:Cite book</ref> He distinguished between resting tremors and the tremors with motion.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> Jean-Martin Charcot coined the term "Parkinson's disease" some 60 years later.
Parkinson erroneously suggested that the tremors in these patients were due to lesions in the cervical spinal cord.<ref name="WilkinsBrody1997">Template:Cite book</ref>
Science


Parkinson's interest gradually turned from medicine to nature, specifically the relatively new fields of geology and palaeontology. He began collecting specimens and drawings of fossils in the latter part of the 18th century. He took his children and friends on excursions to collect and observe fossil plants and animals. His attempts to learn more about fossil identification and interpretation were frustrated by a lack of available literature in English, so he decided to improve matters by writing his own introduction to the study of fossils.
In 1804, the first volume of his Organic Remains of a Former World was published. Gideon Mantell praised it as "the first attempt to give a familiar and scientific account of fossils". A second volume was published in 1808, and a third in 1811. Parkinson illustrated each volume and his daughter Emma coloured some of the plates. The plates were later reused by Gideon Mantell.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> In 1822, Parkinson published the shorter "Outlines of Oryctology: an Introduction to the Study of Fossil Organic Remains, especially of those found in British Strata".
Parkinson also contributed several papers to William Nicholson's "A Journal of Natural Philosophy, Chemistry, and the Arts", and in the first, second, and fifth volumes of the Geological Society's Transactions. He wrote a single volume Outlines of Oryctology in 1822, a more popular work. On 13 November 1807, Parkinson and other distinguished gentlemen met at the Freemasons' Tavern in London. The gathering included such great names as Sir Humphry Davy, Arthur Aikin, and George Bellas Greenough. This was to be the first meeting of the Geological Society of London.<ref>History of the Geological Society Template:Webarchive, UK.</ref>
Parkinson belonged to a school of thought, catastrophism, that concerned itself with the belief that the Earth's geology and biosphere were shaped by recent, large-scale cataclysms. He cited the Noachian deluge of Genesis as an example, and he firmly believed that creation and extinction were processes guided by the hand of God. His view on Creation was that each "day" was actually a much longer period, that lasted perhaps tens of thousands of years.
Death and memorials
Parkinson died on 21 December 1824, after a stroke that interfered with his speech. He bequeathed his houses in Langthorne to his sons and wife, and his apothecary's shop to his son John. His collection of organic remains was given to his wife, and much of it was sold in 1827; a catalogue of the sale has never been found. He was buried at St. Leonard's Church, Shoreditch.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
Parkinson's life is commemorated with a stone tablet inside the church of St Leonard's, Shoreditch, where he was a member of the congregation; the exact site of his grave is not known and his body may lie in the crypt or in the churchyard. A blue plaque at 1 Hoxton Square marks the site of his home. Several fossils were named after him. No portrait of him is known. A photograph sometimes identified as an image of him is of a dentist of the same name; he died before the invention of photography.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
World Parkinson's Day is held each year on his birthday, 11 April.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> In addition to the eponymous disease, Parkinson is commemorated in the names of several fossil organisms, including the ammonite Parkinsonia parkinsoni, the crinoid Apiocrinus parkinsoni, the snail Rostellaria parkinsoni, and the tree Nipa parkinsoni.<ref name="Goldman&Goetz2012">Template:Cite book</ref>
Works
- An Address, to the Hon. Edmund Burke from the Swinish Multitude London, 1793.
- Medical admonitions addressed to families, respecting the practice of domestic medicine, and the preservation of health London, 1799. Fifth Edition, 1812
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- The Town and Country Friend and Physician. Philadelphia, 1803.
- Template:Cite book The first volume containing the vegetable kingdom, 1804. Second Edition 1833. The second volume containing the fossil zoophytes, 1808. Second Edition 1833. The third volume containing the fossil starfish, echini, shells, insects, amphibia, mammals &c. 1811
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- Template:Cite book Second Edition, 1830
References
Further reading
External links
- 1755 births
- 1824 deaths
- 18th-century English medical doctors
- Alumni of the London Hospital Medical College
- British neurologists
- Catastrophism
- English activists
- 18th-century British geologists
- 19th-century English medical doctors
- English palaeontologists
- History of mental health in the United Kingdom
- Parkinson's disease researchers
- People from Shoreditch
- Place of death missing
- 19th-century English geologists
- Fellows of the Geological Society of London