logologo-optometry

An introduction to clinical perimetry

/home/acomuseum/public_html/images/archive/721.jpg
Catalogue Number: 736
An introduction to clinical perimetry
Category: Book
Sub-Category: Book of historical note
Author: Harry Moss TRAQUAIR
Year Of Publication/Manufacture: 1949
Edition: 6th Edition
Time Period: 1940 to 1999
Place Of Publication/Manufacture: London
Publisher/Manufacturer: Henry Kimpton
Description Of Item: Original dark blue cloth, 264 pages, 164 illustrations and one colour plate
Historical Significance: This is the sixth edition of Traquair's classic text on perimetry. The first edition was published in 1927 (see cat No 338). There were 5 later editions, some re-issued by US publishers. The last edition was published in 1957, when it was titled 'Traquairs Clinical Perimetry' and co-authored by G I Scott. Harry Moss Traquair (1875-1954) was Scottish is regarded as the father of clinical perimetry. His name is attached to some visual field concepts such as Traquair's hill of vision, Traquair's perimetric targets and Traquair's scotoma. This book was the last ediiton published under Traquair's sole authorship. Traquair was born in Edinburgh in 1875, and educated at the Edinburgh Academy and the Universities of Halle and Edinburgh. He developed tuberculosis while at Edinburgh University and for that reason went to the Orange Free State, where he remained until the age of twenty-one. The disease recurred during his later years and was eventually the cause of his death. He graduated in medicine 1901 with first-class honours, and was elected a Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh in 1904. He was appointed ophthalmic surgeon to the Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh in 1927 and Lecturer in Diseases of the Eye at the University of Edinburgh in the same year. He was President of the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh from 1939 to 1941, President of the UK Ophthalmological Society from 1943 to 1944, and a Member of the Council of the Faculty of Ophthalmologists. After retirement from practice he was elected the first Honorary Member of the Faculty. He contributed widely to the literature of ophthalmology, and was awarded the Middlemore Prize in 1920, the Doyne Memorial Medal in 1922, and the Mackenzie Memorial Medal in 1939.
How Acquired: Donated by CWC optometrists, Launceston, originally from the practice of Eric Padman
Date Acquired: 1/08/2005
Condition: Good
Location: Archive room. East wall. Books of historical note

Search the archive:

Author or Inventor:
Catalogue #
Name of Donor