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Surgeon-General

Cosmo Gordon Logie

FRSE
Personal details
Born (1820-08-25)August 25, 1820
Bengal, India
Died April 6, 1886(1886-04-06) (aged 65)
Paddington, London
Profession Military surgeon
Education University of Edinburgh

Surgeon-General Cosmo Gordon Logie FRSE (1820–1886) was a military surgeon and medical author of Scots descent in the 19th century.

Life[]

He was born in Bengal in India on 25 August 1820, the son of Elizabeth Sophia (née Arnold), daughter of Sir John Arnold, and Lt Col William Logie of Speymouth.[1]

He was sent home to Scotland to study and trained in medicine at the University of Edinburgh graduating MD in 1840. He followed in his father's footsteps and joined the British Army as an Assistant Surgeon to the Rifle Brigade in 1841.[2] In 1862 he became Surgeon Major to the Royal Horse Guards.

In 1871 he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, his proposer was Alexander Hamilton LLB.[3]

He retired in 1875 at the rank of Deputy Surgeon General and died at Paddington in London on 6 April 1886.

Publications[]

  • On the Cattle Disease (1866)
  • The Causes of the Premature Decline of the Cavalry Soldier (1869)

Family[]

He married Mary Maria Kean (1843–1898) the daughter of the eminent actor Charles John Kean in 1876, when he was 54 and she was 33. Together they had a son Charles Harry Gordon Logie (1877–1897). He had two illegitimate children prior to his marriage, Cosmo Gordon Logie Smail (1856–1908) to a Ms Smail; and Charles Arnold Boswell (born 1860) to Isabella Boswell.[4]

References[]

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