Topley, Professor William Whiteman Carlton FRCP, FRS (1886-1944), bacteriologist

  • Topley, William Whiteman Carlton, 1886-1944
Date:
1910s-1960s
Reference:
PP/TOP
  • Archives and manuscripts

About this work

Description

Small collection of personalia and other papers including biographical information, obituaries, press cuttings, certificates and photographs; publications, writings and notes, including on his time in Serbia; diaries dating from the Second World War period and a medal from the First World War.

Publication/Creation

1910s-1960s

Physical description

8 boxes

Acquisition note

These papers were donated to the library at Wellcome Collection by Topley's daughter in 2001.

Biographical note

Topley was an epidemiologist and bacteriologist. He qualified in medicine from St Thomas's Hospital in 1911 and was Director of the Pathological Department at Charing Cross Hospital from 1911-1922. During the First World War Topley served as a bacteriologist on the British Sanitary Commission, including during the typhus epidemic in Serbia. In 1922 he became Professor of Bacteriology at the University of Manchester, a position he held until 1927 when he was appointed the first Professor of Bacteriology and Immunology at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. Topley was best known for his work on experimental epidemiology and microbial diseases. In 1929 he co-authored, with Graham Wilson, The Principles of Bacteriology and Immunity which became a standard text on the subject. In 1939 Topley organised the Emergency Public Health Laboratory Service and in 1941 became Secretary to the Agricultural Research Council. He died in 1944

Related material

The London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine also holds a few items relating to Topley, including publications and photographs.

Permanent link

Identifiers

Accession number

  • 937
  • 950