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Orlando Charnock Bradley was born at Wheelton, near Chorley, in Lancashire, on May 8, 1871.
Orlando Charnock Bradley was born at Wheelton, near Chorley, in Lancashire, on May 8, 1871.


He received his early education at Wheelton, afterwards proceeding
He received his early education at Wheelton, afterwards proceeding to Chorley Grammar School. Later he attended classes in chemistry, animal physiology and botany at the Harris Institute, Preston, before entering the New Veterinary College, Edinburgh, which was then carried on as a private enterprise by the late Professor William Williams, but was afterwards incorporated by the University of Liverpool in which it now forms the School of Veterinary Science. Bradley’s student career was such that his outstanding ability quickly attracted the attention of Williams, and upon his graduating M.R.C.V.S. in 1892 he was at once appointed Lecturer in Comparative Anatomy and in addition was placed in charge of the College Hospital. It cannot be said that his bent ever lay towards clinical veterinary practice, and one may venture to assume that he did not find his hospital duties particularly attractive, especially when they had to be undertaken in conjunction with his studies in comparative anatomy, in which subject, from his first contact with it, he knew he had found his true scientific sphere. It was nevertheless in the field of clinical veterinary medicine that the spirit of inquiry and the faculty of precise observation which he possessed, and in later years so markedly developed, first became evident in a published paper, for it was at this early stage that he recorded his observations on the treatment of intestinal tympany in the horse by antizymotic agents introduced directly into the colon by intestinal puncture.
to Chorley Grammar School. Later he attended classes in chemistry,
animal physiology and botany at the Harris Institute, Preston, before
entering the New Veterinary College, Edinburgh, which was then carried
on as a private enterprise by the late Professor William Williams, but
was afterwards incorporated by the University of Liverpool in which it
now forms the School of Veterinary Science. Bradley’s student career
was such that his outstanding ability quickly attracted the attention of
Williams, and upon his graduating M.R.C.V.S. in 1892 he was at once
appointed Lecturer in Comparative Anatomy and in addition was placed
in charge of the College Hospital. It cannot be said that his bent ever
lay towards clinical veterinary practice, and one may venture to assume
that he did not find his hospital duties particularly attractive, especially
when they had to be undertaken in conjunction with his studies in
comparative anatomy, in which subject, from his first contact with it,
he knew he had found his true scientific sphere. It was nevertheless in
the field of clinical veterinary medicine that the spirit of inquiry and the
faculty of precise observation which he possessed, and in later years so
markedly developed, first became evident in a published paper, for it
was at this early stage that he recorded his observations on the treatment
of intestinal tympany in the horse by antizymotic agents introduced
directly into the colon by intestinal puncture.


By reason of temperament and inclination Bradley soon became
almost wholly immersed in his anatomical work, and in order (among
other reasons) to extend his knowledge of comparative anatomy took
up the study of medicine at the University of Edinburgh, where he
graduated M.B., Ch.B., in 1900. He was Goodsir Memorial Fellow in
the years 1903-5, the title of his thesis being The Comparative Anatomy
of the Mammalian Cerebellum, and in 1905 was awarded the degree of
Doctor of Science in respect of his work on the development and
morphology of the mammalian hind-brain. Two years later there
followed the conferment of his Doctorate in Medicine for his researches
in the development of the mammalian liver, and in 1908 he received from the Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons the John Henry Steel Memorial
Medal ‘“‘in reward of merit.”


Between 1893 and 1908 Bradley’s contribution to the literature was
By reason of temperament and inclination Bradley soon became almost wholly immersed in his anatomical work, and in order (among other reasons) to extend his knowledge of comparative anatomy took up the study of medicine at the University of Edinburgh, where he graduated M.B., Ch.B., in 1900. He was Goodsir Memorial Fellow in the years 1903-5, the title of his thesis being The Comparative Anatomy of the Mammalian Cerebellum, and in 1905 was awarded the degree of Doctor of Science in respect of his work on the development and morphology of the mammalian hind-brain. Two years later there followed the conferment of his Doctorate in Medicine for his researches in the development of the mammalian liver, and in 1908 he received from the Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons the John Henry Steel Memorial Medal ‘“‘in reward of merit.
extensive and during this period he published forty-seven original scientific
communications, principally on anatomical, genetical and_ historical
subjects. His text-books have proved of incalculable value to veterinary
science. The Outlines of Veterinary Anatomy published in three parts
in 1896-97 was an immature effort in which he, in after years, found
no satisfaction, but his later works were wholly admirable and have
become standard texts. These are: Topographical Anatomy of the
Limbs of the Horse (1920); Topographical Anatomy of the Thorax and
Abdomen of the Horse (1922); Topographical Anatomy of the Head and
Neck of the Horse (1923); Topographical Anatomy of the Dog, in three
editions (1919, 1927, 1935); and The Structure of the Fowl, in two
editions (1915, 1937).


He founded and was editor of the excellent but short-lived Veterinary
Review (1917-20), which had as its object the provision of an account
of current veterinary literature of interest to the specialist and the
practitioner.


In his scientific writings Bradley’s diction is simple, clean-cut and
Between 1893 and 1908 Bradley’s contribution to the literature was extensive and during this period he published forty-seven original scientific communications, principally on anatomical, genetical and_ historical subjects. His text-books have proved of incalculable value to veterinary science. The Outlines of Veterinary Anatomy published in three parts in 1896-97 was an immature effort in which he, in after years, found no satisfaction, but his later works were wholly admirable and have become standard texts. These are: Topographical Anatomy of the Limbs of the Horse (1920); Topographical Anatomy of the Thorax and Abdomen of the Horse (1922); Topographical Anatomy of the Head and Neck of the Horse (1923); Topographical Anatomy of the Dog, in three editions (1919, 1927, 1935); and The Structure of the Fowl, in two editions (1915, 1937).
explicit, but on occasion he would write, as he would often speak, with
grace and charm. His Azstory of the Edinburgh Veterinary College,
published on the occasion of the centenary of the College in 1923, is not
only an authoritative historical record but a fascinating tale.


In October 1900 he was elected to the Chair of Anatomy in the Royal
(Dick) Veterinary College and to the Principalship of the College in 1911,
in which year he was also appointed to the Barclay and Goodsir Lectureship in Comparative Anatomy in the University of Edinburgh. In the
same year he was elected to the Council of the Royal College of Veterinary
Surgeons, the governing body of the veterinary profession.


This time not only marked an epoch in Bradley’s career, but the
He founded and was editor of the excellent but short-lived Veterinary Review (1917-20), which had as its object the provision of an account of current veterinary literature of interest to the specialist and the practitioner.
circumstances of it effected a widening of his sphere of influence and
occasioned a redirection of the main lines of his activities. His research
work gave place to administration not only in that which concerned: his
College, but in the wider field of professional politics. His wisdom in
council was early recognised by his being elected Vice-President of the
Royal College in 1912, and again in 1919, before proceeding to the
Presidential Chair, which he occupied from 1920 to 1922. In 1935 he
received the highest honour which it is within the power of the Royal
College to bestow—that of Honorary Fellowship.


In 1909 Bradley in a presidential address to the Scottish Metropolitan Veterinary Medical Society outlined his conception of uniting all the
many veterinary societies scattered throughout the country into one
national association. At a conference held the following year the
principle of amalgamation was approved, and a committee under Bradley’s
chairmanship was appointed to advance the scheme. After years of
labour and in face of much discouragement, approval and acceptance of
the constitution and rules of that body now known as the National
Veterinary Medical Association of Great Britain and Ireland were finally
obtained. Bradley was first elected President in 1914 and served as
President continuously until 1922.


The Board of Management of the Royal (Dick) Veterinary College
In his scientific writings Bradley’s diction is simple, clean-cut and explicit, but on occasion he would write, as he would often speak, with grace and charm. His Azstory of the Edinburgh Veterinary College, published on the occasion of the centenary of the College in 1923, is not only an authoritative historical record but a fascinating tale.
as early as 1907 recognised the need for the removal of the College to
new and much more commodious buildings, but because of numerous
difficulties and delays the actual building of the new College in Summerhall was not begun till 1913, and its memorial foundation-stone was laid
two days before the outbreak of the Great War. The lean years of the
war constituted a period during which his dominant qualities, quiet
steadfastness to purpose and unswerving determination were most clearly
evident. Not only did he find ways and means of carrying on the building
of the fabric of the new College in spite of the diminution in the building
funds due to the rapidly rising costs, but maintained, at least in being, the
National Veterinary Association which almost from its inception he had
to guide with a steady hand along the very edge of financial bankruptcy.
The fine buildings in which the Edinburgh Veterinary College is now
housed and the strength to which the National Veterinary Association
has so rapidly attained must have been causes of much satisfaction.


His interest in general scientific matters is reflected in his long association with the Royal Physical Society of Edinburgh, to the Fellowship of
which he was elected in 1893, serving as Secretary 1903-11 and as
President 1912-15. Between Igo1 and 1928 he made twelve contributions to the Society’s Proceedings.


Bradley was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh in
In October 1900 he was elected to the Chair of Anatomy in the Royal (Dick) Veterinary College and to the Principalship of the College in 1911, in which year he was also appointed to the Barclay and Goodsir Lectureship in Comparative Anatomy in the University of Edinburgh. In the same year he was elected to the Council of the Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons, the governing body of the veterinary profession.
1903. He was a member of the Council, 1907-10 and again 1915-17,
and served as Vice-President 1934-37. Two of his papers are published
in the Society’s Proceedings: ‘“‘ Abdominal Viscera of Cercocebus fuliginosus and Lagothrix humboldt: (1903), and ‘‘Craniometrical Observations
on the Skull of Eguus prjevalskit and other Horses” (1907).


Bradley could upon occasion affect a charming geniality, but his
natural manner was placid, suave, precise and even cold. His sense of
humour was deep and very real, but his wit, while nimble and adroit,
could be sharp. His tastes were artistic and blended curiously but


This time not only marked an epoch in Bradley’s career, but the circumstances of it effected a widening of his sphere of influence and occasioned a redirection of the main lines of his activities. His research work gave place to administration not only in that which concerned: his College, but in the wider field of professional politics. His wisdom in council was early recognised by his being elected Vice-President of the Royal College in 1912, and again in 1919, before proceeding to the Presidential Chair, which he occupied from 1920 to 1922. In 1935 he received the highest honour which it is within the power of the Royal College to bestow—that of Honorary Fellowship.


smoothly with his scientific attributes. He performed with acceptance
 
upon the violoncello and appreciated music very warmly; yet, with
In 1909 Bradley in a presidential address to the Scottish Metropolitan Veterinary Medical Society outlined his conception of uniting all the many veterinary societies scattered throughout the country into one national association. At a conference held the following year the principle of amalgamation was approved, and a committee under Bradley’s chairmanship was appointed to advance the scheme. After years of labour and in face of much discouragement, approval and acceptance of the constitution and rules of that body now known as the National Veterinary Medical Association of Great Britain and Ireland were finally obtained. Bradley was first elected President in 1914 and served as President continuously until 1922.
complete detachment, he could informedly discourse upon the mechanism
 
of its production. He was readily touched by natural beauty, especially
 
the beauty of flowers, and this but served to quicken his interest in the
The Board of Management of the Royal (Dick) Veterinary College as early as 1907 recognised the need for the removal of the College to new and much more commodious buildings, but because of numerous difficulties and delays the actual building of the new College in Summerhall was not begun till 1913, and its memorial foundation-stone was laid two days before the outbreak of the Great War. The lean years of the war constituted a period during which his dominant qualities, quiet steadfastness to purpose and unswerving determination were most clearly evident. Not only did he find ways and means of carrying on the building of the fabric of the new College in spite of the diminution in the building funds due to the rapidly rising costs, but maintained, at least in being, the National Veterinary Association which almost from its inception he had to guide with a steady hand along the very edge of financial bankruptcy. The fine buildings in which the Edinburgh Veterinary College is now housed and the strength to which the National Veterinary Association has so rapidly attained must have been causes of much satisfaction.
principles and practice of scientific plant-breeding. It was in the possession of so many and such different qualities and of a mind so keen,
 
cultured, and so severally faceted that Bradley was equipped splendidly
 
for carrying through the many important tasks which he sought and to
His interest in general scientific matters is reflected in his long association with the Royal Physical Society of Edinburgh, to the Fellowship of which he was elected in 1893, serving as Secretary 1903-11 and as President 1912-15. Between Igo1 and 1928 he made twelve contributions to the Society’s Proceedings.
which he set himself. The passage of time alone will permit of the proper
 
assessment of the remarkable contribution he made to the advancement
 
of Veterinary Science during, perhaps, the most critical phase of its
Bradley was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh in 1903. He was a member of the Council, 1907-10 and again 1915-17, and served as Vice-President 1934-37. Two of his papers are published in the Society’s Proceedings: ‘“‘ Abdominal Viscera of Cercocebus fuliginosus and Lagothrix humboldt: (1903), and ‘‘Craniometrical Observations on the Skull of Eguus prjevalskit and other Horses” (1907).
development.
 
He died on November 21, 1937.
 
Bradley could upon occasion affect a charming geniality, but his natural manner was placid, suave, precise and even cold. His sense of humour was deep and very real, but his wit, while nimble and adroit, could be sharp. His tastes were artistic and blended curiously but smoothly with his scientific attributes. He performed with acceptance upon the violoncello and appreciated music very warmly; yet, with complete detachment, he could informedly discourse upon the mechanism of its production. He was readily touched by natural beauty, especially the beauty of flowers, and this but served to quicken his interest in the principles and practice of scientific plant-breeding. It was in the possession of so many and such different qualities and of a mind so keen, cultured, and so severally faceted that Bradley was equipped splendidly for carrying through the many important tasks which he sought and to which he set himself. The passage of time alone will permit of the proper assessment of the remarkable contribution he made to the advancement of Veterinary Science during, perhaps, the most critical phase of its development. He died on November 21, 1937.


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 16:26, 6 February 2020

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Introduction

O. Charnock Bradley (1871 – 1937)

Professor Orlando Charnock Bradley FRSE (1871 – 1937) was a British veterinarian at the University of Edinburgh and first President of the National Veterinary Medical Association.


He attended classes in chemistry, animal physiology and botany at the Harris Institute, Preston, before entering the New Veterinary College, Edinburgh, which was then carried on as a private enterprise by the late Professor William Williams, but was afterwards incorporated by the University of Liverpool in which it now forms the School of Veterinary Science.

He was Goodsir Memorial Fellow in the years 1903-5, the title of his thesis being "The Comparative Anatomy of the Mammalian Cerebellum", and in 1905 was awarded the degree of Doctor of Science in respect of his work on the development and morphology of the mammalian hind-brain.

(above text modified from obituary notice)

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Obituary Notice

Orlando Charnock Bradley was born at Wheelton, near Chorley, in Lancashire, on May 8, 1871.

He received his early education at Wheelton, afterwards proceeding to Chorley Grammar School. Later he attended classes in chemistry, animal physiology and botany at the Harris Institute, Preston, before entering the New Veterinary College, Edinburgh, which was then carried on as a private enterprise by the late Professor William Williams, but was afterwards incorporated by the University of Liverpool in which it now forms the School of Veterinary Science. Bradley’s student career was such that his outstanding ability quickly attracted the attention of Williams, and upon his graduating M.R.C.V.S. in 1892 he was at once appointed Lecturer in Comparative Anatomy and in addition was placed in charge of the College Hospital. It cannot be said that his bent ever lay towards clinical veterinary practice, and one may venture to assume that he did not find his hospital duties particularly attractive, especially when they had to be undertaken in conjunction with his studies in comparative anatomy, in which subject, from his first contact with it, he knew he had found his true scientific sphere. It was nevertheless in the field of clinical veterinary medicine that the spirit of inquiry and the faculty of precise observation which he possessed, and in later years so markedly developed, first became evident in a published paper, for it was at this early stage that he recorded his observations on the treatment of intestinal tympany in the horse by antizymotic agents introduced directly into the colon by intestinal puncture.


By reason of temperament and inclination Bradley soon became almost wholly immersed in his anatomical work, and in order (among other reasons) to extend his knowledge of comparative anatomy took up the study of medicine at the University of Edinburgh, where he graduated M.B., Ch.B., in 1900. He was Goodsir Memorial Fellow in the years 1903-5, the title of his thesis being The Comparative Anatomy of the Mammalian Cerebellum, and in 1905 was awarded the degree of Doctor of Science in respect of his work on the development and morphology of the mammalian hind-brain. Two years later there followed the conferment of his Doctorate in Medicine for his researches in the development of the mammalian liver, and in 1908 he received from the Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons the John Henry Steel Memorial Medal ‘“‘in reward of merit.”


Between 1893 and 1908 Bradley’s contribution to the literature was extensive and during this period he published forty-seven original scientific communications, principally on anatomical, genetical and_ historical subjects. His text-books have proved of incalculable value to veterinary science. The Outlines of Veterinary Anatomy published in three parts in 1896-97 was an immature effort in which he, in after years, found no satisfaction, but his later works were wholly admirable and have become standard texts. These are: Topographical Anatomy of the Limbs of the Horse (1920); Topographical Anatomy of the Thorax and Abdomen of the Horse (1922); Topographical Anatomy of the Head and Neck of the Horse (1923); Topographical Anatomy of the Dog, in three editions (1919, 1927, 1935); and The Structure of the Fowl, in two editions (1915, 1937).


He founded and was editor of the excellent but short-lived Veterinary Review (1917-20), which had as its object the provision of an account of current veterinary literature of interest to the specialist and the practitioner.


In his scientific writings Bradley’s diction is simple, clean-cut and explicit, but on occasion he would write, as he would often speak, with grace and charm. His Azstory of the Edinburgh Veterinary College, published on the occasion of the centenary of the College in 1923, is not only an authoritative historical record but a fascinating tale.


In October 1900 he was elected to the Chair of Anatomy in the Royal (Dick) Veterinary College and to the Principalship of the College in 1911, in which year he was also appointed to the Barclay and Goodsir Lectureship in Comparative Anatomy in the University of Edinburgh. In the same year he was elected to the Council of the Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons, the governing body of the veterinary profession.


This time not only marked an epoch in Bradley’s career, but the circumstances of it effected a widening of his sphere of influence and occasioned a redirection of the main lines of his activities. His research work gave place to administration not only in that which concerned: his College, but in the wider field of professional politics. His wisdom in council was early recognised by his being elected Vice-President of the Royal College in 1912, and again in 1919, before proceeding to the Presidential Chair, which he occupied from 1920 to 1922. In 1935 he received the highest honour which it is within the power of the Royal College to bestow—that of Honorary Fellowship.


In 1909 Bradley in a presidential address to the Scottish Metropolitan Veterinary Medical Society outlined his conception of uniting all the many veterinary societies scattered throughout the country into one national association. At a conference held the following year the principle of amalgamation was approved, and a committee under Bradley’s chairmanship was appointed to advance the scheme. After years of labour and in face of much discouragement, approval and acceptance of the constitution and rules of that body now known as the National Veterinary Medical Association of Great Britain and Ireland were finally obtained. Bradley was first elected President in 1914 and served as President continuously until 1922.


The Board of Management of the Royal (Dick) Veterinary College as early as 1907 recognised the need for the removal of the College to new and much more commodious buildings, but because of numerous difficulties and delays the actual building of the new College in Summerhall was not begun till 1913, and its memorial foundation-stone was laid two days before the outbreak of the Great War. The lean years of the war constituted a period during which his dominant qualities, quiet steadfastness to purpose and unswerving determination were most clearly evident. Not only did he find ways and means of carrying on the building of the fabric of the new College in spite of the diminution in the building funds due to the rapidly rising costs, but maintained, at least in being, the National Veterinary Association which almost from its inception he had to guide with a steady hand along the very edge of financial bankruptcy. The fine buildings in which the Edinburgh Veterinary College is now housed and the strength to which the National Veterinary Association has so rapidly attained must have been causes of much satisfaction.


His interest in general scientific matters is reflected in his long association with the Royal Physical Society of Edinburgh, to the Fellowship of which he was elected in 1893, serving as Secretary 1903-11 and as President 1912-15. Between Igo1 and 1928 he made twelve contributions to the Society’s Proceedings.


Bradley was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh in 1903. He was a member of the Council, 1907-10 and again 1915-17, and served as Vice-President 1934-37. Two of his papers are published in the Society’s Proceedings: ‘“‘ Abdominal Viscera of Cercocebus fuliginosus and Lagothrix humboldt: (1903), and ‘‘Craniometrical Observations on the Skull of Eguus prjevalskit and other Horses” (1907).


Bradley could upon occasion affect a charming geniality, but his natural manner was placid, suave, precise and even cold. His sense of humour was deep and very real, but his wit, while nimble and adroit, could be sharp. His tastes were artistic and blended curiously but smoothly with his scientific attributes. He performed with acceptance upon the violoncello and appreciated music very warmly; yet, with complete detachment, he could informedly discourse upon the mechanism of its production. He was readily touched by natural beauty, especially the beauty of flowers, and this but served to quicken his interest in the principles and practice of scientific plant-breeding. It was in the possession of so many and such different qualities and of a mind so keen, cultured, and so severally faceted that Bradley was equipped splendidly for carrying through the many important tasks which he sought and to which he set himself. The passage of time alone will permit of the proper assessment of the remarkable contribution he made to the advancement of Veterinary Science during, perhaps, the most critical phase of its development. He died on November 21, 1937.

References

Bradley OC. On the Development and Homology of the Mammalian Cerebellar Fissures: Part I. (1903) J Anat. Physiol. 37: 112-30. PMID 17232548

Bradley OC. Development and Homology of the Mammalian Cerebellar Fissures: Part II. (1903) J Anat Physiol 37: 221-240.13. PMID 17232554

Bradley OC. On the Development of the Hind-Brain of the Pig: Part I. (1905) 40, 1-14.13. PMID 17232657

Bradley OC. On the Development of the Hind-Brain of the Pig: Part II. (1905) 40, 133-151.6 PMID 17232671

Bradley OC. A contribution to the morphology and development of the mammalian liver. (1908) J Anat. 43: 1-42. PMID 17232788

Bradley OC. (1903). On the Development and Homology of the Mammalian Cerebellar Fissures: Part I. J Anat Physiol , 37, 112-30. PMID: 17232548

Bradley OC. (1908). A Contribution to the Morphology and Development of the Mammalian Liver. J Anat Physiol , 43, 1-42. PMID: 17232788

Bradley OC. (1906). On the Development of the Hind-Brain of the Pig: Part II. J Anat Physiol , 40, 133-151.6. PMID: 17232671

Bradley OC. (1905). On the Development of the Hind-Brain of the Pig: Part I. J Anat Physiol , 40, 1-14.13. PMID: 17232657

Bradley OC. (1904). The Mammalian Cerebellum: Its Lobes and Fissures. J Anat Physiol , 39, 99-117. PMID: 17232628

Bradley OC. (1904). The Mammalian Cerebellum: Its Lobes and Fissures. J Anat Physiol , 38, 448-75. PMID: 17232617

Bradley OC. (1903). Development and Homology of the Mammalian Cerebellar Fissures: Part II. J Anat Physiol , 37, 221-240.13. PMID: 17232554

Bradley OC. (1928). Notes on the Histology of the Oviduct of the Domestic Hen. J. Anat. , 62, 339-45. PMID: 17104198


Search PubMed: Orlando Charnock Bradley


Cite this page: Hill, M.A. (2024, May 29) Embryology Embryology History - Orlando Charnock Bradley. Retrieved from https://embryology.med.unsw.edu.au/embryology/index.php/Embryology_History_-_Orlando_Charnock_Bradley

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