William Hunter (anatomist)

William Hunter (23 May 1718 – 30 March 1783) was a Scottish anatomist and physician.

He was born in East Kilbride, South Lanarkshire, the elder brother of John Hunter. After studying divinity at the University of Glasgow, he went into medicine in 1737, studying under William Cullen. He was trained in anatomy at St George's Hospital, London, and specialised in obstetrics.

Early career
In 1764, he became physician to Queen Charlotte. He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1767 and Professor of Anatomy to the Royal Academy in 1768. To aid his teaching of dissection, in 1775 Hunter commissioned sculptor Agostino Carlini to make a cast of the flayed but muscular corpse of a recently executed criminal, a smuggler.

Professor of Anatomy
He was professor of anatomy at the Royal Academy of Arts in London from 1769 until 1772 (his lectures have been published by M. Kemp, "Dr. William Hunter at the Royal Academy of Arts", Glasgow University Press, 1975). He was very interested in arts, had very strong connection to the artistic world and was involved in the problems connected to the illustration of anatomical treatises: in fact, he personally followed the illustration of the "Anatomia uteri umani gravidi" (Birmingham, 1774). He chose as a model for a clear, precise but schematic illustration of anatomic dissections the drawings by Leonardo da Vinci conserved in the Royal Collection at Windsor: Kenneth Clark considers him responsible for the Eighteenth-century rediscovery of Leonardo's drawings in England.

In 1770 he built himself a house fully equipped for the practice of his science, and this formed the nucleus the University of Glasgow's Hunterian Museum and Art Gallery.

An avid antique coin collector
William Hunter was also an avid antique coin collector and the Hunter Coin cabinet in the Hunterian Museum is one of the worlds great collections. According to Preface of 'Catalogue of Greek Coins in the Hunterian Collection' Macdonald 1899, Hunter purchased many important collections including those from Horace Walpole and the bibliophile Thomas Crofts. King George III even donated an Athenian gold piece.

He died in 1783, aged 64, and was buried at St. James's, Piccadilly in London.

Anecdote
He used to relate the following anecdote:—During the American war, he was consulted by the daughter of a peer, who confessed herself pregnant, and requested his assistance; he advised her to retire for a time to the house of some confidential friend; she said that was impossible, as her father would not suffer her to be absent from him a single day. Some of the servants were, therefore, let into the secret, and the doctor made his arrangement with the treasurer of the Foundling Hospital for the reception of the child, for which he was to pay 190l.—The lady was desired to weigh well if she could bear pain without alarming the family by her cries; she said "Yes,"—and she kept her word. At the usual period she was delivered, not of one child only, but of twins. The doctor, bearing the two children, was conducted by a French servant through the kitchen, and left to ascend the area steps into the street. Luckily the lady's maid recollected that the door of the area might perhaps be locked; and she followed the doctor just in time to prevent his being detained at the gate. He deposited the children at the Foundling Hospital, and paid for each 100l. The father of the children was a colonel of the army, who went with his regiment to America, and died there. The mother afterwards married a person of her own rank.