George Pearson (doctor)


George Pearson, MD, FRS was a British physician, chemist and early advocate of Jenner's cowpox vaccination.
Davies Gilbert, who was then President of the Royal Society, began his 1829 memoir of Dr. Pearson thus:
He continued:
Pearson studied in Edinburgh, took his MD in 1771 and went to study for a year at St. Thomas's Hospital. He settled in Doncaster in 1777. In his six years there he became a close friend of John Philip Kemble and analysed the water at Buxton, about which he produced a two-volume work.
In 1783 he moved to London, to Leicester Square, and was admitted a Licentiate of the Royal College of Physicians on 25 June 1784. He began to lecture. He was elected Physician of St George's Hospital on 23 February 1787, and was there for the next forty years. He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society on 23 June 1791..
Davies went on:
On Sunday 9 November 1828 he died at his home in George Street, Hanover Square, in Davies' words: 'in consequence of a fall down stairs'.
He left two daughters; one, Frances Priscilla, married John Dodson, DCL, and the other, Mary-Anne, was, once again as Davies put it in 1828, single.

Pearson and the Royal Society

His first application to the Royal Society had been rejected on ballot 15 June 1786, when his neighbour and St. George's colleague John Hunter had been his lead proposer.
For his second attempt in 1791 Pearson's proposers were George Baker; William Heberden; Robert Hallifax ; William Seward; John Gunning; Andrew Kippis; Thomas Bowdler; James Keir; Maxwell Garthshore; James Carmichael Smyth; Bp. Landaff; George Staunton; John Paradise; William Young; John Ash; Tiberius Cavallo; William Watson; Dr. Gray; John Gillies.

Pearson and Smallpox Vaccination

Pearson was a very early advocate of smallpox vaccination and supporter of Edward Jenner and published his early observations within months of the publication of Jenner's Inquiry. Early in 1799 he helped to set up the Original Vaccine Pock Institute in London and started to distribute vaccine, some samples of which were contaminated with smallpox virus. This caused a rift with Jenner who thought his own work was being overshadowed. In turn, Pearson became envious of Jenner's growing reputation. When Jenner petitioned Parliament for a financial reward in 1802, he published a detailed account of his own contribution, together with evidence that Jenner did not discover, vaccination bringing attention to farmer Benjamin Jesty and others who he maintained had prior claims. When Jenner sought a further Parliamentary grant in 1805 Pearson brought Jesty to London to visit the Original Vaccine Pock Institute to further his claim with no success. By this time, although there was opposition to vaccination as such, Jenner's role in its introduction was firmly established and Pearson played little further part. However, his role in the introduction of smallpox vaccine was examined in detail much later when controversy arose over the origin of vaccinia virus, the active constituent of smallpox vaccine.

No. 52 Leicester Square

For 20 years, between the ages of 34 and 54, from 1785–1805, Dr. Pearson lived at 52 Leicester Square.
His predecessors there included Sir Paul Rycaut, the traveller, diplomat, and historian of Turkey, 1679-c. 1684; Justice Robert Perryman or Perrismore, 1704–11; Jacques Christophe Le Blon, painter, engraver and printer, 1734–5; Sir William Wolseley, of Wolseley, Staffordshire, fifth baronet, 1757– 1768; Vice-Admiral John Campbell, 1774–82. The house was demolished in the 1840s making way for New Coventry Street.

Pearson of Tyers Hill

As a result of his marriage to Frances Pearson, co-heir and daughter of Nathaniel Pearson by his heiress wife Priscilla Rayney, of Tyers Hill, George Pearson became involved with Tyers Hill a small estate near Ardsley, Darfield, Barnsley.
Priscilla Rayney, a first cousin, four times removed, of the first of the Rayney baronets, was daughter and co-heir of Alderman Thomas Rayney by Frances daughter of Alderman John Fayram.
Thomas Rayney was son of Henry Rayney by Priscilla daughter of William Wordsworth, of Falthwaite, Silkstone, Penistone by Helen Crosland. Henry Rayney was son of John Rayney of Tyers Hill by Anne, daughter of William Wentworth of South Kirkby, S. Yorks.
John Rayney's grandfather, Henry Rayney of Ferrymoor, had bought Tyers Hill from John Byron in 1569. The nearby Monk Bretton priory was dissolved on 30 November 1538.
Into the mid-twentieth century the heirs of Pearson and Rayneys were leasing Meltonfield and Parkgate seams of coal under Tyershill Farm and land at Cudworth, Darfield and Royston,, to the Mitchell's Main Colliery Company Limited.
George Pearson's wife was a third cousin once removed of William Wordsworth. Between 1775–1799 George Pearson's father, the apothecary, who owned Mosborough Hall, Sheffield, and his mother was Deborah daughter of George Smith by Mary, daughter of John Burnley of Moorgate, Rotherham, a butcher. George Smith is associated with property in Wortley; Tankersley; and Mortomley and High Green, Ecclesfield.
On Pearson's death the Tyers Hill property was inherited by Sir John Dodson, who had married Frances-Priscilla, Pearson's eldest daughter, on 24 December 1822, thus according to John Bateman, who derived his information from statistics published in 1873, John Dodson's son John George Dodson had 181 acres of farmland in the West Riding of Yorkshire, with a rental income worth 300 guineas per annum.
The arms of Pearson of Tyers Hill:
Shield: azure between two palets wavy ermine three suns or.
Crest: out of a cloud, a sun.

Three of his wife's great-nephews

On 10 July 1798 Bower was appointed a Lieutenant in the Fifth West Yorkshire Militia, and then on 1 April 1808 he was promoted to Captain in the Doncaster Volunteer Infantry.

Selected works