Miles Vaughan Williams


Miles Vaughan Williams was a British cardiac pharmacologist and academic. He is best known for the Vaughan Williams classification of antidysrhythmic drugs. From 1955 to 1985, he was a Fellow of Hertford College, Oxford, and its Tutor in medicine.

Life

He was born in Bangalore to Stella and Arthur Vaughan Williams. His father, an engineer working on the railways of India, was a cousin of the composer Ralph Vaughan Williams. Schooling was at Wellington college, and university at Wadham College, where he studied philosophy and classics. He became an ambulance officer during the second world war. Upon his return to Oxford, he switched from Greats to Medicine.
In 1956 he married Marie, with whom he had three children.

Scientific work

He is best known for his work on beta-adrenoceptor antagonists, and for the development of the first widely used classification system for antidysrhythmic drugs, commonly known as the Vaughan Williams classification. This classification system is still widely taught. His work has been recognized through an honorary fellowship of the American College of Clinical Pharmacology and an honorary doctorate from the Sorbonne.

Hertford College

Miles was the first full science fellow of Hertford College, Oxford, appointed in 1955. Apart from teaching, his major contribution to the college included improvements to the fabric of the building, and the design of the Holywell Quadrangle. He used funding from pharmaceutical companies to provide travel funds for medical students at the college.

Selected publications