P. A. Buxton


Patrick Alfred Buxton was a British medical entomologist

Origins

Patrick Buxton was born on 24 March 1892 in Hyde Park Street, Paddington, London, son of the banker and politician Alfred Fowell Buxton and his wife Violet Jex-Blake.

Career

Buxton was educated at Rugby School and Trinity College, Cambridge, where he graduated with first class honours in Natural Sciences in 1915. He was elected a fellow of the college in 1916. He continued his studies at St George's Hospital, London and qualified in medicine in 1917. Since it was during the First World War he immediately took up a commission in the Royal Army Medical Corps and served in Mesopotamia and North West Persia.
While in the middle east he collected extensively, and developed his interest in insects. In 1921 Buxton accepted the post of entomologist in the Medical Department in Palestine. From 1923 to January 1926 he was with a collecting expedition in Samoa. On returning to London he was appointed head of the Department of Entomology in the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. His work was focused on understanding insects in relation to control. He was involved in the practical control of pests such as lice, mosquitoes and flies during the Second World War. After the way in 1945-1946 he was involved in East Africa on the problem of the control of Tsetse flies.

Awards and honours

Buxton was awarded the Linnean Medal, elected a Fellow of the Royal Society, and Companion of the Order of St Michael and St George.

Marriage and family

Patrick Buxton married Muryell Gladys Rice in March 1917 in Swansea, Glamorgan, Wales.
Patrick and Muryell had two sons and four daughters:
He died on 13 Dec 1955 at his home Grit Howe, Gerrards Cross, Buckinghamshire, but his widow survived him by more than 30 years and died on 6 September 1989 in Oxford.