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Irvine Loudon The Mill House, Locks Lane,
Wantage OX12 9EH
irvine.loudon{at}wuhmo.ox.ac.uk
Surgeons, or rather male surgeons, are always addressed as
Mr in the United Kingdom and the Republic of Ireland, sometimes but not
always in Australia and New Zealand, and rarely in Canada or the United
States. This curious British tradition is such a mystery to doctors in
other countries as well as to the British public, that even a work as
erudite as the 1996 edition of The New Fowler's Modern English
Usage seems to have got it wrong.1 Is it therefore a
tradition that should be perpetuated indefinitely, or should it be abandoned?
To understand how the tradition arose it is necessary to go back to the
beginning of the 18th century, when physicians were distinguished by
the possession of a university medical degree: an MD. Although many had
acquired their MDs abroad with minimal effort or bought them for about
£20 (about £800 today) from the Universy of Aberdeen or of
St Andrews, the possession of a medical doctorate entitled
physicians and no other medical practitioner to be addressed as
"doctor." Eighteenth century surgeons, who were of course addressed
as Mr, seldom had any formal qualification except in the case of the
few who were Members of the Company of Surgeons. After the founding of
the Royal College of Surgeons of London in 1800, however, it was
customary for surgeons to take the examination for Membership of the
Royal College of Surgeons and put MRCS after their
name.2
Summary points
(Male) surgeons are always addressed as Mr in the United Kingdom
and the Republic of Ireland
The tradition arose before 1800 when physicians were by definition
doctors who possessed a university medical degree (an MD); surgeons
seldom had any formal qualifications
The growth of voluntary hospitals in the 18th century brought high
status to surgeons
After the founding of the Royal College of Surgeons of London in 1800, surgeons had a formal qualification (the MRCS)
Surgeons became so proud to be distinguished from physicians that the
title of Mr became a badge of honour
Physicians were gentlemen with a university education who dealt with internal diseases, arrived at a diagnosis on the basis of the history and external appearance of the patient, and prescribed in Latin. In theory, but seldom in practice, their supposedly superior knowledge gave them a monopoly over the practice of physic and the authority to supervise the work of surgeons.2 It was the extraordinarily rapid growth of the number of voluntary hospitals between the 1730s and 1800 that brought this hierarchical division to an end. It is only a slight oversimplification to say that because of the rules regarding medical admissions medicine stagnated and surgery leapt ahead within the new world of these hospitals. The brilliant work of men such as John Hunter (1728-93), of whom a contemporary said that he had "made gentlemen of us all," highlights the rapid advance in the status of surgery so that John Abernethy (1764-1837), honorary surgeon at St Bartholomew's Hospital, was able to say in 1812:
There was a time when surgeons were considered as mere appendages of physicians, the mere operators to be put in motion by their directors: but times have changed and surgeons are changed too . . . and in consequence have got a kind of information which puts them on a par with others of the profession.3
Some of his colleagues went further, claiming that surgery was actually superior to medicine. G J Guthrie, president of the Royal College of Surgeons (PRCS), (1785-1856) told a parliamentary select committee in 1834 that "Surgery in Great Britain is at the highest point of elevation of surgery in any part of Europe."4 This is just one indication of the striking self confidence of the surgeons at the London teaching hospitals who by the early years of the 19th century were earning the highest medical incomes and saw themselves as being at the very top of the medical tree. Surgeons had become so pleased with themselves that being addressed as Mr ceased to be a put-down and became a badge of honour and distinction. Although surgeons in 1730 had no right to be called Dr, hospital surgeons in 1830 had no wish to be.
But the situation was complicated by the rapid rise of the 18th century general practitioner in the form of the surgeon-apothecary or, as they were soon to be called, the general practitioner. The Apothecaries' Act of 1815 made it compulsory for all new entrants to general practice to acquire the Licence of the Society of Apothecaries (LSA). A large majority of general practitioners, however, also acquired the MRCS so that the dual qualification MRCS LSA, known colloquially as the "College and Hall" (that is, the college of surgeons and the licence granted at Apothecaries' Hall), was the hallmark of the general practitioner who was qualified to practise surgery as well as physic, midwifery, and pharmacy. 5 6 It was not until 1884 that the Licence of the Royal College of Physicians (LRCP) was joined with the MRCS to form the "conjoint" qualification for general practitioners, thereby liberating them from the "degrading connection with the Society of Apothecaries."7
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FRCS: hallmark of the pure surgeon
After 1815, however, when for the first time it had become
customary for all orthodox medical practitioners to have a formal
qualification and letters after their name, it was galling for the
elite hospital surgeons to have the same qualification (MRCS) as the
general practitioners who, to make matters worse, often called
themselves surgeons. The elite's reaction was to create a new,
unofficial category of "pure surgeons" who differed from the
general practitioner with an MRCS not only by possessing greater
surgical skill and an appointment at a hospital but also on the
negative grounds that under no circumstances would a pure surgeon
dispense drugs or practise midwifery. Out of 8000 practitioners who
held the MRCS in 1834 there were just 200 "pure surgeons," almost
all in London.8 Only the latter were eligible for election to council and allowed to use the front door of their college: the
general practitioners with an MRCS had to go round to the back. When a
new charter in 1843 changed the Royal College of Surgeons of London
into the Royal College of Surgeons of England, the opportunity was
taken to introduce the rank of fellow (FRCS), which became the
hallmark of the pure surgeon and was firmly linked to the convention of
addressing surgeons as Mr.2
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Footnotes |
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Competing interests: None declared.
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References |
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| 1. |
Aronson J.
Modern English abusage.
BMJ
2000;
320:
357 |
| 2. | Cope Z. The Royal College of Surgeons of England: a history. London: Anthony Blond, 1959. |
| 3. | Royal Society of Medicine London. The notebooks of John Greene Crosse of Norwich. MS , 1812:285:g.11. (Manuscript collection.) |
| 4. | Report of the Select Committee on Medical Education. Evidence of G J Guthrie, PRCS. Parliamentary Papers 1834;XIII (part 2):Q.4842. |
| 5. | Loudon I. Medical care and the general practitioner, 1750-1850. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1986:152-170. |
| 6. | Loudon I. Medical education and medical reform. In: Nutton V, Porter R, eds. The history of medical education in Britain. Amsterdam: Rodopi, 1995:229-249. |
| 7. | Cooke AM. A History of the Royal College of Physicians. , Vol 3 Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1972:844-860. |
| 8. | Report of the Select Committee on Medical Education. Evidence of G J Guthrie, PRCS. Parliamentary Papers 1834;XIII (part 2):Q.4731. |
| 9. | Loudon I. Death in childbirth: an international study of maternal care and maternal mortality, 1750-1850. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1992:183. |
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