Alexander Dron Stewart

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Lt Col Alexander Dron Stewart IMS CIE FRSE FRCPE FRCSE MID LLD (18831969) was a 20th-century Scottish physician and public health expert associated with India.[1]

He was joint founder of the Indian National Science Academy in 1935.[2]

He was born in Blairgowrie in Perthshire on 22 June 1883, the son of William Stewart. He was educated at the High School of Dundee[3] and studied medicine at the University of Edinburgh graduating with an MB ChB in 1906. He was commissioned into the Indian Army on 1 September 1906.[4]

In the First World War he served as a surgeon in Gallipoli, Salonika and Mesopotamia. He was mentioned in dispatches and promoted to Major in March 1918. After the war he did further training in public health in Edinburgh.[4]

He left India permanently in 1935 and settled in Edinburgh.[5]

From 1935 to 1948 he was Superintendent of the Edinburgh Royal Infirmary on Lauriston Place. In 1936 he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh. His proposers were Anderson Gray McKendrick, William Glen Liston, Sir David Wilkie, and William Frederick Harvey.[6] In 1937 he was elected a member of the Harveian Society of Edinburgh.[7][8] In 1938 he was elected to the Aesculapian Club of Edinburgh and from 1949-55 served as honorary secretary.[9]

He died in Edinburgh on 16 August 1969.[10]

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