William Sharp (surgeon)

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Born1729 (1729)
Died17 March 1810(1810-03-17) (aged 80–81)
OccupationSurgeon
EmployerGeorge III
William Sharp
Born1729 (1729)
Died17 March 1810(1810-03-17) (aged 80–81)
OccupationSurgeon
EmployerGeorge III
SpouseCatherine (née Barwick)

William Sharp (1729 – 17 March 1810) was an English physician reported to have acted as surgeon to King George III.[1] With his brother Granville Sharp, he was an active supporter of the early campaign against slavery in Britain.[2]

He commissioned a well-known painting of his extended family playing music on a barge.[1]

The son of Thomas Sharp, Archdeacon of Northumberland, William Sharp was born in 1729. His grandfather, John Sharp, also a Church of England clergyman, had risen to become Archbishop of York, and Sharp's father was his biographer. His other grandfather was Sir George Wheler. Sharp was one of a family of thirteen children, although three of his brothers died in infancy. Sent first to a local school in Northumberland, at the age of fourteen he left his parents to go to London as a student of surgery.[3][4]

Career

Epitaph

References

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