Charles David Badham

Charles David Badham (Avatar)

1805-1857

Vol IV

Pg 9

Charles David Badham

1805-1857

Vol IV

Pg 9

b.27 August 1805 d.14 July 1857

BA Cantab(1826) MA DM Oxon FRCP(1834)

This biography is part of a series of historical obituaries, originally published in print. As products of their time periods, some biographies contain language which is inappropriate and offensive and present biased accounts of physicians’ lives and work that do not disclose unethical and discriminatory behaviour. As an establishment organisation, the RCP, its members, and the way they are written about, have often reflected societal power structures that favour dominant groups. We aim to redress these biases through ongoing work.

Below is the biography as originally published in 1955.

Charles Badham, eldest son of Dr. Charles Badham of London, was educated first at Westminster School. He entered Emmanuel College, Cambridge, in 1822 and won a scholarship two years later. He took his degree in 1826. After studying medicine at Pembroke College, Oxford, from 1829 to 1833, he practised in Rome and Paris for several years until ill health forced him to abandon his medical career. He returned from abroad in 1845 and was ordained in 1847. For the remainder of his life, while holding curacies in East Anglia, he devoted himself to natural history. He was a frequent contributor to Blackwood's and Fraser's Magazines, and published three works, Insect Life (1845), The Esculent Funguses of England (1847) and Prose Halieutics, or Ancient and Modern Fish Tattle (1854). He died at East Bergholt in Suffolk.

G H Brown

[Al.Cantab., i, 112; Al.Oxon., I, 46; D.N.B., ii, 387]