Charles
Scott Sherrington was born on November 27, 1857, at Islington, London. He
was the son - Sir Sherrington pantyhoses Charles of James Norton
Sherrington, of Caister, Great Yarmouth, who died
when Sherrington was a young child. Sherrington's mother later married Dr. Caleb
Rose of Ipswich, a good classical scholar and a noted archaeologist, whose interest
in the English artists of the Norwich School no doubt gave Sherrington the interest
in art that he retained throughout his life.
In 1876 Sherrington began medical studies at St. Thomas's Hospital and in 1878
passed the primary examination of the Royal College of Surgeons, and a year
later the primary examination for the Fellowship of that College. After a short
stay at Edinburgh he went, in 1879, to Cambridge as a noncollegiate student
studying physiology under Michael Foster, and in 1880 entered Gonville and Caius
College there.
In 1881 he attended a medical congress in London at which Sir Michael Foster
discussed the work of Sir Charles Bell and others on the experimental study
of the functions of nerves that was then being done in England and elsewhere
in Europe. At this congress controversy arose about the effects of excisions
of parts of the cortex of the brains of dogs and monkeys done by Ferrier and
Goltz of Strasbourg. Subsequently, Sherrington worked on this problem in Cambridge
with Langley, and with him published, in 1884, a paper on it. In this manner
Sherrington was introduced to the neurological work to which he afterwards devoted
his life.
In 1883 Sherrington became Demonstrator of Anatomy at Cambridge under Professor
Sir George Humphrey, and during the
winter session of 1883-1884 at St. Thomas's
Hospital he demonstrated histology.
The years 1884 and 1885 were eventful ones for Sherrington, for during the winter
of 1884-1885 he worked with Goltz at Strasbourg, in 1884 he obtained his M.R.C.S.,
and in 1885 a First Class in the Natural Sciences Tripos at Cambridge with distinction.
During this year he published a paper of his own on the subject of Goltz's dogs.
In 1885 he also took his M.B. degree at Cambridge and in 1886 his L.R.C.P.
In 1885 Sherrington went, as a member of a Committee of the Association for
Research in Medicine, to Spain to study an outbreak of cholera, and in 1886
he visited the Venice district also to investigate the same disease, the material
then obtained being examined in Berlin under the supervision of Virchow, who
later sent Sherrington to Robert Koch for a six weeks' course in technique.
Sherrington stayed with Koch to do research in bacteriology for a year, and
in 1887 he was appointed Lecturer in Systematic Physiology at St. Thomas's Hospital,
London, and also was elected a Fellow of Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge.
In 1891 he was appointed in succession to Sir Victor Horsley, Professor and
Superintendent of the Brown Institute for Advanced Physiological and Pathological
Research in London. In 1895 he became Professor of Physiology at the University
of Liverpool.
During his earlier years in Cambridge, Sherrington, influenced by W. H. Gaskell
and by the Spanish neurologist, Ramón y Cajal, whom he had met during
his visit to Spain, took up the study of
the spinal cord. By 1891 his mind had
turned to the problems of spinal reflexes, which were being much discussed at
that time, and Sherrington published several papers on this subject and, during
1892-1894, others on the efferent nerve supply of muscles. Later, from 1893-1897,
he studied the distribution of the segmented skin fields, and made the important
discovery that about one-third of the nerve fibres in a nerve supplying a muscle
are efferent, the remainder being motor.
At Liverpool he returned to his earlier study of the problem of the innervation
of antagonistic muscles and showed that reflex inhibition played an important
part in this. In addition to this, however, he was studying the connection between
the brain and the spinal cord by way of the pyramidal tract, and he was at this
time visited by the American surgeon Harvey Cushing, then a young man, who stayed
with him for eight months.
In 1906 he published his well-known book: The Integrative Action of the Nervous
System, being his Silliman Lectures held at Yale University the previous
year, and in 1913 he was invited to become Waynfleet Professor of Physiology
at Oxford, a post for which he had unsuccessfully applied in 1895, and here
he remained until his retirement in 1936. Here he wrote, and published in 1919,
his classic book entitled Mammalian Physiology: a Sir - farm erotica Charles Sherrington Sir family Charles mother Sherrington - son Course Sherrington pictures - black Sir slave Charles of farm Sherrington Charles Sir - erotica Practical Exercises,
and here he regularly taught the students
for whom this book was written.
In physique Sherrington was a well-built, but not very tall man with a strong
constitution which enabled him to carry out prolonged researches.
During the First World War, as Chairman of the Industrial Fatigue Board, he
worked for a time in a shell factory at Birmingham, and the daily shift of 13
hours, with a Sunday shift of 9 hours, did not, at the age of 57, tire him.
From his early years he was short-sighted, but he often worked without spectacles.
The predominant notes of his character as a man were his humility and friendliness
and the generosity with which he gave to others his advice and valuable time.
An interesting feature of him is that he published, in 1925, a book of verse
entitled The Assaying of Brabantius and other Verse, which caused one
reviewer to hope that «Miss Sherrington» would publish more verse.
He was also sensitive to the music of prose, and this and the poet in him, but
also the biologist and philosopher, were evident in his Rede Lecture at Cambridge
in 1933 on The Brain and its Mechanism, in which he denied our scientific
right to join mental with physiological experience.
The philosopher in him ultimately found expression in his great book, Man
on his Nature, which was the published title of the Gifford Lectures for
1937-1938, which Sherrington gave. As is well known, this book, published in
1940, centres round the life and views of the 16th century French physician
Jean Fernel and round Sherrington's own views. In 1946 Sherrington published
another volume entitled The Endeavour of Jean Fernel.
Sherrington was elected a Fellow of the
Royal Society of London in 1893, where
he gave the Croonian Lecture in 1897, and was awarded the Royal Medal in 1905
and the Copley Medal in 1927. In 1922 the Knight Grand Cross of the Order of
the British Empire and in 1924 the Order of Merit were conferred upon him. He
held honorary doctorates of the Universities of Oxford, London, Sheffield, Birmingham,
Manchester, Liverpool, Wales, Edinburgh, Glasgow, Paris, Strasbourg, Louvain,
Uppsala, Lyons, Budapest, Athens, Brussels, Berne, Toronto, Montreal, and Harvard.
As a boy and a young man Sherrington was a notable athlete both at Queen Elizabeth's
School, Ipswich, where he went in 1871, and later at Gonville and Caius College,
Cambridge, for which College he rowed and played rugby football; he was also
a pioneer of winter sports at Grindelwald.
In 1892 Sherrington married Ethel Mary, daughter of John Ely Wright, of Preston
Manor, Suffolk. After some years of frail health, during which, however, he
remained mentally very alert, he died suddenly of heart failure at Eastbourne
in 1952.
From Nobel Lectures, Physiology or Medicine 1922-1941, Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam, 1965
This autobiography/biography was written at the time of the award and later published in the book series Les Prix Nobel/Nobel Lectures. The information is sometimes updated with an addendum submitted by the Laureate. To cite this document, always state the source as shown above.
 
Sir Charles Sherrington died on March 4, 1952.
 
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