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British pharmacologist and fellow of the Royal Society From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Walter Ernest Dixon FRS[1] OBE (2 June 1871 – 16 August 1931) was a British pharmacologist and fellow of the Royal Society.
He was born in Darlington, County Durham and educated at school in Darlington and at Dulwich, gaining a Science Entrance Scholarship to St. Thomas's Hospital in 1890. He later obtained degrees from both London University and Cambridge University.
Dixon became a house physician and then a demonstrator at St. Thomas's in the Department of Physiology. He was also appointed to Lecturership in Pharmacology at Cambridge University, where he resided, going up to London to King's College, London to deliver his lectures, where he held the post of Professor of Materia Medica and Pharmacology.
He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1911.[1] His candidacy citation read: "Professor of Pharmacology. Distinguished as a pharmacologist. Professor of Pharmacology, King's College, London. Assistant to the Downing Professor of Medicine, Cambridge."
During the First World War he played a leading role in a spy ring along the Mediterranean coast of southern Spain that sought to prevent German submarine attacks on British shipping. Other members of the ring included the general manager of the Great Southern of Spain Railway, George Lee Boag, and the Scottish aristocrat Hugh Pakenham Borthwick.[2]
In 1919 he was appointed Reader in Pharmacology at Cambridge. The same year he was awarded OBE in 1919 for his contributions during the First World War.
Dixon died in Whittlesford, Cambridgeshire in 1931.
His publications cited for his candidacy for FRS in 1911 included:[3]
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