Edward Waymouth Reid FRS (11 October 1862, Canterbury – 10 March 1948, Edinburgh) was a British physiologist.[1]

Born the fourth son of James, Reid, F.R.C.S.E.,[2][3] E. Waymouth Reid was educated at Sutton Valence Grammar School and then matriculated in 1879 at Cavendish College, University of Cambridge, where he graduated B.A. in 1883. At St Bartholomew's Hospital in 1885 he qualified M.B. and M.R.C.S. and was an assistant electrician there. At St Mary's Hospital he was a demonstrator in physiology from 1885 to 1887 and a lecturer in physiology from 1887 to 1889.[1]

At the early age of twenty-seven he was appointed to the newly established chair of physiology in University College, Dundee, where he joined a body of highly gifted men who held teaching posts in the recently formed College affiliated to the University of St. Andrews. Waymouth Reid served the University for forty-six years, and after his retirement in 1935 the University of St. Andrews conferred upon him an honorary degree of LL.D.[4]

X-ray photograph of a frog by Reid and Johannes Kuenen, published in Nature, vol. liii. p. 419, 5 March 1896

While at Dundee he performed early experiments with x-rays with the Dutch physicist Johannes Kuenen.[5]

Waymouth Reid was elected F.R.S. in 1898 and graduated Sc.D. in 1904 from Downing College, Cambridge.[6] He was Dean of the Medical Faculty of the University of St Andrews.[2]

From 1887 to 1905 Reid at St Mary's and Dundee was an active research worker on subjects dealing with physical and electrical phenomena associated with living tissue. At St Mary's with Waller he investigated electrical activity in the excised mammalian heart, published in the Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society, 1887. Reid invented a recording osmometer, and at Dundee investigated secretion and absorption and the processes of diffusion, osmosis and filtration in the passage of materials across surfaces.[7]

Reid's work in the early 1900s on active transport across biological membranes was not fully appreciated until the 1950s.[8]

Reid was apparently the first to use everted segments of intestine for absorption studies. ... In 1902 Reid demonstrated the importance of NaCl in absorption. ... This pioneer in studies on epithelial transport was in many ways far ahead of his contemporaries in the field, yet his work was not appreciated.[9]

Under the alias Herr Doktor Bimstein Pumpduluder, Reid used his laboratory at University College to make sweets to be sold in the Dundee Student's Union to raise money for the College's playing field fund.[10][11]

Selected publications

References

  1. 1 2 "Reid, Edward Waymouth (RT879EW)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  2. 1 2 "Reid, Professor Edward Waymouth". Who's Who: 2055. 1919.
  3. Reid, James (1821–1911), Plarr's Lives of the Fellows Online
  4. Herring, P. T. (17 April 1948). "Obituary. Prof. E. Waymouth Reid, F.R.S." Nature. 161 (4094): 591–592. doi:10.1038/161591a0.
  5. "Celebrating Science" (PDF). Contact. University of Dundee: 27. December 2012.
  6. Cathcart, E. P.; Garry, R. C. (1948). "Edward Waymouth Reid. 1862–1948". Obituary Notices of Fellows of the Royal Society. 6 (17): 213–218. doi:10.1098/rsbm.1948.0026. JSTOR 768918. S2CID 202575267.
  7. O'Connor, W. J. (1991). "Edward Waymouth Reid FRS (1862–1948)". British Physiologists 1885–1914: A Biographical Dictionary. pp. 424–425. ISBN 9780719032820.
  8. Booth, Christopher C. (1990). "Rediscoveries". BMJ. 301 (6754): 763–768. doi:10.1136/bmj.301.6754.763. PMC 1664075. PMID 2224257.
  9. Bell, G. S.; Parsons, D. S. (1976). "Edward Waymouth Reid: a pioneer investigator of epithelial transport". The Journal of Physiology. 263 (1): 75P–78P. doi:10.1113/jphysiol.1976.sp011648. PMC 1307676. PMID 796437.
  10. "RU 777/6/4 Items relating to E. Waymouth Reid, Professor of Physiology". Archive Services Online Catalogue. University of Dundee. Retrieved 30 January 2018.
  11. Shafe, Michael (1982). University education in Dundee: A Pictorial History. Dundee: University of Dundee. p. 20.
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