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- Charles_Locock abstract "Sir Charles Locock, 1st Baronet (21 April 1799 – 23 July 1875) was an obstetrician to Queen Victoria. He is also credited with the introduction of potassium bromide as a treatment for epilepsy.Charles Locock was born to Henry Locock and his wife Susannah Smyth in Northampton. He studied under Benjamin Brodie and Andrew Duncan, graduating from medical school at Edinburgh University in 1821. Locock became a licensed doctor of the Royal College of Physicians in 1823 and a fellow in 1836. He opened his own obstetrical practice, which became the largest in London. In 1840 he became the first obstetrician to Queen Victoria, and was the attending doctor for the births of all her children. In 1842 he was elected a Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians. He published an 1857 paper in The Lancet outlining the use of potassium bromide as a treatment for epilepsy.In 1860 Locock had a key role in the sensational judicial case known as The Eastbourne manslaughter. It was Locock who conducted the autopsy establishing that the 15-year-old Reginald Cancellor had died as the result of corporal punishment at the hands of his teacher, Thomas Hopley – which led to Hopley being eventually sent to four years in prison on charges of manslaughter.Locock married Amelia Lewis on 5 August 1826; the couple had five sons. He retired from medicine in 1857 and was created a baronet. He also became the 26th president of the Royal Medical and Chirurgical Society. Locock became involved in politics, acting as a justice of the peace for Kent and running as a Conservative candidate for the Isle of Wight in the 1864 election (he lost). He was elected a fellow of the Royal Society the same year.Locock's third son Frederick Locock (1831–1910) married, apparently without the knowledge of his family, by licence at the Countess of Huntingdon's Chapel, North Street, Brighton, on 28 August 1867, Mary Blackshaw, who described herself as the daughter of Abraham Blackshaw, gentleman, but in reality was the illegitimate daughter of a labourer of that name. She was, it seems, the mother of two illegitimate children. The couple adopted a boy, Henry Frederick Leicester Locock, who was born on 30 December 1867 and who was probably their child, but who subsequently told his children that he was the son of Princess Louise. The Princess apparently took some interest in the boy after Mary's early death in 1874. In 2004 an application by Henry Frederick's grandson to use his grandfather's remains in the churchyard at Sevenoaks for DNA purposes was rejected by the Court of Arches, the highest church court, because 'he had failed to show there was a real likelihood of a connection having existed between his grandfather and Princess Louise'. The claims had already been rejected by Lady Longford, the editor of the Princess's correspondence and, after examination in some detail, were again dismissed by Anthony Camp as 'fiction' in 2007, but were revived without new evidence by the art historian Lucinda Hawksley in 2013.Locock was succeeded in the Baronetage by Charles Brodie Locock, born 1827, in 1853 barrister of Lincoln's Inn. Son Sidney (1834-1885), was the British minister resident in Servia from 1881 till his death on 30 Aug. 1885. His fifth son was eventually to be commissioned Colonel Herbert Locock (1837-1910) in the Royal Engineers; while in that post he co-authored the Drainage Manual.".
- Charles_Locock birthDate "1799-04-21".
- Charles_Locock birthYear "1799".
- Charles_Locock deathDate "1875-07-23".
- Charles_Locock deathYear "1875".
- Charles_Locock thumbnail Sir_Charles_Locock_1862.jpg?width=300.
- Charles_Locock wikiPageExternalLink abstract.html?res=9405E5D71E39EF34BC4F53DFBE66838E669FDE.
- Charles_Locock wikiPageExternalLink Locock,_Charles_%28DNB00%29.
- Charles_Locock wikiPageID "31322042".
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- Charles_Locock wikiPageRevisionID "693608482".
- Charles_Locock wikiPageWikiLink Andrew_Duncan,_the_younger.
- Charles_Locock wikiPageWikiLink Arches_Court.
- Charles_Locock wikiPageWikiLink Brighton.
- Charles_Locock wikiPageWikiLink Category:1799_births.
- Charles_Locock wikiPageWikiLink Category:1875_deaths.
- Charles_Locock wikiPageWikiLink Category:Alumni_of_the_University_of_Edinburgh.
- Charles_Locock wikiPageWikiLink Category:Baronets_in_the_Baronetage_of_the_United_Kingdom.
- Charles_Locock wikiPageWikiLink Category:Burials_at_Kensal_Green_Cemetery.
- Charles_Locock wikiPageWikiLink Category:English_obstetricians.
- Charles_Locock wikiPageWikiLink Category:Fellows_of_the_Royal_Society.
- Charles_Locock wikiPageWikiLink Category:People_from_Northampton.
- Charles_Locock wikiPageWikiLink Charles_Brodie_Locock.
- Charles_Locock wikiPageWikiLink Eastbourne_manslaughter.
- Charles_Locock wikiPageWikiLink Epilepsy.
- Charles_Locock wikiPageWikiLink Herbert_Locock.
- Charles_Locock wikiPageWikiLink Isle_of_Wight.
- Charles_Locock wikiPageWikiLink Kent.
- Charles_Locock wikiPageWikiLink Lincolns_Inn.
- Charles_Locock wikiPageWikiLink Manslaughter.
- Charles_Locock wikiPageWikiLink Northampton.
- Charles_Locock wikiPageWikiLink Obstetrics.
- Charles_Locock wikiPageWikiLink Potassium_bromide.
- Charles_Locock wikiPageWikiLink Princess_Louise,_Duchess_of_Argyll.
- Charles_Locock wikiPageWikiLink Queen_Victoria.
- Charles_Locock wikiPageWikiLink Royal_College_of_Physicians.
- Charles_Locock wikiPageWikiLink Royal_Engineers.
- Charles_Locock wikiPageWikiLink Royal_Society.
- Charles_Locock wikiPageWikiLink Sevenoaks.
- Charles_Locock wikiPageWikiLink Sir_Benjamin_Collins_Brodie,_1st_Baronet.
- Charles_Locock wikiPageWikiLink The_Lancet.
- Charles_Locock wikiPageWikiLink University_of_Edinburgh.
- Charles_Locock wikiPageWikiLink File:Sir_Charles_Locock_1862.jpg.
- Charles_Locock wikiPageWikiLinkText "Charles Brodie Locock".
- Charles_Locock wikiPageWikiLinkText "Charles Locock".
- Charles_Locock dateOfBirth "1799-04-21".
- Charles_Locock dateOfDeath "1875-07-23".
- Charles_Locock name "Locock, Charles".
- Charles_Locock shortDescription "British obstetrician".
- Charles_Locock wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Authority_control.
- Charles_Locock wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Persondata.
- Charles_Locock wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Charles_Locock wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Use_dmy_dates.
- Charles_Locock description "British obstetrician".
- Charles_Locock description "British obstetrician".
- Charles_Locock subject Category:1799_births.
- Charles_Locock subject Category:1875_deaths.
- Charles_Locock subject Category:Alumni_of_the_University_of_Edinburgh.
- Charles_Locock subject Category:Baronets_in_the_Baronetage_of_the_United_Kingdom.
- Charles_Locock subject Category:Burials_at_Kensal_Green_Cemetery.
- Charles_Locock subject Category:English_obstetricians.
- Charles_Locock subject Category:Fellows_of_the_Royal_Society.
- Charles_Locock subject Category:People_from_Northampton.
- Charles_Locock hypernym Obstetrician.
- Charles_Locock type Agent.
- Charles_Locock type Baronet.
- Charles_Locock type Person.
- Charles_Locock type Scientist.
- Charles_Locock type Person.
- Charles_Locock type Baronet.
- Charles_Locock type Doctor.
- Charles_Locock type Member.
- Charles_Locock type Obstetrician.
- Charles_Locock type Scientist.
- Charles_Locock type Winner.
- Charles_Locock type Agent.
- Charles_Locock type NaturalPerson.
- Charles_Locock type Thing.
- Charles_Locock type Q215627.
- Charles_Locock type Q5.
- Charles_Locock type Person.
- Charles_Locock comment "Sir Charles Locock, 1st Baronet (21 April 1799 – 23 July 1875) was an obstetrician to Queen Victoria. He is also credited with the introduction of potassium bromide as a treatment for epilepsy.Charles Locock was born to Henry Locock and his wife Susannah Smyth in Northampton. He studied under Benjamin Brodie and Andrew Duncan, graduating from medical school at Edinburgh University in 1821. Locock became a licensed doctor of the Royal College of Physicians in 1823 and a fellow in 1836.".
- Charles_Locock label "Charles Locock".
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- Charles_Locock wasDerivedFrom Charles_Locock?oldid=693608482.
- Charles_Locock depiction Sir_Charles_Locock_1862.jpg.
- Charles_Locock givenName "Charles".
- Charles_Locock isPrimaryTopicOf Charles_Locock.
- Charles_Locock name "Charles Locock".
- Charles_Locock name "Locock, Charles".
- Charles_Locock surname "Locock".