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Distributed for University of Wales Press

Griffith Evans 1835-1935

Veterinarian, Pioneer Parasitologist and Adventurer

The life and career of forgotten Welsh veterinary surgeon, medic and adventurer​ Griffith Evans, who discovered that blood parasites cause disease and met Abraham Lincoln and Ulysses S. Grant.

In 1880, Welsh army veterinary surgeon Griffith Evans made the groundbreaking discovery that blood parasites, then universally considered benign, were pathogenic. This was a crucial milestone in the battle against parasitic diseases in animals and humans, but Evans was spurned by his peers and colleagues. His conclusions from experiments with diseased horses were acknowledged by Koch and Pasteur, but it took many years before his achievement received general recognition. Long ignored and forgotten, restoring Evans to his rightful eminence is important for the history of veterinary and medical science in general, and Welsh science in particular. Evans’s talent for engagement with people and cultures characterized his life in Canada and India. During a long and productive retirement in north Wales, he immersed himself in local and national affairs. At his centenary in 1935, Evans received the accolades of his profession, community, and family, dying peacefully in his hundredth year. Since that time, his name has faded into obscurity.

256 pages | 22 halftones | 5.43 x 8.5 | © 2024

Scientists of Wales

Biography and Letters

History of Science


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Table of Contents

Series Editor’s Foreword
List Of Illustrations
Acknowledgments And Preface
Prologue
Family, Childhood and Education
The Royal Veterinary College and Bridgnorth
Woolwich – The Royal Artillery
The Great Eastern
Montreal
Abraham Lincoln and the American Civil War
At The Front
Home, Marriage and Family
India
Katie
Surra On the Northwest Frontier
Banishment To the Madras Presidency
Return To Britain – Unhappy Years
North Wales and Retirement
‘I Knew I Should Be Proved Right’
‘Enjoying A Long Sunset’
Centenarian
Epilogue
Notes

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