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William Alexander Greenhill 1 January — 19 September was an English physician, literary editor and sanitary reformer. Clough , W. Lake , A. Stanley and C. Vaughan ; he went on to Trinity College, Oxford , where he took no arts degree but studying medicine at the Radcliffe Infirmary and Paris graduated M. Greenhill was appointed physician to the Radcliffe Infirmary in A "pioneer in the cause of sanitary reform, in the days when sanitary reform was thought a crazy fanaticism", [ 2 ] he first wrote on Oxford's public health and mortality for the Ashmolean Society , after a cholera outbreak in Oxford.
In he hosted Richard Francis Burton in his house, encouraging the young student to study the Arabic by introducing him to the Spanish scholar Don Pascual de Gayangos. Morris and James Bowling Mozley. A political liberal, Greenhill actively supported William Ewart Gladstone 's election as MP for the university in In Greenhill resigned his Radcliffe Infirmary post and briefly attempted practice as an Oxford physician.
However, he moved later that year to Hastings on grounds of health, though he may also have wanted to escape Oxford's febrile religious controversies. Leonards and East Sussex Infirmary. In he founded the Hastings Cottage Improvement Society, and was its secretary from to this company bought up and improved insanitary accommodation, as well as building new housing of a better standard.
The venture's success prompted Greenhill to promote the idea at the National Association for the Promotion of Social Science , and establish a similar organisation in London, the London Labourers' Dwellings Society , of which he was secretary from to At the time of his death at The Croft, Hastings, aged 81, Greenhill had outlived his wife and his eldest daughter and son, who had each died young; one son and one daughter survived him. Greenhill's interest in Arabic and Greek medical writers resulted in a Greek and Latin edition of Theophilus , a Latin edition of Thomas Sydenham , an English translation from the Arabic of Rhazes on small-pox , and a large number of articles in William Smith 's Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities.