Dr Antony Duggan FRCP (1920-2004)

  • Duggan, Antony Joseph
Date:
1930s-2000s
Reference:
PP/AJD
  • Archives and manuscripts

About this work

Description

Papers of Dr Antony Duggan FRCP (1920-2004), tropical medicine specialist and former Wellcome employee.

The broad headings of the material in this collection are as follows:

1/ material on Duggan's service in Nigeria, 1940s-1950s, with the Sleeping Sickness Service, including papers of his then superior Dr Leslie McLetchie

2/ material on tropical medicine following Duggan's return to the UK in 1953

3/ material on museums, including medical ones, and Duggan's work in the Museums Association

4/ personal items including passport, diaries and a video interview with Duggan

5/ publications, offprints and typescripts.

Publication/Creation

1930s-2000s

Physical description

6 Boxes

Acquisition note

Presented to the library at Wellcome Collection by Miss Cecilia Duggan, Dr. Duggan's daughter, in September 2007.

Biographical note

Antony J. Duggan was born in London in 1920 and trained at the University of London.

In 1944 he joined the Sleeping Sickness Service in Nigeria, working first with Dr Leslie McLetchie and then replacing him as Senior Medical Officer. His work on sleeping sickness included both work on the control of tsetse flies, and the testing of new arsenical remedies. His understanding of this complex infection was reflected in his authorship of a paper that clarified the clinical nomenclature of the time by relating symptoms to the various stages of the host/parasite relationship.

In 1953 Duggan returned to the United Kingdom where, after a short period as Pathology Registrar at the Central Middlesex Hospital, he joined the Wellcome Museum as Assistant Director. He became Director in 1964 and served as such until his retirement in 1984. Under him the Museum, which had become rather run-down, was revitalised and attracted many visitors (both specialist and non-specialist). Duggan pursued his second career in museums to the extent of taking the Museums Association Diploma and becoming heavily involved with the Association, both as an examiner and as chair of the Ethics Panel. After his retirement the Museum was transferred to the Wellcome Tropical Institute in 1985, but closed down and dispersed in 1988 as part of the rearrangement of the Wellcome Trust's activities.

Duggan also played a leading role in the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, serving in sequence between 1971 and 1983 as Secretary, Treasurer, Vice-President and finally President.

He died of tuberculosis in 2004.

More information on his life and career can be found in his obituaries in the British Medical Journal 2005: 330: 366 (12 February 2005) and Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 2005, 99, 481-482).

Related material

At Wellcome Collection:

WA/MMS/AD/Cur/5 consists of 3 boxes of material produced by Duggan whilst working for the Wellcome Museum of Medical Science.

Copyright note

Copyright in this material was retained by the Duggan family.

Terms of use

This collection has been catalogued and is available to library members. Some items have access restrictions which are explained in the item-level catalogue records.

Permanent link

Identifiers

Accession number

  • 1537
  • 1857