Samuel Wilmot


Samuel Wilmot MD MRCSI was the president of the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland in 1815, 1832 and 1846.
Wilmot entered Trinity College Dublin in 1790 to study medicine. He graduated MD and he indentured to William Hartigan, Professor of Anatomy and Surgery in TCD. Wilmot's first appointment was to the Meath Dispensary and in 1807 he was elected Surgeon to Mercer's Hospital. He was later appointed Surgeon to Dr. Steevens' Hospital. Subsequently he held positions in the Lock, Sir Patrick Dun's, and Cork-street Hospitals. He was also consulting surgeon to the City of Dublin Hospital, and surgeon to the Hospital for Incurables. In 1824 he founded Park Street School of Medicine, and in 1826 was appointed Professor of Anatomy and Surgery to the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland.
His obituary stated that Wilmot's expertise "was diseases of the urinary and genital organs, in the treatment of which few, if any, excelled him. The delicacy of manipulation with which he managed such cases was only equalled by the sound practical knowledge and great experience which guided him. The greater portion of his department of the surgical course, at the College of Surgeons, consisted of the description and management of those affections."
He resigned his professorship in 1848, and died on 9 November of that year.