BISSET, CHARLES, an
ingenious physician and writer on Fortification, was born at Glenalbert,
near Dunkeld, in the year 1717. It is alone known, regarding his
parentage, that his father was a lawyer of some eminence, and a
distinguished Latinist. After a course of medical studies at Edinburgh, he
was appointed, in 1740, second surgeon of the Military Hospital in
Jamaica, and spent several years in the West India Islands, and in Admiral
Vernon’s fleet, in order to become acquainted with the diseases of the
torrid zone. The physician who studies new and local forms of disease,
with their symptoms, and natural and accidental terminations, whatever may
be his success as a medical practitioner, may justly be said to perform
good service to his kind. His observations are not of less value than
those of the cautious and expert navigator, who searches and describes
shores hitherto unknown. But, while thus seeking to avert disease from
others, Dr Bisset became himself liable to its ravages. Having, in 1745,
contracted ill health at Greenwich in Jamaica, he was under the necessity
of resigning his situation as second surgeon, in order to return to
Britain. In May, 1746, he purchased an ensigncy in the 42nd (Highland)
regiment, so well known for a long train of military glories, and which
was then commanded by Lord John Murray. By this transition, his attention
was turned from the medical to the military profession, and fortification
became his favourite study. After a fruitless descent on the coast of
Brittany in September, 1748, and passing a winter at Limerick in Ireland,
the regiment was, in the beginning of next campaign, brought into action
at Sandberg, near Hulst, in Dutch Flanders, where one Dutch and two
English regiments suffered very severely. Here Dr Bisset employed himself
in drawing a sketch of the enemy’s approaches, and some time after, in
another of Bergen-op-Zoom, with the permanent lines, the environs, and the
enemy’s first parallel; which were presented by his colonel to the Duke
of Cumberland, the commander-in-chief. The Duke was so much pleased with
these specimens of Dr Bisset’s military knowledge, that he ordered him
to attend the siege of Bergen-op-Zoom, and give due attention daily to the
progress of both the attack and the defence, in order to form a journal of
the whole proceedings. This distinguished duty Dr Bisset undertook with a
modest reluctance, the result rather of inexperience than of any
consciousness of want of knowledge. The result, however, was highly
honourable to him. His journals, duly illustrated with plans, were daily
delivered to Lord John Murray, who forwarded them every second or third
day, to the Duke, who was then at Maestricht, at the head of the allied
army, observing the motions of the French army under Marshal Saxe. His
royal highness was pleased to express his approbation, by recommending Dr
Bisset to the Duke of Montagu, then master-general of the ordnance, who
honoured him with a warrant as engineer extraordinary to the brigade of
engineers; he was at the same time promoted to a lieutenancy in the army.
At the end of the war,
being placed on half-pay, he had full leisure to pursue his studies in
fortification, and also to visit the principal specimens of the art upon
the Continent. The result was his "Essay on the Theory and
Construction of Fortifications," which appeared in 1751, in 8vo.
His attention being now
disengaged from this pursuit, he resumed his original profession, and, for
the sake of a salubrious air, which was necessary to his weakly
constitution, retired to practise at the village of Skelton, in Cleveland,
Yorkshire, where he spent all the remainder of his life. In 1755, when the
Seven Years’ War was impending, he published a "Treatise on the
Scurvy, with Remarks on the Cure of Scorbutic Ulcers," which he
dedicated to Viscount Anton, and the other Lords of the Admiralty. In
1762, appeared his "Essay on the Medical Constitution of Great
Britain," which he inscribed to his friend Sir John Pringle. In this
work he shows the effects of the change of weather, and of the seasons, on
the diseases of Great Britain; and at the conclusion is an interesting
paper on the virtues of the herb Bear’s-foot, in the cure of worms. In
1765, the University of St Andrews conferred upon him the degree of M.D.
In 1766, he published, at Newcastle, a volume of "Medical Essays and
Observations," in which are upwards of twenty papers on the
climate and diseases of the West Indies, which his experience in that
country had enabled him to illustrate in a most satisfactory manner;
besides some others on the chronic disease of Great Britain, particularly
the hooping-cough and the scorbutic itch, as well as many chirurgical
remarks, which show a mind bent on the improvement of his profession. A
few years before his death, he deposited, in the Library of the Infirmary
at Leeds, a manuscript of medical observations, in octavo, and extending
to nearly seven hundred pages; for which the physicians of that
institution honoured him with a formal vote of thanks. Dr Bisset also
presented a manuscript treatise on fortification to the Prince of Wales
(afterwards George IV.); which was deposited in his Royal Highness’s
private library. These, with a small published treatise on naval tactics,
and a few political papers, constituted the whole of the intellectual
exertions of this distinguished man; who died at Knayton, near Thirsk, in
May 1791, aged seventy-five years.
|