Arthur Shadwell (September 1854 – 21 March 1936) was a British physician and author, specialising in public health, temperance, and wider problems of economics and politics.
[1][2] Arthur Shadwell was an alumnus of Uppingham School and Keble College, Oxford where he matriculated in 1874.
[3][4] He completed his clinical training at Saint Bartholomew's Hospital, and became a Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians.
[6] Shadwell had worked as an assistant physician in Brighton at the Sussex County Hospital, before he decided to pursue his dream of writing on public health, temperance, and wider problems of economics and politics,[7][8] He wrote numerous books and articles for publications like Maclean's,[9] and in 1892 he was selected to be a special correspondent for The Times.
[1][15] Shadwell lived at Pond Cottage[16] and Old Yard House, Ham Common, London[4] where he was buried at St Andrews Church.