Philip Hamill

Philip Hamill (15 October 1883 – 3 March 1959) was a British physiologist, physician, and teacher of pharmacology and therapeutics.

thesis, the Raymond Horton-Smith Prize), and the University of London (BSc 1906, DSc 1910), entering St Bartholomew's Hospital Medical School in 1909, qualifying MRCS, LRCP in 1910, MRCP in 1912, and FRCP in 1919.

[3][4] Following qualification, Hamill worked at St Bartholomew's and at other hospitals in posts including demonstrator in Pathology, and in 1916 went to Mesopotamia with the RAMC; he was invalided out after suffering from dysentery and malaria.

His published work included the estimation of dissolved oxygen, and studies of the cardiac metabolism of alcohol.

[3][4] In 1918, Hamill married Louisa Maude, daughter of jeweller, merchant, and director of the British Honey Company Ltd, Ferdinand Francis Zehetmayr, of 1, Linden Villas, St Margaret's, Twickenham, West London (historically Middlesex).