William Osborne Greenwood FRSE (1873–1947) was a curious (and perhaps unique) Briton qualified both as a surgeon and a minister of religion.
Issues covering both fields included debates on the agony of childbirth.
His proposers were John William Ballantyne, James Haig Ferguson, Sir John Halliday Croom and Alexander Hugh Freeland Barbour.
[1] In 1930 he began a completely new career and was ordained as a deacon in the Church of England.
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