Sir Willoughby Francis Wade FRCP (31 August 1827 – 28 May 1906) was a British physician, surgeon, and professor of medicine.
[1] He was knighted in 1896 for professional skill and for his work in furthering the interests of medical men, especially as President of the British Medical Association during the Birmingham meeting of 1890.
He published many articles in medical journals and was the first to draw attention to the presence of albuminuria in diphtheria.
[3] In 1880 in Wandsworth, London, Wade married his cousin Augusta Frances (1836–1916), daughter of Sir John Power, 2nd Baronet, of Kilfane; the marriage was without issue.
In 1898 Willoughby and Augusta Wade retired to a villa near Florence and in 1905 moved to Rome.