Correspondence, plans and other papers relating to the building and administration of the Medical Sciences Institute at Dundee University, 1968-1973; Material relating to alterations. 1974-1986; Medical Sciences Institute: papers relating to fire and alterations. 1966-1986; Medical Services Institute Maps and Plans. 1966-1970; Administrative Papers. 1965-1988; Papers relating to teaching. 1926-1994; Publications. 1887-1896.
David AT Dick, Professor of Anatomy, University of Dundee
This material is held atUniversity of Dundee Archive Services
- Reference
- GB 254 UR-SF 28
- Dates of Creation
- 1887-1994
- Name of Creator
- Physical Description
- 0.4 linear metres
Scope and Content
Administrative / Biographical History
David Dick was born in Glasgow and attended Glasgow University before going to Balliol College, Oxford as a research student. In the late 1950s Dick was appointed Carlsberg Wellcome Research Fellow at the Carlsberg Laboratory in Copenhagen before returning to Oxford. In 1966 he took the post of Visiting Professor of Psychology at Duke University in the United States then, in 1968, was appointed Cox Professor of Anatomy at Dundee University. He was responsible for building up a distinguished Anatomy Department in the University's Medical Sciences Institute and was well respected both as a researcher and teacher. Illness forced him to take partial retirement in 1988 and he retired fully in 1991. Dick was a keen church goer and also took an active interest in politics, becoming honorary vice-president of the local branch of the Liberal Democratic Party. He also stood as a candidate in local district council elections. His other interests included writing and he published a collection of poems entitled 'Physics of the Heart' inspired by his struggle against heart disease. David Dick died in 1992 aged 65 and was survived by his wife Elizabeth and their children.
Arrangement
Usually chronological within series.
Access Information
Open for consultation subject to preservation requirements. Access must also conform to the restrictions of the Data Protection Act (2018), General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR, 2018) and any other relevant legislation or restrictions. Clinical information is closed for 100 years.
Acquisition Information
Unclear. The papers were originally catalogued as RC 120/9, then transferred to RU 296
Note
David Dick was born in Glasgow and attended Glasgow University before going to Balliol College, Oxford as a research student. In the late 1950s Dick was appointed Carlsberg Wellcome Research Fellow at the Carlsberg Laboratory in Copenhagen before returning to Oxford. In 1966 he took the post of Visiting Professor of Psychology at Duke University in the United States then, in 1968, was appointed Cox Professor of Anatomy at Dundee University. He was responsible for building up a distinguished Anatomy Department in the University's Medical Sciences Institute and was well respected both as a researcher and teacher. Illness forced him to take partial retirement in 1988 and he retired fully in 1991. Dick was a keen church goer and also took an active interest in politics, becoming honorary vice-president of the local branch of the Liberal Democratic Party. He also stood as a candidate in local district council elections. His other interests included writing and he published a collection of poems entitled 'Physics of the Heart' inspired by his struggle against heart disease. David Dick died in 1992 aged 65 and was survived by his wife Elizabeth and their children.
Other Finding Aids
Descriptive list available
Physical Characteristics and/or Technical Requirements
Paper and some photographs
Archivist's Note
Fonds level description compiled by Caroline Brown, July 2003. Description updated by Jennifer Johnstone, April 2007
Conditions Governing Use
Reproduction is available subject to preservation requirements. Charges may be made for this service, and copyright and other restrictions may apply; please check with the Duty Archivist.
Accruals
Not expected
Additional Information
Published
Catalogued
UR-SF 28