Henry Littlejohn: Difference between revisions
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== Early life and education == |
== Early life and education == |
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Henry Littlejohn was born in [[Edinburgh]] on 8 May 1826 to Isabella Duncan and Thomas Littlejohn, a master baker of 33 Leith Street. |
Henry Littlejohn was born in [[Edinburgh]] on 8 May 1826 to Isabella Duncan and Thomas Littlejohn, a master baker of 33 Leith Street.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://digital.nls.uk/83400915|title=Edinburgh Post Office annual directory, 1832-1833|website=National Library of Scotland|access-date=2018-01-24}}</ref><ref name="ONDB">{{cite ODNB |last1=White |first1=Brenda M. |title=Littlejohn, Sir Henry Duncan |date=23 September 2004|doi=10.1093/ref:odnb/40753 }}</ref> |
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He studied at the [[Perth Academy]] before attending the [[Royal High School, Edinburgh]] (1838 to 1841). He went on to study medicine at the [[University of Edinburgh]], graduating in 1847. He became a Licentiate of the [[Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh]] in the same year. |
He studied at the [[Perth Academy]] before attending the [[Royal High School, Edinburgh]] (1838 to 1841). He went on to study medicine at the [[University of Edinburgh]], graduating in 1847. He became a Licentiate of the [[Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh]] in the same year.<ref name="BMJ">{{cite journal |title=Obituary: Sir Henry Littlejohn |journal=British Medical Journal |date=10 October 1914 |volume=2 |issue=2806 |pages=46-50 |pmc=2299842 }}</ref>. |
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== Medical and teaching career == |
== Medical and teaching career == |
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From 1847 to 1848, Littlejohn worked as a |
From 1847 to 1848, Littlejohn worked as a house surgeon at the [[Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh]]. After a short period of study in [[Paris]], he returned to the Infirmary as an assistant pathologist. This was followed by a brief spell in general practice. He was admitted as a Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons in 1854.<ref name="ONDB" /> |
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In 1856 he became a lecturer in [[medical jurisprudence]] at the [[Extramural medical education in Edinburgh|Edinburgh Extramural School of Medicine]] at [[Surgeons' Hall]], Edinburgh. |
In 1856 he became a lecturer in [[medical jurisprudence]] at the [[Extramural medical education in Edinburgh|Edinburgh Extramural School of Medicine]] at [[Surgeons' Hall]], Edinburgh.<ref name="RCSE">{{cite web |title=Henry Duncan Littlejohn |url=https://archiveandlibrary.rcsed.ac.uk/surgeon/3770455-henry-duncan-littlejohn |website=Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh |accessdate=29 July 2020}}</ref> |
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== Medical Officer of Health == |
== Medical Officer of Health == |
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[[File:Extract from Henry Littlejohn's report (1865).jpg|thumb|An extract from one of the tables in Littlejohn's 1865 report]] |
[[File:Extract from Henry Littlejohn's report (1865).jpg|thumb|An extract from one of the tables in Littlejohn's 1865 report]] |
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In 1862, Littlejohn was appointed Edinburgh's first Medical Officer of Health. This was at a time when many of the town's inhabitants were living in squalor, in filthy overcrowded tenements, often with no water supply and with little or no sanitation. Disease was rampant. There had been two recent [[cholera]] epidemics, while [[typhoid]], [[diphtheria]] and [[smallpox]] were endemic. |
In 1862, Littlejohn was appointed Edinburgh's first Medical Officer of Health. This was at a time when many of the town's inhabitants were living in squalor, in filthy overcrowded tenements, often with no water supply and with little or no sanitation. Disease was rampant. There had been two recent [[cholera]] epidemics, while [[typhoid]], [[diphtheria]] and [[smallpox]] were endemic.<ref name="EEN">{{cite journal |title=Henry Littlejohn helped win cholera fight |journal=Edinburgh Evening News |date=14 October 2014 |url=https://www.edinburghnews.scotsman.com/news/henry-littlejohn-helped-win-cholera-fight-1523527 |accessdate=29 July 2020}}</ref><ref name="RCSE" /> |
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During his first three years in the post, Littlejohn carried out a meticulous investigation into the living conditions and the state of health of the town's inhabitants. His report, published in 1865, contained 120 pages of detailed statistics, analysing conditions in over one thousand separate streets, closes and tenements. It included extensive data on the prevalence of the most common diseases as well as historical data on earlier epidemics. The report convincingly demonstrated the link between depravation, disease and mortality. |
During his first three years in the post, Littlejohn carried out a meticulous investigation into the living conditions and the state of health of the town's inhabitants. His report, published in 1865, contained 120 pages of detailed statistics, analysing conditions in over one thousand separate streets, closes and tenements. It included extensive data on the prevalence of the most common diseases as well as historical data on earlier epidemics. The report convincingly demonstrated the link between depravation, disease and mortality.<ref name="RCSG">{{cite web |last1=Parry |first1=Carol |title=Littlejohn's Report of the Sanitary Condition of Edinburgh |url=https://heritageblog.rcpsg.ac.uk/2014/04/07/littlejohns-report-of-the-sanitary-condition-of-edinburgh/ |website=Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Glasgow |accessdate=29 July 2020 |date=7 April 2014}}</ref> |
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With the backing of Littlejohn's report, the [[Lord Provost of Edinburgh|Lord Provost]], [[William Chambers (publisher)|William Chambers]], and the Town Council launched an ambitious programme of [[urban renewal]] in Edinburgh. This resulted in the demolition of the worst slums and created the largely Victorian Old Town that exists today. On Littlejohn's recommendation, the Council also brought in regulations governing water supply, sewage, building standards, food hygiene, waste disposal and the management of cemeteries. |
With the backing of Littlejohn's report, the [[Lord Provost of Edinburgh|Lord Provost]], [[William Chambers (publisher)|William Chambers]], and the Town Council launched an ambitious programme of [[urban renewal]] in Edinburgh. This resulted in the demolition of the worst slums and created the largely Victorian Old Town that exists today. On Littlejohn's recommendation, the Council also brought in regulations governing water supply, sewage, building standards, food hygiene, waste disposal and the management of cemeteries.<ref name="ONDB" /><ref name="RCSE" /> |
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In order to track and anticipate the spread of infectious diseases through the population, Littlejohn campaigned for legal powers to compel medical practitioners to notify him of all cases of the most infectious diseases. Despite opposition from doctors, a clause was added to the 1879 Edinburgh Municipal Police Act making such [[Notifiable disease|notification]] compulsory – the first |
In order to track and anticipate the spread of infectious diseases through the population, Littlejohn campaigned for legal powers to compel medical practitioners to notify him of all cases of the most infectious diseases. Despite opposition from doctors, a clause was added to the 1879 Edinburgh Municipal Police Act making such [[Notifiable disease|notification]] compulsory – the first legislation of its kind in Britain. Significantly, the Act placed responsibility for notification on the attending doctor rather than the householder. This measure was extended to the whole of Scotland through the 1897 Public Health (Scotland) Act.<ref name="ONDB" /><ref name="RCSE" /> |
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In 1900, Littlejohn identified a link between [[cigarette]] smoking and [[cancer]], 62 years before the [[Royal College of Physicians]] produced a report which acknowledged such a link.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Catford |first1=E F |title=Edinburgh: The Story of a City |date=1975 |publisher=Hutchinson & Co. |isbn=0 09 123850 1 |page=201}}</ref> |
In 1900, Littlejohn identified a link between [[cigarette]] smoking and [[cancer]], 62 years before the [[Royal College of Physicians]] produced a report which acknowledged such a link.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Catford |first1=E F |title=Edinburgh: The Story of a City |date=1975 |publisher=Hutchinson & Co. |isbn=0 09 123850 1 |page=201}}</ref> |
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During Littlejohn's 46 years as Medical Officer of Health, the death rate in Edinburgh fell from 26 per thousand to 17 per thousand. |
During Littlejohn's 46 years as Medical Officer of Health, the death rate in Edinburgh fell from 26 per thousand to 17 per thousand.<ref name="SCOT">{{cite journal |title=Resignation of Henry D Littlejohn |journal=The Scotsman |date=16 March 1908 |page=7}}</ref> There was a dramatic drop in outbreaks of smallpox and typhus.<ref name="GAZ" /> His introduction of compulsory notification of infectious diseases has been described as 'one of the major advances in public health of the 19th century'.<ref name="RCSE" /> |
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== Police surgeon and forensic scientist == |
== Police surgeon and forensic scientist == |
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Littlejohn enjoyed a parallel career in forensic science and criminal investigation. In 1854, the Town Council appointed him to the part-time post of police surgeon. He went on to serve as medical adviser to the [[Crown Office and Procurator Fiscal Service|Crown]] in Scottish criminal cases, in which role he would continue for over 50 years. He acted as [[expert witness]] in many criminal trials. These included three cases of child murder, and a case of culpable homicide resulting from a railway accident which claimed twenty lives. |
Littlejohn enjoyed a parallel career in forensic science and criminal investigation. In 1854, the Town Council appointed him to the part-time post of police surgeon. He went on to serve as medical adviser to the [[Crown Office and Procurator Fiscal Service|Crown]] in Scottish criminal cases, in which role he would continue for over 50 years. He acted as [[expert witness]] in many criminal trials. These included three cases of child murder, and a case of culpable homicide resulting from a railway accident which claimed twenty lives.<ref name="ONDB" /><ref name="BMJ" />. At the time of his retirement in 1908, the ''Scotsman'' noted that "there was no great criminal trial in the High Court in which he did not act as a Crown witness."<ref name="SCOT" /> |
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One of his most famous cases was that of the wife-murderer, [[ |
One of his most famous cases was that of the wife-murderer, [[Eugene Chantrelle]]. On the first day of 1878, Chantrelle's wife, Elizabeth, became violently ill, and died the next day. A broken gas pipe was discovered in her bedroom, and the police at first assumed that her death was the result of accidental gas poisoning. Littlejohn was not satisfied. Analysing some vomit found on her nightgown, he detected traces of opium. He ordered a full [[Autopsy|post mortem]], which revealed that she had died of narcotic poisoning. Chantrelle was arrested, tried for murder, convicted and executed, mainly on Littlejohn's evidence.<ref>{{cite web |title=Eugene Marie Chantrelle |url=https://sites.google.com/site/southsideheritagegroup/the-south-side-story/crimes-in-the-southside/eugene-marie-chantrell |website=Edinburgh Southside Heritage Group |accessdate=29 July 2020}}</ref> |
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== Appointments and honours == |
== Appointments and honours == |
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[[File:The grave of Henry Duncan Littlejohn, Dean Cemetery.JPG|thumb|Littlejohn's grave at the [[Dean Cemetery]]]] |
[[File:The grave of Henry Duncan Littlejohn, Dean Cemetery.JPG|thumb|Littlejohn's grave at the [[Dean Cemetery]]]] |
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Littlejohn was elected president of the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh in 1875. From 1883 to 1885 he served as president of the Edinburgh Medico-Chirurgical Society. He received an honorary LLD from the University of Edinburgh in 1893. In the same year, he became president of the [[Royal Institute of Public Health]]. |
Littlejohn was elected president of the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh in 1875. From 1883 to 1885 he served as president of the Edinburgh Medico-Chirurgical Society. He received an honorary LLD from the University of Edinburgh in 1893. In the same year, he became president of the [[Royal Institute of Public Health]].<ref name="ONDB" /><ref name="GAZ">{{cite web|url=http://www.scottish-places.info/people/famousfirst219.html|title=Sir Henry Duncan Littlejohn|work=Gazetteer for Scotland|accessdate=3 February 2011}}</ref> |
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He was knighted by [[Queen Victoria]] in 1895. |
He was knighted by [[Queen Victoria]] in 1895.<ref>{{cite journal |title=Honours and Appointments |journal=The Times |date=1 July 1895 |page=6}}</ref> |
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== Later life and family |
== Later life and family == |
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In his later life Littlejohn lived at 24 Royal Circus in [[New Town, Edinburgh|Edinburgh's Second New Town]].<ref>Edinburgh and Leith Post Office Directory 1905-6</ref> He retired from public office on 10 March 1908, at the age of 82. |
In his later life Littlejohn lived at 24 Royal Circus in [[New Town, Edinburgh|Edinburgh's Second New Town]].<ref>Edinburgh and Leith Post Office Directory 1905-6</ref> He retired from public office on 10 March 1908, at the age of 82.<ref name="SCOT" /> |
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His wife was Isabella Jane, daughter of H. Harvey. |
His wife was Isabella Jane, daughter of H. Harvey.<ref name="ONDB" /> His son was [[Harvey Littlejohn|Henry Harvey Littlejohn]] (1862–1927) (normally just called Harvey Littlejohn during his life but posthumously largely called Henry) who followed in his father's footsteps as a forensic scientist and medical officer and who adopted similar techniques of investigation and problem solving.<ref>{{cite web |title=Prof. (Henry) Harvey Littlejohn |url=https://www.scottish-places.info/people/famousfirst3921.html |website=Gazetteer for Scotland |accessdate=30 July 2020}}</ref> |
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Littlejohn died at his country house, Benreoch, near [[Arrochar, Argyll|Arrochar]], [[Dunbartonshire]], on 30 September 1914. |
Littlejohn died at his country house, Benreoch, near [[Arrochar, Argyll|Arrochar]], [[Dunbartonshire]], on 30 September 1914.<ref name="ONDB" /> |
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A strong proponent of [[cremation]], |
A strong proponent of [[cremation]],<ref name="BMJ" /> he was cremated at the Glasgow Crematorium. His ashes were interred at the [[Dean Cemetery]] in Edinburgh. His grave is on the edge of the southern path towards the west end. He is buried with his wife and their son and daughter.<ref name="BMJ" /><ref>{{cite web |title=Sir Henry Duncan Littlejohn |url=https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/139947872/henry-duncan-littlejohn |website=Find A Grave |accessdate=29 July 2020}}</ref> |
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==Further reading== |
==Further reading== |
Revision as of 04:06, 30 October 2020
Sir Henry Littlejohn | |
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Born | Edinburgh, Scotland | 8 May 1826
Died | 30 September 1914 Arrochar, Dunbartonshire, Scotland | (aged 88)
Resting place | Dean Cemetery, Edinburgh |
Citizenship | British |
Education | University of Edinburgh, Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh |
Years active | 46 |
Known for | Advances in public health |
Relatives | Henry Harvey Littlejohn (son) |
Medical career | |
Profession | Doctor |
Field | Public health, forensic science |
Notable works | Report on the sanitary condition of the City of Edinburgh (1865) |
Sir Henry Duncan Littlejohn MD LLD FRCSE (8 May 1826 – 30 September 1914) was a Scottish surgeon, forensic scientist and public health official. He served for 46 years as Edinburgh's first Medical Officer of Health, during which time he brought about significant improvements in the living conditions and the health of the city's inhabitants. He also served as a police surgeon and medical adviser in Scottish criminal cases.
Early life and education
Henry Littlejohn was born in Edinburgh on 8 May 1826 to Isabella Duncan and Thomas Littlejohn, a master baker of 33 Leith Street.[1][2]
He studied at the Perth Academy before attending the Royal High School, Edinburgh (1838 to 1841). He went on to study medicine at the University of Edinburgh, graduating in 1847. He became a Licentiate of the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh in the same year.[3].
Medical and teaching career
From 1847 to 1848, Littlejohn worked as a house surgeon at the Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh. After a short period of study in Paris, he returned to the Infirmary as an assistant pathologist. This was followed by a brief spell in general practice. He was admitted as a Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons in 1854.[2]
In 1856 he became a lecturer in medical jurisprudence at the Edinburgh Extramural School of Medicine at Surgeons' Hall, Edinburgh.[4]
Medical Officer of Health
In 1862, Littlejohn was appointed Edinburgh's first Medical Officer of Health. This was at a time when many of the town's inhabitants were living in squalor, in filthy overcrowded tenements, often with no water supply and with little or no sanitation. Disease was rampant. There had been two recent cholera epidemics, while typhoid, diphtheria and smallpox were endemic.[5][4]
During his first three years in the post, Littlejohn carried out a meticulous investigation into the living conditions and the state of health of the town's inhabitants. His report, published in 1865, contained 120 pages of detailed statistics, analysing conditions in over one thousand separate streets, closes and tenements. It included extensive data on the prevalence of the most common diseases as well as historical data on earlier epidemics. The report convincingly demonstrated the link between depravation, disease and mortality.[6]
With the backing of Littlejohn's report, the Lord Provost, William Chambers, and the Town Council launched an ambitious programme of urban renewal in Edinburgh. This resulted in the demolition of the worst slums and created the largely Victorian Old Town that exists today. On Littlejohn's recommendation, the Council also brought in regulations governing water supply, sewage, building standards, food hygiene, waste disposal and the management of cemeteries.[2][4]
In order to track and anticipate the spread of infectious diseases through the population, Littlejohn campaigned for legal powers to compel medical practitioners to notify him of all cases of the most infectious diseases. Despite opposition from doctors, a clause was added to the 1879 Edinburgh Municipal Police Act making such notification compulsory – the first legislation of its kind in Britain. Significantly, the Act placed responsibility for notification on the attending doctor rather than the householder. This measure was extended to the whole of Scotland through the 1897 Public Health (Scotland) Act.[2][4]
In 1900, Littlejohn identified a link between cigarette smoking and cancer, 62 years before the Royal College of Physicians produced a report which acknowledged such a link.[7]
During Littlejohn's 46 years as Medical Officer of Health, the death rate in Edinburgh fell from 26 per thousand to 17 per thousand.[8] There was a dramatic drop in outbreaks of smallpox and typhus.[9] His introduction of compulsory notification of infectious diseases has been described as 'one of the major advances in public health of the 19th century'.[4]
Police surgeon and forensic scientist
Littlejohn enjoyed a parallel career in forensic science and criminal investigation. In 1854, the Town Council appointed him to the part-time post of police surgeon. He went on to serve as medical adviser to the Crown in Scottish criminal cases, in which role he would continue for over 50 years. He acted as expert witness in many criminal trials. These included three cases of child murder, and a case of culpable homicide resulting from a railway accident which claimed twenty lives.[2][3]. At the time of his retirement in 1908, the Scotsman noted that "there was no great criminal trial in the High Court in which he did not act as a Crown witness."[8]
One of his most famous cases was that of the wife-murderer, Eugene Chantrelle. On the first day of 1878, Chantrelle's wife, Elizabeth, became violently ill, and died the next day. A broken gas pipe was discovered in her bedroom, and the police at first assumed that her death was the result of accidental gas poisoning. Littlejohn was not satisfied. Analysing some vomit found on her nightgown, he detected traces of opium. He ordered a full post mortem, which revealed that she had died of narcotic poisoning. Chantrelle was arrested, tried for murder, convicted and executed, mainly on Littlejohn's evidence.[10]
Appointments and honours
Littlejohn was elected president of the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh in 1875. From 1883 to 1885 he served as president of the Edinburgh Medico-Chirurgical Society. He received an honorary LLD from the University of Edinburgh in 1893. In the same year, he became president of the Royal Institute of Public Health.[2][9]
He was knighted by Queen Victoria in 1895.[11]
Later life and family
In his later life Littlejohn lived at 24 Royal Circus in Edinburgh's Second New Town.[12] He retired from public office on 10 March 1908, at the age of 82.[8]
His wife was Isabella Jane, daughter of H. Harvey.[2] His son was Henry Harvey Littlejohn (1862–1927) (normally just called Harvey Littlejohn during his life but posthumously largely called Henry) who followed in his father's footsteps as a forensic scientist and medical officer and who adopted similar techniques of investigation and problem solving.[13]
Littlejohn died at his country house, Benreoch, near Arrochar, Dunbartonshire, on 30 September 1914.[2] A strong proponent of cremation,[3] he was cremated at the Glasgow Crematorium. His ashes were interred at the Dean Cemetery in Edinburgh. His grave is on the edge of the southern path towards the west end. He is buried with his wife and their son and daughter.[3][14]
Further reading
- Littlejohn, Henry D (1865). Report on the sanitary condition of the City of Edinburgh. Colston & Son.
- Laxton, Paul; Rodger, Richard (2013). Insanitary City: Henry Littlejohn and the Condition of Edinburgh. Carnegie Publishing Ltd. ISBN 978-1859362204.
References
- ^ "Edinburgh Post Office annual directory, 1832-1833". National Library of Scotland. Retrieved 24 January 2018.
- ^ a b c d e f g h White, Brenda M. (23 September 2004). "Littlejohn, Sir Henry Duncan". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/40753. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
- ^ a b c d "Obituary: Sir Henry Littlejohn". British Medical Journal. 2 (2806): 46–50. 10 October 1914. PMC 2299842.
- ^ a b c d e "Henry Duncan Littlejohn". Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh. Retrieved 29 July 2020.
- ^ "Henry Littlejohn helped win cholera fight". Edinburgh Evening News. 14 October 2014. Retrieved 29 July 2020.
- ^ Parry, Carol (7 April 2014). "Littlejohn's Report of the Sanitary Condition of Edinburgh". Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Glasgow. Retrieved 29 July 2020.
- ^ Catford, E F (1975). Edinburgh: The Story of a City. Hutchinson & Co. p. 201. ISBN 0 09 123850 1.
- ^ a b c "Resignation of Henry D Littlejohn". The Scotsman: 7. 16 March 1908.
- ^ a b "Sir Henry Duncan Littlejohn". Gazetteer for Scotland. Retrieved 3 February 2011.
- ^ "Eugene Marie Chantrelle". Edinburgh Southside Heritage Group. Retrieved 29 July 2020.
- ^ "Honours and Appointments". The Times: 6. 1 July 1895.
- ^ Edinburgh and Leith Post Office Directory 1905-6
- ^ "Prof. (Henry) Harvey Littlejohn". Gazetteer for Scotland. Retrieved 30 July 2020.
- ^ "Sir Henry Duncan Littlejohn". Find A Grave. Retrieved 29 July 2020.
- 1826 births
- 1914 deaths
- 19th-century Scottish people
- Scottish knights
- Knights Bachelor
- People from Edinburgh
- People educated at the Royal High School, Edinburgh
- Alumni of the University of Edinburgh
- 19th-century Scottish medical doctors
- British forensic scientists
- British public health doctors
- Academics of the University of Edinburgh
- Medical jurisprudence
- Elders of the Church of Scotland
- Burials at the Dean Cemetery
- Scottish surgeons
- Sherlock Holmes
- People educated at Perth Academy