Charles Hawkes Todd


Charles Hawkes Todd was a medical doctor and the president of the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland in 1821.

Early life

The son of physician and apothecary Andrew Todd and Alicia Hawkes, Charles was born in Sligo, Ireland, 6 November 1784. In 1804, Charles married Elizabeth Bentley, who was the daughter of Colonel Robert Bentley and Mary Stanley.

Professional life

He was educated in a Dublin school but did not enter the University. Instead, he was indentured to James Henthorn, who was related by marriage. Todd passed his examination on 28 June 1803 at the Royal College of Surgeons in Dublin. In April 1809, he was appointed to the position of Surgeon to the House of Industry Hospitals, where he taught anatomy and surgery in a medical school attached to these hospitals. In 1819, Todd was appointed Professor of Anatomy and Surgery at the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland. In 1821 he became president of that college.
In tribute, the Royal College placed his bust in their principal hall. In memory of Charles and Elizabeth, Dublin's medical students erected a tablet at St. Patrick's Cathedral, and the surviving children added a memorial window.

Personal life

Dr. Charles Todd and Elizabeth Bentley Todd had nine sons and six daughters, and all but three were married. Four of his sons were medical practitioners, three were members of the clergy, one was a barrister, and one was a solicitor. Their first son, James Henthorn Todd, was an Irish scholar and Regius Professor of Hebrew at Trinity College in Dublin. Their second son, Robert Bentley Todd, was a London-based physician best known for describing several medical conditions, including Todd's palsy. Their youngest son, Armstrong Todd, was also a London-based physician known for his work in anesthesiology and new surgical procedures.
The children of Charles and Elizabeth Bentley Todd were:
Two children married into the same Hart family: John Harriott Hart of London and Mary Glanville Hart. That is, Robert Bentley Todd married Elizabeth Mary Hart and Margaret Gilmore Todd married John Hart.
In Romantic Ireland, historian Rev. Patricia Hanna, Ph.D. describes James Henthorn Todd's family. She observed that in 1831, Asiatic cholera killed 5,632 people in Dublin and over 50,000 countrywide. While two members of the Todd family did became gravely ill, Hanna suggests the large family must have had proficiency in nursing and doctoring for all to have survived.
Charles Todd died on 19 March 1826 at No. 3 Kildare Street in Dublin. He is buried at St. James' Church, Dublin. His wife, Elizabeth Bentley Todd, died 12 January 1862 at her oldest son's home in Dublin. She is buried near her husband at St. James' Churchyard.