Following a severe outbreak of
cholera in England in 1831-32 a London physician, J.H.Tucker, proposed in a letter to the
Lancet that a society should be formed to specifically study epidemics. The first meeting of the Epidemiological Society of London took place on 6 May 1850 in Hanover Square, London. At a follow-up meeting in July, chaired by
Sir Astley Cooper, a constitution was agreed and officers appointed.
Benjamin Guy Babington, a Guy's Hospital physician, was elected as the first president of the society, whose agreed objectives were: • to institute rigid examination into the causes and conditions which influence the origin, propagation, mitigation, and prevention of epidemic diseases • to institute...original and comprehensive researches into the nature and laws of disease • to communicate with government and legislature on matters connected with the prevention of epidemic diseases. Reports from members of the Epidemiological Society were recorded at the NAPSS; the two societies being linked courtesy of their members holding a scientific interest in matters epidemiological - e.g.: The society's published transactions from 1858 include a report from the Epidemiological Society which is followed by a miscellaneous paper delivered by
T. M. Greenhow: "Health; how preserved, how impaired". Greenhow's nephew,
Dr E Headlam Greenhow, is listed as delivering a paper: "Public Health Statistics". Dr E.H. Greenhow had held the "Chair" of the Epidemiological Society in May 1853. In 1900 the Epidemiological Society held its final Commemoration Dinner. In 1907 it became the Epidemiology and State Medicine section of the
Royal Society of Medicine. ==Awards==