He was born in Wheelton near
Chorley in
Lancashire on 8 May 1871. He studied at Chorley Grammar School and then the Harris Institute in Preston (studying chemistry, animal physiology and botany) before travelling north to
Edinburgh to study as a vet. This was at the
New Veterinary College run by William Williams, set up in rivalry to the
Dick Vet School set up by
William Dick. He graduated in 1892 and then took up a role as a lecturer at the College. As was common at that time, Bradley also studied anatomy at the
University of Edinburgh as an extramural subject at the same time as attending the college, a practice introduced by
William Dick. This was done under the famous anatomist,
Sir William Turner. In 1903 Bradley won the Goodsir Memorial Fellowship for his thesis, On the development and homology of the mammalian cerebellar fissures. Bradley obtained his DSc from the University of Edinburgh in 1905 with a thesis entitled, Contributions to the development and morphology of the mammalian hind-brain. In 1907 he was awarded a
Doctor of Medicine by the same university for his thesis, Contribution to the morphology and development of the mammalian liver. In 1900 he was offered the chair of Veterinary Anatomy at the
Royal Dick Veterinary College, the foremost such college in
Scotland. In 1911 he became its Principal. In 1909 he founded the National Veterinary Medical Association, and was its first president. He was Vice-President of the
Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons in 1912 and served as its president from 1920 to 1922. He died on 21 November 1937. ==Publications==