Sharpey established himself in Edinburgh in 1829, and in the following year he obtained the fellowship of the College of Surgeons of Edinburgh, presenting a probationary essay
On the Pathology and Treatment of False Joints. The diploma of fellow qualified him to become a teacher in Edinburgh; but in 1831 he again spent three months in Berlin. In 1831–1832, with
Allen Thomson, who taught physiology, he gave a first course of lectures on systematic anatomy in the
Extramural School of Medicine in Edinburgh. The association of Sharpey with Thomson lasted during the remainder of Sharpey's stay in Edinburgh. He was elected a fellow of the
Royal Society of Edinburgh in 1834, his proposer being
Sir Robert Christison. In 1835 he was elected a member of the
Harveian Society of Edinburgh. In July 1836 Sharpey was appointed to the chair of anatomy and physiology in the
University of London in succession to
Jones Quain. In this capacity Sharpey gave the first complete course of lectures on physiology and minute anatomy. His lectures then continued for 38 years. Sharpey was appointed in 1840 one of the examiners in anatomy at the university of London, and he was also a member of the senate of the University. He was elected a
Fellow of the Royal Society on 9 May 1839. In 1846 he described the skeletal loadbearing fibres that now bear his name,
Sharpey's fibres. He was made a member of its council in 1844, and was appointed one of the secretaries in place of
Thomas Bell in November 1853, an office which he held until his retirement. He was also for 15 years, from April 1861, one of the members appointed by the Crown on the general council of medical education and registration. Sharpey was also one of the trustees of the
Hunterian Museum in
Glasgow. In 1859 he received the honorary doctorate (LLD) for his literary works from the
University of Edinburgh. His pupils included
Michael Foster,
George Oliver, and
Burdon Sanderson. Sharpey was a correspondent and friend of
Charles Darwin. He was also on the Commission on Scientific Instruction and the Advancement of Science, and was also a Fellow of the
Geological Society. ==Later life==