Shearman was born in
Harwich and graduated an
M.D. from
Edinburgh on 12 September 1807 (with a dissertation on
pneumonia), and was admitted as a licentiate of the
Royal College of Physicians,
London, on 11 April 1808. He commenced practice as a physician in London, but soon removed to
Maidstone, whence he returned to the metropolis in 1813. He practised for many years in
Northampton Square,
Clerkenwell, and subsequently, until his death, at 17 Canonbury Villas,
Islington. He was physician to the London Dispensary from 1813 to 1824, to the
Infirmary for Children in Waterloo Road from 1816, and to the West London Infirmary and Lying-in Institution in
Villiers Street from 1821. He was the senior member of the medical staff when the last-named institution became the
Charing Cross Hospital, a position which he retained in the new hospital until 1852. To the Charing Cross Hospital school of medicine he rendered important services by his annual lectures on the theory and practice of medicine. His
Introductory Lecture was published in 1834. In 1852 he became consulting physician, and retired from practice. For several years he filled the office of treasurer to the
Medical Society of London, in 1824 was president of the society, and in 1834 published an oration delivered before it. He died on 21 November 1861 at the age of ninety-four, and was buried on the western side of
Highgate Cemetery. == Publications ==