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Edward Lowbury was born on 12 December, 1913, is an A 20th-century english male writer. Discover Edward Lowbury's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is he in this year and how he spends money? Also learn how he earned most of networth at the age of 93 years old?

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Age 93 years old
Zodiac Sign Sagittarius
Born 12 December 1913
Birthday 12 December
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Date of death 10 July, 2007
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We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 12 December. He is a member of famous writer with the age 93 years old group.

Edward Lowbury Height, Weight & Measurements

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Edward Lowbury Net Worth

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Net Worth in 2024 $1 Million - $5 Million
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Timeline

1913

Edward Joseph Lister Lowbury (12 December 1913 – 10 July 2007) was a pioneering and innovative English medical bacteriologist and pathologist, and also a published poet.

Edward Lowbury was born in Hampstead to the recently naturalised Benjamin William Loewenberg (of Latvian-Jewish background) and the Brazilian-born Alice Sarah Hallé (of German-Jewish origin) in 1913.

The family name was anglicised to Lowbury at the start of World War 1.

His father was a medical doctor and Edward’s middle names were chosen in honour of the surgeon Joseph Lister who had done so much to reduce post-operative infection.

His son was to follow closely in Lister’s footsteps in the medical career that he eventually chose.

Lowbury’s secondary education was as a foundation scholar at St Paul’s School (London), where he began to specialise in science.

He was also twice winner of the school’s Milton Prize – the first time for a sequence of 40 sonnets.

1934

Having won a science scholarship to University College, Oxford, he continued to take an interest in writing, gaining the 1934 Newdigate Prize and the 1937 Matthew Arnold Memorial essay prize.

His initial medical training was at the Royal London Hospital.

1936

Between 1936-85 Lowbury published seven commercial collections (and shared in two joint collections).

Much of that work can be found in the following (which were followed by a new collection):

A considerable part of Lowbury’s poetic output appeared first in small press editions, from which he then drew for his more commercial collections.

1943

He was called up to the Royal Army Medical Corps in 1943, where he specialised in pathology and was posted to Kenya.

There he was one of the editors of the wartime literary magazine Equator.

While still in service, his collection Crossing the Line was given first prize in a competition judged by Louis MacNeice and accepted for publication.

On leaving the army, he took employment with the Common Cold Research Unit with James Lovelock as one of his colleagues.

Those days are remembered in the last of Lowbury’s "Apocryphal Letters": Gaia – a letter to James Lovelock.

1949

In 1949 Lowbury was appointed head of the microbiology department at the Medical Research Council burns unit of Birmingham Accident Hospital and also taught pathology as a Research Fellow at the University of Birmingham Medical School.

1954

In 1954 Lowbury had married Alison Young, daughter of the poet Andrew Young, with whom he had three daughters – Ruth (1955), Pauline (1956) and Miriam (1959).

1961

He also published regular collections of poetry: Time for Sale (1961), Daylight Astronomy (1968), Green Magic (for children, 1972), The Night Watchman (1974).

1964

As founder of the Hospital Infection Research Laboratory at what is now known as City Hospital, Birmingham in 1964, he emerged as one of the foremost researchers in hospital infection, particularly in the prevention of burns infection, the problems of antibiotic resistance and skin disinfection and lectured on his specialities throughout the world before retiring in 1979 and being awarded an OBE.

Through clinical trials Lowbury confirmed previous work showing that specialist positively pressurised dressing rooms reduced infections.

With John Babb he proved that a specialised filter system could remove bacteria from an airstream and retain them, either reducing infection risk or allowing an already infected patient to be treated in an open ward.

He documented treatment of infections with Pseudomonas aeruginosa, noting that the development of carbenicillin resistance used a single mechanism which conferred protection against a range of antibiotics.

He further showed that overuse of a new antibiotic led to increased staphylococcus resistance, and that a subsequent reduction in use reversed the effect.

His work with Rod Jones contributed to the development of a pseudomonas vaccine.

1974

With Harold Lilly he developed tests for effectiveness of hand washes before alcohol became the norm in 1974.

These tests were still the basis for European standards when he died.

He worked on topical antibacterial compounds with surgeons Douglas Jackson and Jack Cason, eventually leading to topical silver, which continues in use.

His poetry was widely anthologised and in 1974 he was made a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature.

1976

Pride of place goes to the nine publications from Roy Lewis' Keepsake Press, some quite substantial, such as Poetry & Paradox (1976) with its 19 poems and introductory essay, or ''Birmingham!

1979

His findings were usefully summed up in the Everett Evans Lecture and the Wallace Memorial Lecture that he gave in the years immediately before his retirement in 1979.

He then became a founder member of the Hospital Infection Society, of which he served as its first president and where an annual Lowbury Lecture was sponsored in his honour.

Other honours included a D.Sc. at Aston University, where he was made Visiting Professor in Medical Microbiology; an LL.D at Birmingham University; Fellowships of the Royal Colleges of Surgeons, of Physicians and of Pathologists and membership of the New York Academy of Sciences.

Birmingham printers who used Lowbury’s work include F.E.Pardoe (The Ring, 1979) and David Wishart, whose Hayloft Press published a number of folded cards between 1987-97.

As a poet, Lowbury has been described as ‘a sort of missing link between the Georgians and The Movement’.

1983

Comparable with these are Goldrush from Roger Pringle’s Celandine Press (Shipston-on-Stour, 1983), which has 19 titles of which one is a six-part sequence, and Variations from Aldeburgh from Peter Scupham’s Mandeville Press (Hitchin, 1987), which has 13 poems.

1985

Birmingham!'' (1985) with its 22.

1986

Several of these books were made even larger by the number of illustrations that accompanied the poems: in the latter work there are eight line drawings by Donald Fairhall, while the three poems in Flowering Cypress from Kenneth Lindley’s Pointing Finger Press (Hereford, 1986) are supplemented by four of the artist’s woodcuts and a linoprint.

2001

Following his retirement he continued to live (and write) in Birmingham until the death of his wife in 2001 and his deteriorating eyesight made it necessary to move to a nursing home in London.