Charles Morley Wenyon

Charles Morley Wenyon CMG CBE FRS FRSM[1] (1878–1948) was a distinguished English protozoologist.He spent a year in the Sudan in 1907–8, attached to the Gordon Memorial College, Khartoum, as well as visiting Iraq (1910), Syria (1911) and Malta (1913).During the First World War, he joined the Medical Advisory Committee in the Near East, with which he travelled to Egypt, India and Mesopotamia in 1916 and 1917, researching dysentery.[1] In 1926, he published the two-volume textbook, Protozoology,[1] a "standard work" in the field, according to his obituarist in The Times,[3] and was editor of the Kala-Azar Bulletin.He served as president of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene in 1945–47, after being joint honorary secretary from 1920.
Charles Morley Wenyon
protozoologistLiverpoolFatshanKingswood SchoolzoologyphysiologyYorkshire CollegeUniversity College, LondonGuy's HospitalCamberwellLondon School of Tropical MedicinePasteur InstituteFélix MesnilRichard HertwigGordon Memorial CollegeKhartoumleishmaniasisdysenterymalariaSalonikaCaucasusWellcome FoundationThe TimesRoyal Society of Tropical Medicine and HygieneRoyal Society of EdinburghMary KingsleyLiverpool School of Tropical MedicineLegion d'HonneurNew York Academy of SciencesRoyal Society of MedicineManson MedalObituary Notices of Fellows of the Royal Society