|
Timeline of the Royal Institute of Public Health and Hygiene
|
Year |
event
|
1886 |
Formation of the Society of Medical Men Qualified in Sanitary Science, name quickly changed to The Public Health Medical Society
|
1891 |
International Congress on Hygiene in London
|
1892 |
Society Incorporated as British Institute of Public Health
|
1895 |
Harben Gold Medal and lectureship inaugurated
|
1897 |
Queen Victoria becomes patron and issues letters patent. Name changed to Royal Institute of Public Health
|
1901 |
King Edward VII becomes patron
|
1903 |
Institute of Hygiene Limited registered as a company "for the advancement of knowledge of hygiene (especially personal and domestic) and for establishing a museum of hygiene to exhibit articles of merit"
|
1904 |
Report of RIPH Committee on Bacterial Examination of Water
|
1905 |
RIPH laboratories open for chemical, bacterial, and pathological specimens
|
1907 |
Midlands Counties Branch becomes the first IH provincial branch
|
1908 |
Further provincial IH branches approved
|
1909 |
IH makes public appeal to help finance rapid development
|
1910 |
King George V becomes RIPH patron
|
1912 |
RIPH launch appeal for £3000 for building work. W. H. Lever donates £600 for the foundation of a museum
|
1913 |
RIPH Lever Museum inaugurated
|
1914 |
Queen visits RIPH
|
1915 |
IH involved in the design of respirators for use of public in the event of a gas attack
|
1916 |
Secretary of RIPH and four doctors are killed in action
|
1917 |
IH offer their services to new Ministry of Food (offer rejected)
|
1918 |
January–February IH Food Saving exhibition
|
1920 |
IH replaces monthly Periodical Letter to Members with Health Notes
|
1923 |
IH Membership Badge instituted
|
1924 |
IH Journal replaces Health Notes
|
1925 |
IH new headquarters at 28 Portland Place opened by Princess Mary on 5 June
|
1926 |
Leicester Personal Health Association becomes affiliated with IH
|
1927 |
Department of State Medicine of RIPH set up to train London medical students in forensic medicine and toxicology
|
1928 |
IH becomes an associate member of the Central Council for Health Education
|
1929 |
IH granted Royal Charter of Incorporation
|
1930 |
RIPH public lectures on birth control
|
1931 |
RIPH public lectures on Health of the Citizen
|
1932 |
RIPH begin negotiations with Royal Sanitary Institute, and later the Institute of Hygiene and the British Social Hygiene Council, for amalgamation
|
1933 |
Opening of 23 Queen Square as new RIPH headquarters
|
1934 |
RIPH negotiations with Royal Sanitary Institute terminated
|
1935 |
Negotiations between RIPH and IH reopened. Draft agreement for amalgamation reached
|
1937 |
IH supplemental charter granted by Privy Council
|
1938 |
Journals combined
|
1940 |
Exhibition and lectures on Food and Fitness
|
1947 |
First Bengue Memorial Award lecture
|
1948 |
RIPHH publishes History of State medicine in England by Sir A. Macnalty
|
1949 |
Provincial health lectures start at Leicester
|
1951 |
Queen Elizabeth II becomes patron
|
1954 |
Abortive discussions on amalgamation with Royal Sanitary Institute
|
1958 |
Courses on Food Hygiene and the Handling of Food introduced
|
1962 |
Closure of Hygiene Museum
|
1977 |
Closure of laboratories
|