Maurice Craig

British psychiatrist
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroBritish psychiatrist
PlacesUnited Kingdom Great Britain
wasPsychiatrist
Work fieldHealthcare
Gender
Male
Birth29 May 1866
Death6 January 1935 (aged 68 years)
Star signGemini
The details

Biography

Sir Maurice Craig CBE FRCP (1866-1935), was a British psychiatrist and pioneer in the treatment of mental illness.

Biography

Craig was born on 29 May 1866 and educated at Bedford School, Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge and at Guy's Hospital. He worked at the Bethlem Royal Hospital and, in 1908, was appointed as Physician for Psychological Medicine at Guy's Hospital.

During the First World War he became a Lieutenant Colonel in the Royal Army Medical Corps, carrying out work with men suffering from shell shock. He was appointed to the War Office Committee on Shell Shock.

Craig was psychiatrist to Virginia Woolf for twenty-two years, and to the future King Edward VIII.

In 1905, the first edition of his ground-breaking reference work Psychological Medicine: A Manual on Mental Diseases for Practitioners and Students was published and, in 1922, he founded the National Council for Mental Hygiene. In 1930, he was appointed Vice-Chairman of the International Committee for Mental Hygiene.

Sir Maurice Craig died on 6 January 1935.

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