Dr Daniel Cunningham
- Dr Daniel Cunningham (1919-1996), respiratory physiologist
- Date:
- 1881-1987
- Reference:
- PP/CUN
- Archives and manuscripts
About this work
Description
Dr Daniel Cunningham's papers cover the period 1941-1987, and include scientific and administrative correspondence, notes and data on experiments, lecture notes, articles, papers documenting his committee work (e.g. MRC Diet and Energy Committee 1951-1952; MRC Royal Naval Personnel Research Committee on exhaled air resuscitation, 1963), and conference and symposia papers e.g. correspondence and photographs relating to the J S Haldane Centenary Symposium, 1959-1961.
The archive also contains a small amount of material relating to the work of Cunningham's father, the physician Colonel John Cunningham (1880-1968) and his grandfather, the anatomist Professor Daniel John Cunningham, (1850-1909):
Publication/Creation
Physical description
Acquisition note
Biographical note
He was born in India on 21 October 1919, the son of a doctor in the Indian Medical Service, and in 1938 he won an exhibition to Worcester College, Oxford. At the end of his second year, having won the university prizes in both physiology and anatomy, he went to Edinburgh to study at the Medical School.
An abbreviated clinical course allowed him to join the RAMC in 1943, and he spent the next two years attached to the 3rd Parachute Brigade in Northwest Europe. When the war ended Cunningham was moved to Germany where he had the opportunity to study the nutritional status of several thousand civilians. Among them he recorded hundreds of cases of hunger oedema and, through meticulously noted observations, he showed that the previous textbook description of this condition was erroneous.
Cunningham returned to Oxford in October 1946 for the third year of a degree course in animal physiology. Even before he had taken his final examination he had been elected Radcliffe Medical Fellow of University College, where he remained until his retirement.
Appointed a departmental demonstrator he was promoted to university lecturer and five years later he began the series of experiments that clarified many aspects of the control of breathing. Over the years his laboratory flourished, and he enjoyed close and fruitful collaborations with many colleagues, particularly Dr B.B. Lloyd and later Dr E.S. Petersen. Moreover, the breadth of his interests enabled him also to make significant contributions to medical science in the fields of circulatory and metabolic physiology.
Cunningham's great success as a human physiologist was attributable to three factors. First he was subtle in experimental design and inventive in the construction of new apparatus. The treadmill that enabled him to study respiration during exercise became famous, and he modified and improved the essential analyser for carbon dioxide. Secondly, he appreciated earlier than most other physiologists the value of the quantitative approach and of mathematical models that both describe existing data and allow predictions to be made (and tested) for new experimental conditions. Thirdly, he benefited greatly from an intellectual give-and-take both with colleagues investigating lower animals and with clinicians who were studying specific impairments in patients.
Cunningham married Judy Hill, a professional violinist, in 1947. He died on 26 February 1996.
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Identifiers
Accession number
- 1084
- 1314