Dugald Campbell

Dugald Campbell (25 January 1858 – 16 November 1940) was a Scottish doctor from the Isle of Arran, who went to the Hawaiian Kingdom and set up the national health service during the 1890s. Campbell travelled extensively and in Hawaii he took up the post of government physician on the islands, where he set about raising cash for a hospital that would treat all islanders for free.

Campbell was born at the manse in Lamlash, the sixth son of Rev. Colin Fisher Campbell and Anne Mary McMillan. He was educated at the University of Glasgow and earned his doctorate in medicine from Edinburgh University. He came first to Kauai, where he was government physician in Waimea. In 1890, he married Canadian Mabel Sidney Rhodes in Honolulu. He died in 1940 in Lamlash, three years after his wife.

With the success of J.K. Rowling's ''Harry Potter'', it has been revealed that she may be his great-granddaughter. Provided by Wikipedia
Showing 1 - 6 results of 6 for search 'Campbell, Dugald', query time: 0.03s Refine Results
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    In the heart of Bantuland ; a record of twenty-nine years' pioneering in Central Africa among the Bantu peoples. by Campbell, Dugald

    Philadelphia : London : J. B. Lippincott company; Seeley, Service & co., ltd., 1922
    Format: Book


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    Camels through Libya. by Campbell, Dugald

    London : Seely, Service & co., limited, 1935
    Format: Book


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    With the Bible in North Africa. by Campbell, Dugald, 1871-

    Kilmarnock, J. Ritchie 1944
    Format: Book


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    Blazing trails in Bantuland, by Campbell, Dugald, 1871-

    London, Pickering & Inglis 1933
    Format: Book