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Manon C Williams

@manoncwilliams

Historian of health and medicine in the 18th and 19th c. maritime world || Pearsall Early Career Fellow in Naval and Maritime History @ the Institute for Historical Research, London

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01.07.2025
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Latest posts by Manon C Williams @manoncwilliams

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Festival of Social History To celebrate 50 years of the Social History Society, we’ve teamed up with the Institute of Historical Research to host a Social History Festival! The festival will feature two expert discussion pan…

📣Bookings now open!

👉Celebrating 50 years of the Social History Society with our 'Festival of Social History' @ihr.bsky.social

Panels, zine-making stall, tours, lunch, a roundtable, & keynote by Naomi Tadmor

📅 24 Apr 2026
💷 from £10 for members

All welcome!
socialhistory.org.uk/events/festi...

05.02.2026 14:40 👍 25 🔁 15 💬 0 📌 3
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Bound Bowels at Sea: Obstipation and the Limits of Maritime Medicine - Global Maritime History Last month, we talked about shipboard lavatories as part of our regular “Health at Sea in the Age of Sail” features. This month, we continue that theme by considering a very common affliction that cau...

wp.me/p9nqgh-3ly

Thank you to Richard DeGrijs for his latest Health and Sea/Maritime Medicine article.

24.02.2026 15:31 👍 4 🔁 5 💬 0 📌 0

I love the moose!

16.02.2026 13:51 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0

A good point, of course! I suppose it depends on both the project whether its impact would be best curated in book form or in public/community engagement. I just wish that the latter was seen as an acceptable primary output for a project, rather than just an add on to a book-project.

13.02.2026 13:18 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 1 📌 0

An interesting read about how historians tend to think about projects as ‘books’. I’ve recently been wondering how we can forefront impact or public engagement outputs as project goals, rather than monographs (…though admittedly less helpful on the job market).

12.02.2026 18:35 👍 6 🔁 2 💬 1 📌 0

👀Funding available for #Humanities research and engagement.

10.02.2026 12:17 👍 10 🔁 5 💬 0 📌 0

It was such a nice surprise to see you there!

02.02.2026 11:21 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 1 📌 0
A painting of a soldier with brown hair. He is  standing up and is shirtless and is resting his right hand on his head. There are two gunshot wounds visible on his torso.

A painting of a soldier with brown hair. He is standing up and is shirtless and is resting his right hand on his head. There are two gunshot wounds visible on his torso.

The Battle of Corunna took place #OTD in 1809. Civilian surgeon Charles Bell volunteered to treat wounded soldiers returning to Britain. He later created these artworks which he used for teaching. Some of these artworks can be seen in our Wohl Pathology Museum.

16.01.2026 12:02 👍 47 🔁 14 💬 1 📌 2

Ah, that’s too bad — thanks for reposting though!

07.01.2026 08:21 👍 2 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
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‘Men of the most splendid talents and professional respectability’: Naval surgeons, professional identity, and collective bargaining (1793–1815) | King's College London In this seminar, Dr Manon C Williams explores how naval surgeons during the French Wars collectively pushed for reforms to improve their status and professional identity.

Come hear me talk about my beloved naval surgeons on 29 January at KCL’s Maritime History Seminar!

I’ll be speaking about my PhD research along with some important updates, newly-discovered from the archives during my Caird Fellowship at Royal Museums Greenwich.

www.kcl.ac.uk/events/naval...

06.01.2026 10:56 👍 8 🔁 3 💬 1 📌 0
UK Government Web Archive This Page is [ARCHIVED CONTENT] and shows what the site page https://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/surgeonsatsea/ looked like on 1 Aug 2023 at 16:31:43

I’m glad you’re getting some enjoyment from it! They are a large and messy series, but well worth a gander (I’m biased).

If you haven’t found them already, here are the volumes that have been digitised: webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk/ukgwa/202308...

Let me know if you have any questions!

06.01.2026 08:38 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 1 📌 0

If your son is interested in Maturin’s character (as the ship surgeon), the surgeon’s logbooks have been more heavily catalogued and some even digitised from 1793. You’ll have to look through series ADM 101 in the TNA catalogue. I’ve been through those extensively so feel free to ask me questions!

29.12.2025 22:27 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 2 📌 0

Thank you — very kind of you to share!

23.12.2025 08:59 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 1 📌 0

Thank you Dave!

23.12.2025 08:57 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0

If your work engages with naval and maritime history, art, and culture, do consider applying. Next year’s application is open now until 18 January 2026: www.rmg.co.uk/collections/.... Feel free to reach out to me if you have any questions about my research or the fellowship.

22.12.2025 12:40 👍 5 🔁 3 💬 0 📌 0
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Unfit for service: healthcare and welfare in Nelson's Navy Hidden in the seemingly mundane bureaucratic letters of the Royal Navy lie some fascinating insights into the role of the British state in providing healthcare and welfare to ill and injured seamen.

This year, as a Caird Research Fellow at Royal Museums Greenwich, I developed a new research project on occupational health, disability, and welfare in the British Royal Navy during the French Wars (1793–1815). Read some of my preliminary findings here: www.rmg.co.uk/stories/mari....

22.12.2025 12:38 👍 16 🔁 8 💬 3 📌 1
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Unfit for service: healthcare and welfare in Nelson's Navy Hidden in the seemingly mundane bureaucratic letters of the Royal Navy lie some fascinating insights into the role of the British state in providing healthcare and welfare to ill and injured seamen.

This year, as a Caird Research Fellow at Royal Museums Greenwich, I developed a new research project on occupational health, disability, and welfare in the British Royal Navy during the French Wars (1793–1815). Read some of my preliminary findings here: www.rmg.co.uk/stories/mari....

22.12.2025 12:38 👍 16 🔁 8 💬 3 📌 1
Black and White photo of a woman pushing someone in a wheelchair below the text Disability History Month.

Black and White photo of a woman pushing someone in a wheelchair below the text Disability History Month.

20 November to 20 December is UK Disability History Month. Here at the IHR we have been relaunching our collection guides including our Disability History guide: buff.ly/zXSqTKe

09.12.2025 12:13 👍 7 🔁 2 💬 0 📌 0
CfP: Marginal Militaries: Navigating Historical Boundaries, Differences and Experiences at the Military Periphery From enslaved soldiers in republican-era Rome to foreign mercenaries in the Thirty-Years War and commonwealth soldiers in the World Wars, militaries have never been monolithic organisations. they have served as key sites in the formation of state power and different kinds of collective belongings. Yet the boundaries that determine who may serve, under what conditions and on whose behalf have never been fixed as these boundaries have shifted in response to changing configurations of citizenship, empire, class, gender, race/ethnicity, religion, physical capacities and national identity. Militaries have functioned both as mechanism for producing social hierarchies, and as arenas in which such hierarchies are negotiated, contested and reconfigured. This conference explores how lines of inclusion and exclusion have been drawn, negotiated and experienced within military organisations across diverse historical periods and geographical contexts. The aim is to foster a nuanced conversation that broadens our understanding of military institutions by focusing on the experiences and narratives of those often marginalised within them. We welcome contributions which examine how distinctions such as the following have been historically constructed, negotiated and embodied/experienced within and/or in relation to military institutions, organisations and structures: Race, ethnicity and minority status:  Gender, gender-identity/non-conformity and sexuality Nationality, migration and statelessness: Religion: Disability status: While the emphasis is on historical perspectives, proposals are invited from scholars working in adjacent fields (political science, cultural studies). It will be held 22-23 October, 2026 the Swedish Defence University, Stockholm, Sweden. We are applying for funding to hold it fully in person, but depending on the outcome, it could be a hybrid event.

CfP: Marginal Militaries: Navigating Historical Boundaries, Differences and Experiences at the Military Periphery From enslaved soldiers in republican-era Rome to foreign mercenaries in the Thirty-Years War and commonwealth soldiers in the World Wars, militaries have never been monolithic organisations. they have served as key sites in the formation of state power and different kinds of collective belongings. Yet the boundaries that determine who may serve, under what conditions and on whose behalf have never been fixed as these boundaries have shifted in response to changing configurations of citizenship, empire, class, gender, race/ethnicity, religion, physical capacities and national identity. Militaries have functioned both as mechanism for producing social hierarchies, and as arenas in which such hierarchies are negotiated, contested and reconfigured. This conference explores how lines of inclusion and exclusion have been drawn, negotiated and experienced within military organisations across diverse historical periods and geographical contexts. The aim is to foster a nuanced conversation that broadens our understanding of military institutions by focusing on the experiences and narratives of those often marginalised within them. We welcome contributions which examine how distinctions such as the following have been historically constructed, negotiated and embodied/experienced within and/or in relation to military institutions, organisations and structures: Race, ethnicity and minority status: Gender, gender-identity/non-conformity and sexuality Nationality, migration and statelessness: Religion: Disability status: While the emphasis is on historical perspectives, proposals are invited from scholars working in adjacent fields (political science, cultural studies). It will be held 22-23 October, 2026 the Swedish Defence University, Stockholm, Sweden. We are applying for funding to hold it fully in person, but depending on the outcome, it could be a hybrid event.

Please submit a preliminary title of maximum 150 characters and an abstract of maximum 350 words to MarginalMilitaries@gmail.com by no later than February 28. If you have any questions, please get in touch! Regards, Natalie Smith & Daniel Stridh

Please submit a preliminary title of maximum 150 characters and an abstract of maximum 350 words to MarginalMilitaries@gmail.com by no later than February 28. If you have any questions, please get in touch! Regards, Natalie Smith & Daniel Stridh

📢 CALL FOR PAPERS: Marginal Militaries: Navigating Historical Boundaries, Differences, and Experiences at the Military Periphery

Conference date: 22-23 October, 2026
Location: @forsvarshogskolan.bsky.social Stockholm, Sweden (hybrid participation tbc)
Cfp Deadline: 28 February, 2026

28.11.2025 10:09 👍 14 🔁 12 💬 2 📌 2
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Advocating for History by Doing History - On History This blog was written by Claire Langhamer, Director of the IHR Historians are very good at crafting arguments and in recent times very many people have advanced very many arguments about why history…

New blog from IHR Director @clairelanghamer@bsky.social reflecting on how historians can advocate for history through our practice, and defend the important historical work that goes on within universities as well as beyond them. blog.history.ac.uk/2025/11/advo...

26.11.2025 10:45 👍 34 🔁 18 💬 0 📌 1
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History of Medicine CFPs If you wish to share your CFPs on the SSHM website please contact the Exec Sec, Dr Justine Pick admin@sshm.org Life Histories in Mind: Mental Ill Health and Learning Disability in Context Location:…

Two #histmed CFPs with deadline for abstracts Jan 2026!
Life Histories in Mind: Mental Ill Health and Learning Disability in Context (Manchester) &
Blood is the price of coal: Coal communities, health and welfare in Britain and beyond from the 19th century to the present (Warwick)
For more details 👇

24.11.2025 12:55 👍 22 🔁 22 💬 0 📌 3
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Who else is watching the fantastic #Empire series by @davidolusoga.bsky.social? It was a pleasure to be involved in this - dangerous and disease-ridden #prisonhulks were used in England for 80 years from 1776, propping up the rotten system of convict transportation. Check out episode 2 for more!

20.11.2025 16:13 👍 1 🔁 2 💬 0 📌 0
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A new installation on ‘Medical alumni in history’ has been unveiled at the School of Medicine. It was designed and installed by our recent PhD graduate – and historian of medicine – @manoncwilliams.bsky.social, and features notable alumni from 19th and 20th century St Andrews. (1/3)

18.11.2025 15:55 👍 2 🔁 2 💬 1 📌 0

I am grateful for all the support I received on this project — special thanks to @aileenfyfe.bsky.social and @richardtbellis.bsky.social for their help.

You can see the online version here: medicine.st-andrews.ac.uk/alumniinhist....

[Photo credit: Edward Broughton]

14.11.2025 11:55 👍 3 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
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I was thrilled to travel to Scotland this week to open an installation I’ve been working on for the School of Medicine @uniofstandrews.bsky.social. The installation showcases diverse alumni from St Andrews’ past to inspire incoming students to the #MBChB. #histmed #medsky #medhums #skystorians

14.11.2025 11:51 👍 4 🔁 1 💬 1 📌 1

Think about the way that the current scientific publishing system is draining resources out of the research ecosystem... That drain is most obvious in terms of money (and this is so despite #openaccess), but there's also an erosion of time, trust and control [1/n]

14.11.2025 11:19 👍 20 🔁 6 💬 1 📌 0
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Salons in the Queen's House: Unfit for Service In this free lunchtime talk, historian Dr Manon Williams will explore how the Royal Navy treated sailors who were judged ‘unfit for service’ due to injury, illness, or old age

If you’re in London and want to learn more about how aged and disabled sailors were declared ‘unfit for service’ and invalided from the Navy, join me on 26 November. I’ll be giving a public talk in Greenwich based on my Caird Research Fellowship.

More info here: www.rmg.co.uk/whats-on/que...

31.10.2025 11:36 👍 6 🔁 5 💬 0 📌 0
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Friedrich Engels ‘took creative liberties’ with descriptions of class divides in Manchester Cambridge historian Emily Chung finds philosopher’s blistering depictions of segregation may have been exaggerated

"Friedrich Engels ‘took creative liberties’ with descriptions of class divides in Manchester"

www.theguardian.com/education/20...

Article itself is #OpenAccess:
www.cambridge.org/core/journal...

#History 🗃️

21.10.2025 06:48 👍 30 🔁 11 💬 0 📌 1
Pen and ink drawing of a Black Victorian gentleman

Pen and ink drawing of a Black Victorian gentleman

In 1837, James McCune Smith became the first Black doctor to graduate from a UK university. You can use the Bibliography of British and Irish History (BBIH) to learn about the many Black individuals who have contributed to the development of medicine and medical communities in the UK and Ireland

21.10.2025 13:05 👍 22 🔁 6 💬 1 📌 0
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Trafalgar Eyewitness Account by the Assistant-Surgeon of H.M.S Swiftsure – The Navy Records Society This letter by Robert Hilton appears to be a collaborative account of the engagements of Trafalgar, as a surgeon’s mate would have been below deck during the battle.  Each of the surviving letters…

The Battle of Trafalgar took place #OnThisDay in 1805 ⚓
Discover an Eyewitness Account of the battle by the Assistant-Surgeon of H.M.S Swiftsure – in The Navy Records Society's online magazine: buff.ly/iGWYEvn

#Navyrecords #navalhistory #OTD #Trafalgar #nelson #Admiralty #historic

21.10.2025 14:26 👍 4 🔁 2 💬 0 📌 0