work was executed by Mr W. Brodie, R. S. A., Edinburgh, 
                    and 
                    bears the following inscriptions: — 
                    On front of the pedestal- 
                    In Memory of 
                    THOMAS ALEXANDER, C. B., 
                    Of the Medical Department of the 
                    British Army. 
                    Born at Prestonpans, 6th May 1812, 
                    Died 1st February, 1860. 
                    On the west side— 
                    The improved sanitary condition 
                    Of the British Army, 
                    As well as the elevation in rank and consideration 
                    Of its Medical Officers, 
                    Are mainly due to his exertions. 
                    His high professional attainments, 
                    And his great administrative powers, 
                    Were wholly devoted to the service of his country 
                    And to the cause of humanity. 
                    On the east side— 
                    Throughout a long military career 
                    He laboured incessantly to elevate the condition 
                    Of the Soldier. 
                    And during the Crimean War 
                    His indefatigable efforts, 
                    As principal Medical Officer of the Light 
                    Division, 
                    To alleviate the sufferings of the troops 
                    Were of inestimable value in stimulating others 
                    To follow his example. 
                    On the back— 
                    West Indies. 
                    North America. 
                    Caffraria. 
                    Alma. 
                    Inkerman. 
                    Sebastapool. 
                    The other child of the village who made for himself a name 
                    in the world of science was the late Sir William Ferguson. 
                    The Dictionary of National Biography says: — 
                    "Sir William Ferguson, surgeon, son of James Ferguson 
                    of Lochmaben, Dumfriesshire, was born at Prestonpans on the 
                    20th of March 1808, and was educated first at Lochmaben, and 
                    afterwards at the High School of Edinburgh. " At the 
                    age of fifteen he was placed by his own desire in a lawyer's 
                    office, but the work proved uncongenial, and at seventeen 
                    he exchanged law for medicine. He became an assiduous pupil 
                    of Dr Robert Knox, the anatomist, who was much pleased with 
                    a piece of mechanism constructed by Ferguson, and appointed 
                    him, at the age of twenty, demonstrator to his class of four 
                    hundred pupils. 
                    "In 1828 Ferguson became a licentiate, and in 1829 a 
                    Fellow, of the Edinburgh College of Surgeons. Two of his preparations, 
                    admirably dissected, are still preserved in the museum of 
                    the Edinburgh College of Surgeons. 
                    " Soon after qualifying, he began to deliver a portion 
                    of the lectures on general anatomy in association with Knox, 
                    and to demonstrate surgical anatomy. In 1831 he was elected 
                    Surgeon to the Edinburgh Royal Dispensary, and in that year 
                    tied the subclavian cord, which had then been done in Scotland 
                    only twice. 
                    "On the l0th October 1833 he married Miss Helen Hamilton 
                    Ranken, daughter and heiress of William Ranken of Spittlehaugh, 
                    Peeblesshire. This marriage placed him in easy circumstances, 
                    but he did not relax his efforts after success in operative 
                    surgery, and in 1836, when he was elected Surgeon to the Royal 
                    Infirmary and Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, he 
                    shared with Syme the best surgical practice in Scotland. 
                    "In 1840 Ferguson accepted the Professorship of Surgery 
                    at King's College, London, with the surgeoncy to King's College 
                    Hospital, and established himself at Dover Street, Piccadilly, 
                    whence he removed in 1847 to George Street, Hanover Square. 
                    He became M. R. C. S. Engl. in 1840, and Fellow in 1844. His 
                    practice grew rapidly, and the fame of his operative skill 
                    brought many students and visitors to King's College Hospital. 
                    "In 1849 he was appointed Surgeon in Ordinary to the 
                    Prince Consort, and in 1855 Surgeon Extraordinary; and in 
                    1867 Sergeant Surgeon to the Queen. 
                    " For many years he was the leading operator in London; 
                    he was elected to the Council of the College of Surgeons in 
                    1861, Examiner in 1867, and was President of the College in 
                    1876. 
                    "As Professor of Human Anatomy and Surgery, he delivered 
                    two courses of lectures before the College of Surgeons in 
                    1864 and 1865, which were afterwards published. He was President 
                    of the Pathological Society in 1859-60, and of the British 
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