Left to right, from the front row:
  1. James Battersby
  2. Ian Murray
  3. Carstairs Douglas
  4. Andrew Allison
  5. John Henderson
  6. John Graham
  7. D. MacKay Hart
  8. John MacEwan
  9. A.A. Fitzgerald Peel
  10. A. Muir Crawford
  11. William Rankin
  12. Prof. J.R.C. Gordon
  13. Eric Oastler
  14. David Fyfe Anderso
  15. William Gilmour
  16. William Balderston
  17. Robert Stewart
  18. F. Pierce Hudson
  19. Douglas Maclurkin
  20. J.R. Connellu
  21. Hermen Felson
  22. Henry W. Gray
  23. David Simpson
  24. James McMillan
  25. Thomas McConnell
  26. Albert Fletcher
  27. Robert Cross
  28. A.M. Graham
  29. Jack Gillman
  30. Sidney Jack Kopet
  31. Cameron Fraser
  32. J. Gilmour Wilson
  33. William Gibson
  34. Thomas Angus
  35. A.S. Said
  36. Cyril Mandelstam
  37. Thomas Skeoch
  38. Murray Rubin
  39. John Lennox
  40. Louis Scrovroner
  41. Thomas Levin
  42. J.T. Sadler
  43. George Buchanan
  44. J.F. McKenna
  45. John Winning
  46. Edward Duschock
  47. Murray Levin
  48. David Goldman
  49. Max Symon
  50. Zola Alpert
  51. A. Hannah
  52. H.J. Walder
  53. Sol Wachter
  54. Victor Guyer
  55. Charles Speigel
  56. Alexander Waddell.
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Dr John Glaister graduated MBChB from the University of Glasgow in 1879 and immediately pursued a career in Forensic Medicine and Public Health. In 1881 he began working at the medical school of the Glasgow Royal Infirmary teaching Forensic Medicine. He then moved in 1888 to St Mungo's College where he became Professor of Forensic Medicine. He held this position until 1898, moving to the University of Glasgow to become the Chair of Forensic Medicine and Public Health.

Glaister was a Fellow of the College and was president from 1907 to 1909. ]]>

Henry Clark began his medical education at Anderson's College and the University of Glasgow, qualifying in 1870. He worked as Assistant Surgeon at the Glasgow Royal Infirmary and at the Glasgow Eye Infirmary. He was later promoted to Surgeon of both of these hospitals. He became Professor of Surgery at St Mungo's College in 1892.

He was made a Fellow of the Faculty of Physicians and Surgeons of Glasgow in 1876 and was president from 1903 to 1905. ]]>

Thomas Kirkpatrick Monro qualified in medicine from the University of Glasgow in 1888, gaining his MD in 1895, going on to hold positions at the Glasgow Western Infirmary. After studying abroad for some time, Monro returned to Glasgow to become the pathologist at the Glasgow Royal Infirmary. He then worked as a physician at the Infirmary.

He was Professor of Medicine and Dean of the Medical Faculty at St Mungo's College. Then in 1913 he became Regius Professor of Practice of Medicine at the University of Glasgow.

Monro was president of the College from 1923 to 1925. ]]>

John Henderson graduated from the University of Glasgow in 1898 and began residency at the Glasgow Royal Infirmary. He joined the Visiting Staff of the Infirmary in 1902 after gaining his MD and in 1913 was appointed Physician of the Wards. As well as medical practice, Henderson had a passion for teaching medicine and worked for a time as Professor of Medicine at St Mungo's College. Henderson was made Consulting Physician of the Royal Infirmary in 1937 after stepping down from ward work.

He became a fellow of the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Glasgow in 1910. Henderson was president of the College from 1937 to 1939. ]]>

John Barlow graduated MB, CM from the University of Edinburgh in 1875. He gained his MD in 1879, however he previously qualified to practice after sitting the MRCS in London in 1874. He initially focused his career on physiology being the assistant to Professor McKendrick at the University of Glasgow and the first Muirhead Demonstrator in Physiology at the Glasgow Royal Infirmary School of Medicine. He was also the Professor of Physiology in St Mungo's College. and lectured in physiology at the Technical College, the predecessor to the University of Strathclyde.

He then focused his career on practicing surgery. He became Visiting Surgeon to the Glasgow Royal Infirmary in 1892, eventually becoming Honorary Consulting Surgeon to the Infirmary in 1913.

Barlow became a Fellow of the Faculty of Physicians and Surgeons of Glasgow in 1881 and served as president from 1913 to 1915. ]]>