Resuscitation by Dr. Hawes of Man Believed Drowned
Resuscitation by Dr. Hawes of Man Believed Drowned
Oil on canvas. This work is the second of a series of two paintings, the first of which shows a 'Young Man Being Lifted From A River, Apparently Drowned'. In this image, 'His Subsequent Resuscitation by Dr William Hawes', the same man is shown after his recovery, sitting up in bed with his jubilant family around him and Dr William Hawes M.D. (1736-1808) by his side. Dr Hawes was known for his ability to resuscitate people who had apparently died from drowning and other causes of asphyxia. In 1774, Hawes and London surgeon Dr Thomas Cogan (1736-1818) agreed to bring 15 friends each to the Chapter Coffee House in London to form a society especially for the purpose of resuscitating the drowned. At the meeting The Humane Society was formed and Hawes became the Society’s Registrar. The inaugural meeting was held on 17 April 1774.
The date these paintings were commissioned from the artist Robert Smirke by The Humane Society is not known. They were presented to Benjamin Hawes, the son of Dr William Hawes, by the Society in 1787, the year it became The Royal Humane Society. The paintings were also engraved that year by Robert Pollard (1755-1838). Benjamin Hawes was chairman of The Royal Humane Society from 1820 to 1860.