John Belchier
John Belchier was a British surgeon at Guy's Hospital from 1736 to 1768.
Life
He was the son of James Belchier of Kingston, Surrey, and was educated at Eton College. He then became an apprentice to William Cheselden of St Thomas's Hospital. He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1732.Belchier discovered at about the time of his Guy's appointment that the vegetable dye madder stained newly forming bone tissue, opening up the study of the growth and development of the skeleton. He was awarded the Copley Medal of the Royal Society in 1737. This research direction was taken forward by Henri-Louis Duhamel [du Monceau] and John Hunter.
Belchier was a member of the Court of Assistants at the Company of Surgeons; in 1766 he was one of two representatives of Guy's on the body of six, with Joseph Warner. He was on the 1768 list of governors and guardians of the Foundling Hospital.