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File:Blue plaque Sampson Gamgee.jpg
Plaque in Birmingham in honor of Sampson Gamgee.<ref name="Letter 257"/>

Gamgee Tissue is a surgical dressing invented by Joseph Sampson Gamgee, a doctor in Birmingham, England, in 1880.<ref name="Gamgee 1880">Template:Cite journal</ref><ref name="Gamgee 1880 letter">Template:Cite journal</ref><ref name="Kapadia 2002">Template:Cite journal</ref>

Surgical dressingEdit

Gamgee Tissue has a thick layer of absorbent cotton wool between two layers of absorbent gauze.<ref name="Gamgee 1880"/> It represents the first use of cotton wool in a medical context, and was a major advancement in the prevention of infection of surgical wounds. It is still the basis for many modern surgical dressings. The name has been a trademark of Robinson Healthcare (formerlyl Robinson and Sons Ltd of Chesterfield),<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> based in Worksop, Nottinghamshire, since 1911.

TolkienEdit

In Birmingham, "Gamgee" became the colloquial name for cotton wool, which led to the surname of Gaffer Gamgee and his son Sam in J. R. R. Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings. In a 1954 letter to the author Naomi Mitchison, who was checking the text of the novel for Tolkien, he addresses a question she had about the name:<ref name="Letter 257">Template:Harvnb</ref>

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Yes, Sam Gamgee is in a sense a relation of Dr. Gamgee, in that his name would not have taken that form, if I had not heard of 'Gamgee tissue'; there was I believe a Dr. Gamgee (no doubt of the kin) in Birmingham when I was a child. The name was any way always familiar to me. Gaffer Gamgee arose first: he was a legendary character to my children (based on a real-life gaffer, not of that name). But, as you will find explained, in this tale the name is a 'translation' of the real Hobbit name, derived from a village (devoted to rope-making) anglicized as Gamwich (pron. Gammidge), near Tighfield (see vol. II p. 217). Since Sam was close friends of the family of Cotton (another village-name), I was led astray into the Hobbit-like joke of spelling Gamwichy [as] Gamgee, though I do not think that in actual Hobbit-dialect the joke really arose.{{#if:J.R.R. Tolkien<ref name="Letter 257"/>|{{#if:|}}

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