Meakins was born on 16 May 1882 in Hamilton, Ontario, the son of Elizabeth Campbell and Charles William Meakins. He received his medical degree from the University of Sydney in 1904.[3] In 1909 he joined McGill University's Faculty of Medicine as a Demonstrator in Clinical Medicine. In 1912 he was appointed Secretary to the Committee on Experimental Medicine.[4] While at McGill University, he held a number of positions in pathology and experimental medicine before becoming Dean of the Faculty of Medicine, a position he held from 1941 to 1948. In addition, he served as director of the Department of Experimental Medicine from 1918 to 1919 and 1924–1948, and Director of the University Medical Clinic from 1927 to 1948.[5] During World War I he served in the Canadian Army Medical Corps. After studying posttraumatic stress disorder and gas poisoning during the World War I, he became Deputy Director of Medical Services with the rank of brigadier during the World War II, and was created a Commander of the Order of the British Empire for his services.[5]
In 1924, he moved back to Canada as Professor of Medicine at McGill University where he remained until his retirement in 1947.[6] He died in Montreal on 12 October 1959.
Family
Meakins married twice, first to Dorothy Brown (died 1926) and then to Sara Caldwell Young. He is father to Jonathan Lafayette Meakins and grandfather of Jonathan Larmonth Meakins.[6]
Publications
Meakins, Jonathan Campbell (1936). The practice of medicine (1st ed.). St. Louis: C. V. Mosby Company. p. xv, 1343.