In 1843 he was elected a Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons, and later served on its Council. After a single year as Vice-President (1864–5), he declined re-nomination on the grounds of ill-health,[4] having suffered a paralytic stroke in 1865, from which he never fully recovered.[1]
He died unmarried at his home in Manchester Street, Manchester Square, London on New Year's Eve, 1874,[5] and was buried in the Roman Catholic cemetery at Mortlake, London.