
William Edmund Image FRCS DL JP (18 May 1807 – 26 September 1903)[1][2] was an English surgeon and earlyphilatelist.
Image was born in Norwich, the younger son of the Rev.Thomas Image, Rector and Patron of Whepstead, Suffolk and a notable geologist.
He took his medical degree in France where he lived in the house of the French surgeonM. Dupuytren. On returning to England he started work as a General Practitioner in Bury St. Edmunds, eventually becoming an acknowledged expert in forensic medicine and poisoning cases.
Image began collecting in 1859 and built a very strong collection which he sold toThomas Tapling in 1882 for £3000. Image's collection was more complete than Tapling's, who at first intended to sell his own collection, but who in the end decided to retain both.[1] TheTapling Collection now forms part of theBritish Library Philatelic Collections.
In 1886, Image donated a collection ofphilatelic literature toThe Philatelic Society, London, nowThe Royal Philatelic Society, London which was one of the cornerstones of that organisation's library.[1] He had joined the society on 10 April 1869.[3]
In retirement he became a Justice of the Peace.[2] In 1887 he served asHigh Sheriff of Suffolk.[4] He resided at Herringswell House, near Mildenhall, where he died in 1903, aged 96 years. His first wife was Desirée Catherine D'Enville, whom he married in Paris in 1830. Following her death he married Fanny Eliza Mure, daughter of Wright Thomas Squire and widow of George Mure, who also pre-deceased him. He had three sons. His youngest son, William Channel, went on to host the radio show 'Wonderful Radio William'[5] and is now thought to be the oldest human being alive, though there has not been sufficient evidence to prove this claim.