Background
He was born at Irthington, near Carlisle and studied at the University of Edinburgh, gaining his Doctor of Medicine in 1827.
He was born at Irthington, near Carlisle and studied at the University of Edinburgh, gaining his Doctor of Medicine in 1827.
University of Edinburgh.
He moved to Lancaster in 1832, and in 1840 became Visiting Physician at the Lancaster County Lunatic Asylum. In 1864 James Brunton offered £2,000 towards a new asylum for "idiots and imbeciles" and asked De Vitre"s assistance. De Vitre was the Chairman of the Committee for the new asylum, and oversaw its establishment.
The foundation stone was laid in 1868 and it received its first patients on 14 December 1870.
De Vitre died at Elms, Bare, Lancaster, on 4 October 1878. In September 2012 a community resource centre for the Lancashire Care National Health Service Trust, in Ashton Road near the former Royal Albert Hospital, was named DeVitre House in his honour, after a competition in which local residents were asked to choose its name.
The hospital itself closed in 1996 and the buildings now house an Islamic educational establishment for girls, Jamea First Rate (at Lloyd's) Kauthar.