Background
His mother Mary Glover-Haviland, who appears to have inherited wealth, was a daughter of the vicar of Saint Mary"s, Bridgewater.
His mother Mary Glover-Haviland, who appears to have inherited wealth, was a daughter of the vicar of Saint Mary"s, Bridgewater.
Haviland attended Winchester College for his secondary schooling and then, in 1803, became a student at Street John"s College, Cambridge.
Haviland"s father, also called John, was a surgeon. When he received his first degree in 1807, his marks placed him near the top of the list. He became a fellow of the college and received higher degrees from Cambridge successively in 1810, 1812 and 1817.
At the same time, he was studying medicine, initially at Edinburgh and then in London at Street Bartholomew"s Hospital ("Barts").
He joined the London-based Royal College of Physicians in 1814, progressing to a fellowship there in 1818. Settling in Cambridge, in 1814 Haviland succeeded Sir Busick Harwood as the university professor of anatomy.
Three years later, in 1817, Sir Isaac Pennington died, and Haviland succeeded him both as the University Regius Professor of Physic and as physician to Addenbrooke"s Hospital. At this point he resigned the anatomy professorship.
In 1839, which was the year of his 54th birthday, he resigned the Addenbrooke"s job on health grounds, but he retained the Regius Professorship till his death in 1851.
The marriage produced five recorded sons. By the time of his death Haviland had acquired a substantial property at Fen Ditton, roughly 5 km (3 miles) downstream from his college. He was buried in the churchyard at Fen Ditton.