Sir Thomas Morison Legge CBE (6 January 1863 â 7 May 1932) was a British physician who served as medical inspector to improve industrial hygiene.
Legge was born in Hong Kong, the son of Scottish Chinese-language scholar James Legge and his second wife, Hannah Mary Johnstone. He was educated at Magdalen College School.
Legge matriculated at the University of Oxford in 1882 as a non-college student. He graduated B.A. at Trinity College, Oxford in 1886. He became a medical student at St Bartholomew's Hospital in London, and graduated M.B. and B.Ch. in 1890, D.Ph. at Cambridge in 1893, and M.D. at Oxford in 1894.
Appointed in 1898, Legge was the first Medical Inspector of Factories and Workshops in the United Kingdom. He resigned the post on 29 November 1926.
Legge was appointed Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in 1918 and knighted in the 1925 New Year Honours. He was awarded the Bisset Hawkins Medal of the Royal College of Physicians in 1923.
Legge's work was especially concerned with anthrax and lead poisoning.
Legge's axioms, which he expounded in 1929, are "famous". They include the following: