The first Director, William Ellis, was destined to achieve the first accolade for "Services to the Insane." Sir William's distinction was conferred on account of his insistence on the essential humanity of the insane patients in his charge at a time when they were considered little different to beasts as a result of misunderstanding and fear. In 1866, James Crichton Browne took up the directorship. He also received the accolade in an era before psychiatry became accepted as an aspect of medical science. Sir James attracted people to study in the asylum and instituted the first pathological laboratory in a mental hospital in Britain. The burgeoning of research was reflected in the in-house journal, The West Riding Lunatic Asylum Medical Reports, edited by Sir James with the assistance of the neurologist Hughlings Jackson, the neuropathologist Sir David Ferrier, and another asylum director, Dr. Bucknill. The Reports contain a remarkable series of observations, and when he retired from the directorship Sir James encouraged the editorial group to remain with him and founded the present-day journal Brain. Lord Adrian, in a comment on these personalities in 1939 in the Proceedings of the Royal Society of London, Series B, recalled "a classical period in the history of medicine, the period when neurology became a science" (volume 126, pages 433–448). It was Crichton Browne who attracted Darwin to the asylum at Wakefield to conduct observations for his work The Expression of Emotions in Man and Animals.