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      Ulster connections with Nelson and Trafalgar

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      The Ulster Medical Journal
      The Ulster Medical Society

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          Abstract

          Last year brought the two hundredth anniversary of the battle of Trafalgar and it is a good time to remember Ulster's strong connection with the Royal Navy over the centuries. We can identify some 200 Ulster doctors who qualified before 1900 and served in the Navy,1 though this may well be an underestimate, for it is hard to produce a complete list to compare with the approximately 260 who served in the Army Medical Service 2 and about 100 who served in the Indian Medical Service 3 over the same period. There are excellent annotated rolls for these two services, while no biographical list exists for the surgeons of the Royal Navy and names have been obtained from Medical Directories and scattered earlier sources. Until about 1850 most of those joining the Naval Medical Service did not have a medical qualification, but took a course of training and an examination set by the Surgeons' Company of London.4 They would then join a ship as surgeon's mate or assistant surgeon, moving from ship to ship over their career, with often a posting on shore as physician to a hospital when they were more senior. On the other hand many served for only a few years, to retire early and move into general or hospital practice (for example Dr Samuel Browne (1809-90), attending surgeon to the Belfast General Hospital and the father of ophthalmic surgery in Belfast 5). Often they only took a medical qualification in mid-career or on retirement from the Service and at this stage no further formal period of study might be necessary. Later in the nineteenth century recruitment was as it is now, from fully qualified doctors and the progression included the rank of staff surgeon, known from 1875 as fleet surgeon. Two surgeons from this group are of special interest now because they served with Nelson on the Victory and wrote detailed letters and diaries of their experiences there. Both have been the subject of biographical articles, published some fifty and ninety years ago and Dr R.S. Allison, neurologist and medical historian,6 collected material on both, although he never published anything on them. LEONARD GILLESPIE Leonard Gillespie (fig 1) was born at Armagh on 20 May 1758, son of Leonard Gillespie and Elizabeth Blakely.7 His parents died when he was a child and he was brought up by his two elder sisters until he was apprenticed at the age of fourteen to a doctor in Armagh. Five years later he went to Dublin where he studied for a year under various surgeons. (The Royal College of Surgeons did not receive its charter until 1784 8). In June 1777 he attended a court of examiners of the Company of Surgeons in London and having satisfied them, was passed into the Royal Navy, to become second assistant surgeon on HMS Royal Oak. In this period he saw a lot of the slave coast of West Africa and made journeys to and around the West Indies, guarding merchant ships and in March 1779 heard the guns in General Washington's camp firing to celebrate the third anniversary of the Declaration of Independence. He was promoted to surgeon in 1781. The duties of the surgeon, of course, rarely involved operative surgery and both at sea and in the hospital of St Lucia, he took a particular interest in leg ulcers. These were caused by abrasions, dirt and damp, and healing was impeded by scurvy. Fig 1 Leonard Gillespie, MD, RN. (from the portrait by Charles Louis Bazin) The peace of Versailles in 1783 saw Gillespie discharged from the Navy, with a considerable sum of prize money, and he took the opportunity to study medicine further in Edinburgh, St Andrews and Paris for two years before returning home to see his sisters. Those in Armagh advised him to practise at home, as was common with naval surgeons after a war was over, but he found the country life too narrow compared with that of London and Paris, and boredom soon set in. Within a year he was in London enjoying both the intellectual and medical stimulation, and by 1787 he was back at sea. As a humane and cultured man he deplored the press-gang methods, the drunkenness, hangings and floggings, and the constant recourse to prostitutes who made treatment of venereal disease one of his main concerns. Over the next few years society at sea must have been even narrower than in Armagh, but he took every opportunity, when his ship berthed in Edinburgh or London, to attend lectures and cultural gatherings. His ship put in at Le Havre in January 1791 and he took prolonged leave to visit Paris again and to attend the wards of the hospitals until the situation worsened with the execution of Louis XVI. War was declared between England and France on 1 February 1793 and he rejoined the Navy on board HMS Majestic, taking part in Lord Howe's victory on the Glorious First of June 1794. As we have seen, surgeons' problems were often matters of health and nutrition, and he records that after the victory they took on board two hundred French prisoners, suffering from typhus fever and scurvy. The fever soon spread to his own ship's company and eventually sixty-eight men had to be sent to hospital. For the next eight years the Majestic was stationed in and around Martinique in the West Indies, where he gained even more experience of disease, particularly yellow fever. In this period he also wrote two books on tropical diseases and was granted the degree of MD by St Andrews University, on the recommendation of a London friend, Dr James Sims (formerly from county Tyrone). He also formed a lasting relationship with a local woman, Caroline Heiliger, by whom he had two children, as well as writing frequently to his sisters in Armagh and investing his large sums of prize money. Gillespie left detailed journals of his stay in Martinique which are full of concern for the welfare of the negro slaves, the treatment of prisoners and the spiritual and moral welfare of the British soldiers and sailors. The peace of Amiens in 1802 allowed him to return home again, but he realised that war was likely to be resumed soon. In 1804 he rejoined the Navy, being promoted to the advisory role of physician and Inspector of the Naval Hospitals in the Mediterranean. This brought him into close contact with Nelson for the first time. Both were of the same age and both held similar humanitarian views on the health and welfare of the sailors and the evils brought on by rum in particular. He joined the Victory in January 1805 and grew to share the general admiration felt by all for their leader. One typical day in the Mediterranean he recalled in a letter to his sister Jane, written between January and March 1805. His servant woke him at 6.00 am with a light and a weather report, after which he dressed and went on deck to watch the dawn, then joining Lord Nelson, Rear Admiral Murray, Captain Hardy and others at breakfast. This was followed by a day of study, writing and exercise, visiting the sick berth only when asked by the surgeon. There was a band performance at two o'clock, followed by an excellent dinner with the best wines, for the officers at least. This was followed by more band music and after tea, Gillespie wrote, “Nelson generally unbends himself, though he is at all times as free from stiffness and pomp as a regard to proper dignity will admit, and is very communicative. At eight o'clock a rummer of punch with cake or biscuit is served up, soon after which we wish the Admiral a good night (who is generally in bed before nine o'clock)”. This was too early for Gillespie, who would then read for an hour or join old friends in the ward room. Much of 1805 was spent in fruitless chase of the French fleet which, perhaps wisely, kept retiring to the safety of port. On August 18, when the Victory was anchored off Spithead, Gillespie resigned and was granted prolonged leave to go to London. It is surprising that he should have done so at this time, but it seems that he felt that his own health was not good and, fearing a major battle, he did not relish the brutal surgery which would inevitably accompany this. He also thought that he had persuaded the Admiral to rest more now and look after himself, though Nelson notoriously paid little heed to medical opinions and was in vigorous mental and physical health for the battle of Trafalgar in October. In the autumn Gillespie went to the spa at Cheltenham but was well enough to attend Nelson's funeral at St Paul's Cathedral on the ninth January 1806. He held no more naval appointments and retired on half-pay in 1809. After the peace of 1815 he returned to Paris which, in spite of twenty years of war, he had come to regard as his home. His portrait was painted in Paris by Charles Louis Bazin in 1837 and through the window in the background HMS Victory is proudly shown. He died in London on 13 January 1842 at the age of 84 but was buried in the Pere Lachaise Cemetery in Paris. SIR WILLIAM BEATTY The other distinguished naval surgeon was Sir William Beatty (fig 2), remembered now for having attended Lord Nelson during the battle of Trafalgar. Beatty was born c. 1773, the oldest of six children of James Beatty of HM Customs in Londonderry, and Ann Smyth.9 Two brothers and a brother-in-law had naval connections, which is not surprising considering the importance of Londonderry as a port and the progress of the Napoleonic Wars as they were growing up. William seems to have been educated locally and was trained by apprenticeship as a surgeon's mate. It is evident from his Journal that he also must have had some practical instruction in anatomy. He is first recorded as surgeon to HMS Flying Fish in 1793, with subsequent appointments to HMS Alligator, HMS Amethyst, HMS Alcmena, HMS Resistance, and HMS Spenser. He was appointed surgeon to HMS Victory on 14 December 1804, replacing George Magrath, another Ulster surgeon, and had two surgeons under him, as well as a third transferred to the ship on the evening of the battle of Trafalgar, 21 October 1805, to deal with the heavy casualties. Fig 2 Sir William Beatty, MD, RN. (from the original portrait) Beatty has left records of his patients in his Journal, preserved in the Public Record Office, Kew. There was, of course, no physician on board the Victory, and Beatty records five deaths in the ten months before the battle, of which three were due to consumption, one to fever and one to injury. As a result of the battle there were about 55 killed immediately, together with 102 wounded, of whom 7 died. Beatty and his team seem to have treated all the wounded, although five of the worst were left behind at Gibraltar and five others were later transferred to the hospital ship Sussex, lying off Sheerness. As well as the manuscript Journal, Beatty published an “Authentic Narrative on the death of Lord Nelson: with the circumstances preceding, attending and subsequent to that event; the Professional Report of His Lordship's wound and several interesting anecdotes ……”. This gives a graphic picture of the day of the battle and we feel we can re-create the whole scene of Nelson's wounding and death. The Admiral was in good spirits on the morning of the 21st October and confident of victory. Contrary to advice, he insisted on dressing up in his uniform coat, which had all his orders and decorations conspicuously displayed. The French ship Redoutable was very close, with a sniper posted high up on the mizen-top only 15 yards from the quarter-deck of the Victory. Nelson was an easy and identifiable target, so a sniper was able to take steady and fatal aim. Two snipers were immediately shot from Nelson's ship but Nelson was already mortally wounded. As Beatty wrote later “The ball struck the forepart of his Lordship's epaulette, and entered the left shoulder immediately below the processus acromion scapulae, which is slightly fractured. It then descended obliquely into the thorax, fracturing the second and third ribs; and, after penetrating the left lobe of the lungs, and dividing in its passage a large branch of the pulmonary artery, it entered the left side of the spine between the sixth and seventh dorsal vertebrae, fractured the left transverse process of the sixth dorsal vertebra, wounded the medulla spinalis, and fracturing the right transverse process of the seventh vertebra, made its way from the right side of the spine, directing its course through the muscles of the back and lodged therein about two inches below the inferior angle of the right scapula. On removing the ball a portion of the gold lace and pad of the epaulette, together with a small piece of his Lordship's coat, was found firmly attached to it”. All this information was, of course, not available at the time of injury. When Nelson had been carried below and was being examined, he said “Ah, Mr Beatty, you can do nothing for me, I have been shot through the spine.” He knew the symptoms of paraplegia since Beatty had explained them in the case of a boy in the crew who had been similarly injured a few days earlier. Nelson had severe bleeding and suffered greatly from thirst, but no treatment was possible and he died two and three-quarter hours later. Nelson specifically asked for his body not to be thrown overboard but buried in St Paul's Cathedral, if the people wished it. Beatty, therefore had the task of preserving the body. This was undertaken by immersing it in the largest cask that could be found, surrounded by brandy – a procedure which was successful for all but the intestines, which did decompose and had to be removed when he carried out a full post mortem examination in Spithead. The body was eventually taken by sea to Greenwich, where it lay in state for three days before the state funeral to St Paul's. The bullet was retained by Beatty, mounted in crystal and subsequently passed from his family to Queen Victoria who had it placed in the Armoury, Windsor Castle. The bullet and Nelson's naval coat have been reunited in an exhibition during 2005 in the National Maritime Museum to commemorate the battle. After the war Beatty took the MD of St Andrews in 1817, followed by the LRCP London in the same year. He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1818. He was appointed resident physician to Greenwich Hospital in 1822, and remained on its staff until his retirement in 1839. William IV, who always took a great interest in naval matters, conferred a knighthood on him in 1831. He never married and spent his last years in London, dying at 43 York Street, Portman Square on 25 March 1842, to be buried in Kensal Green Cemetery (where there is sadly no memorial). Many other Ulstermen served as naval surgeons during the 18th and early 19th centuries. These included David McBride (1726-1778) who obstinately recommended malt for the prevention of scurvy, even after it had been superseded by James Lind's lemon juice. He was subsequently one of the founding surgeons of the Meath Hospital, Dublin.10,11 There were also Richard McClelland (c. 1761-1807), one of the founding surgeons of the Belfast Dispensary in 1792, Andrew Marshall (1779-1868) who was attending surgeon to the Belfast Fever Hospital 1807-28, and David Moore (1780-1849) who had been appointed surgeon in the navy by Lord Nelson in 1803 and was attending surgeon to the Fever Hospital 1821-45.12 Sir George Magrath (1775-1857) was a flag medical officer to Lord Nelson before Sir William Beatty, as we have seen, and was awarded the KCB by his former shipmate, King William IV in 1831.13 James Johnson (1777-1845) was a more eccentric shipmate of the King, who also served in the Napoleonic wars, but is more famous as a medical writer and for a prolonged lawsuit with Thomas Wakley of The Lancet, resulting in his having to pay damages of £100 to Wakley.14 Finally, we may mention Sir James Prior (c. 1790-1869) who was present at the surrender of Heligoland in 1814 and of Napoleon himself in 1815.15 This list only covers some of the more celebrated surgeons, but in many of the small dispensaries throughout the British Isles there would have been surgeons who had trained in the Royal Navy during these wars. Fortunately for the patient, a surgeon could acquire more surgical experience during one naval battle than he would require during the remainder of his life.

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          Can Internet-based continuing medical education improve physicians' skin cancer knowledge and skills?

          We sought to determine whether an Internet-based continuing medical education (CME) program could improve physician confidence, knowledge, and clinical skills in managing pigmented skin lesions. The CME program provided an interactive, customized learning experience and incorporated well-established guidelines for recognizing malignant melanoma. During a 6-week evaluation period, 354 physicians completed the on-line program as well as a pretest and an identical posttest. Use of the CME program was associated with significant improvements in physician confidence, correct answers to a 10-question knowledge test (52% vs 85% correct), and correct answers to a 15-question clinical skills test (81% vs 90% correct). We found that the overall improvement in clinical skills was due to a marked increase in specificity and a small decrease in sensitivity for evaluating pigmented lesions. User satisfaction was extremely high. This popular and easily distributed online CME program increased physicians' confidence and knowledge of skin cancer. Remaining challenges include improving the program to increase physician sensitivity for evaluating pigmented lesions while preserving the enhanced specificity.
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            The history of the General Hospital, Belfast, and the other medical institutions of the town

            A. Malcolm (1851)
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              The History of Neurology in Belfast: The first hundred years

              I would like to tell the story of the development of neurology in Belfast. I wish to concentrate on the first century. Why do I say the first century? Having researched the beginnings, I was surprised to discover that the first physician with special training in neurology to practice in Belfast set up his brass plate as long ago as 1888. From 1888 to the late 1980's comprises the first hundred years of neurology in Belfast. This takes us up to the closure of Claremont Street Hospital, and in-patient beds in Belfast City Hospital, with concentration of acute neurology beds at the Royal Victoria Hospital. I am not going to say much about my contemporaries or myself. I also feel more comfortable describing the talents and accomplishments of my predecessors whose lives have run their full course. There are many precedents for this. PEOPLE AND PLACES The story is essentially one of people and places. The people were pioneering individuals who formed teams and fruitful collaborations. The story concentrates on three very influential men – their publications were read and quoted extensively in the world of medicine and neurology. Two of them served as presidents of the Association of British Neurologists, Sydney Allison and Harold Millar. The third, Louis Hurwitz, surely would also have been accorded that honour, had he not died at the age of forty-five. All were gifted researchers, writers, clinicians and teachers. The places were the hospitals where they worked, and the stories of their development. Dr Hugh Calwell succeeded Sydney Allison as honorary archivist at the Royal Victoria Hospital. He wrote an article on the initiation of neurology in Belfast based on Sydney Allison's collected papers.1 The paper covers the foundation of the clinics in Great Victoria Street and of Claremont Street Hospital, extending up to 1948, the foundation of the National Health Service. I want to move the account forwards by forty years. Sydney Allison published extensively on a wide range of topics but did not publish much concerning his personal feelings and experiences, when he was active professionally. I am grateful to John Allison his son, who copied some extracts of his father's extensive private diaries to help me with my background research. The papers contain frank personal views of hospital politics of his time. These have been quoted sensitively. I am also indebted to Mrs Sheila Millar who gave me collections of papers, slides and books belonging to Harold shortly after his death in 1993. Dr Natalie Hurwitz also gave me Louis' slide collection in the mid 1990's following a guest lecture in his honour given in 1996 by their close friend Prof P K Thomas, a past editor of Brain. THE FIRST BELFAST NEUROLOGIST The first physician in Belfast with specific neurological training was John McGee McCormac of Banbridge (fig 1). He entered Royal Belfast Academical Institution in 1860 and after two years there went on to Queen's College Belfast, as a medical student. In 1867 he qualified in Edinburgh with LRCP & S, and proceeded to gain his MD degree in Durham in 1885. He spent some time in London studying neurology and attended the National Hospital, Queen Square as a post-graduate student. This institution had been founded only a few years earlier in 1860. Before he left London, he became one of the original members of the Neurological Society of London. McCormac, on his return to Belfast in 1888, practiced from his own home at 29 Great Victoria Street. This was a location popular among other members of the medical fraternity, being on the then outskirts of the expanding city. The current layout of this part of Belfast is dramatically different, being the site of a modern commercial arcade leading to Glengall Street bus station. His neighbours included future eminent physicians such as HL McKissack and JA Lindsay, who later became professor of medicine. By 1889 McCormac's house had become “The Belfast Institution for Nervous Diseases, Paralysis and Epilepsy”. In 1893 McCormac moved to the house next door leaving number 29 to the patients and in 1897 he and the institution moved to numbers 71 and 73 where they remained until his sudden death in 1913. Active in Belfast medical and intellectual society, on his return to Belfast in 1888, he was a member of the Natural History and Philosophical Society. It is recorded that he read neurological papers at the Northern Ireland Branch of the British Medical Association. It is of interest that within one year of Roentgen's discovery of X-ray apparatus in the session 1896-7 he gave a detailed account of the physics of the production of X-rays and described their use in examining bones, liver, kidneys and heart. CLAREMONT STREET HOSPITAL McCormac was also instrumental in the establishment of Claremont Street Hospital (fig 2) in 1896. It was initially called the “Victoria Hospital for Diseases of the Nervous System, Paralysis and Epilepsy” and was opened at number 14 Claremont Street. It was endowed and sponsored by a Miss Farrell, the daughter of a former rector of Dundonald, Co. Down. McCormac was its first physician. Miss Farrell suffered from a neurological illness, but it is not recorded what the nature of this illness was. The new hospital had male and female wards containing 15 beds altogether. The hospital was supported by a committee of management drawn from the members of the Belfast establishment. For example Lieutenant-General Geary presided over the Committee of Management during the year 1899 and Sir James Henderson DL succeeded him. The first surviving annual report covers the year ending 1904. Thirty-five in-patients were admitted. According to McCormac “31 were cured, 18 much benefited and 2 unchanged”. In the 1909 report it is recorded that “cases of paralysis, melancholia, hypochondriasis, rheumatic neuritis, sciatica and chorea were treated with complete success and epileptics have been so greatly benefited that for years they have not suffered from any recurrence of attacks”. I am sure our contemporary outcome statistics would not better that! When John McGee McCormac died in 1913 he was described as the founder of the hospital, but credit was also given to Miss Farrell. Following McCormac's death John Thompson MD (RUI) LRCP London originally of Lisburn was appointed to succeed him. Thompson had been a student in Queen's College Belfast. He also studied in Dublin, London and Vienna. It was not unusual for undergraduate students in those days to migrate between several medical schools before graduation. This phenomenon was described in detail in Prof Richard Clarke's “Gary Love Lecture”, delivered during the last year. Thompson's interests lay more in what we would now call functional disorders rather than organic nervous diseases. In 1927 when the hospital was amalgamated with the Killowen Colony for Epileptics in Lisburn (fig 3), the title of the combined institutions was changed to the “Nervous Diseases Hospital and Epileptic Colony”. Thompson reported good results “in treating epilepsy and most functional diseases were much improved by electrical treatment and the use of ultra-violet rays.” The use of ultra-violet rays in medicine was controversial. He is recorded as deploring the “unscientific attitude” of the Medical Research Council in a report that cast doubt on the value of treatment of nervous diseases using ultra-violet light. He wrote that the report would “have the tendency to disturb the mind of the large number of patients receiving the treatment, and even if there were a psychological or faith healing element in the treatment, they have no right to criticise one of the most recent advances in medical science and shake the confidence of the public”. In 1926 Thomas Howard Crozier was appointed assistant physician to Claremont Street. He worked in Claremont Street for only 2 years before moving on to the staff of the Royal Victoria Hospital. He remained on the staff of the Royal as a physician until his retirement. Crozier later recalled that when Thompson was interviewing him for the appointment in Claremont Street the conversation concerned religious and theological belief rather than medicine. In some of Sydney Allison's later writings, he recalled the liberal distribution of biblical texts throughout the hospital. Little remains in the archives of Thompson's time. By all accounts he was a diligent and caring physician. The Killowen Colony for Epileptics in Lisburn was housed in a property belonging to the Thompson family, which later was passed to the Health Service. DR HILTON STEWART In 1929 Howard Hilton Stewart (fig 4) was appointed assistant physician. He had been a registrar in the Hospital for the Paralysed and Epileptic in Maida Vale, London, where he had undergone neurological training. He was later appointed to the Ulster Hospital. In 1930 he applied for the post of assistant physician at the Royal Victoria Hospital. The book containing testimonials for his application is still preserved (fig 5). He received letters of support from Wilfred Harris, the Senior Physician in Maida Vale, Douglas MacAlpine and Russell Brain. Hilton Stewart was a son of Andrew William Stewart, a former editor of the Belfast Telegraph. His special interest lay in the follow up and control of patients suffering from epilepsy. Another particular interest was the management of psychoneurosis. After the National Health Act in 1948 he gave up general medicine and became a consulting neurologist. In 1956 he was appointed Clinical Lecturer and Examiner in Medicine in Queen's University in Belfast and joined the staff of the Royal. His publications include works on epilepsy, the mental consequences of head injuries and on Sydenham's chorea.2–5 His South American wife, May Clara Dos Santos whom he married in 1930 pre-deceased him by 6 years in 1958. He never fully recovered from this loss. A very kind woman, she devoted her life to the welfare of the patients and staff in Claremont Street Hospital. The entry on Hilton Stewart in Munk's Roll (a record of particularly distinguished deceased fellows of the Royal College of Physicians of London) records that he was “a man of deep religious faith and an Elder of the Kirk. Religion was in his heart rather than his tongue. Throughout his life his friends were drawn to him by his wit and his consideration for others.” Following his death in 1963 a library was founded in Claremont Street Hospital as a tribute to his memory, based on his personal collection of books and journals. This remarkable occasion was well attended. Photographs of the occasion still exist, as does a collection of autographs of those who attended, including Dr MacDonald Critchley, who had travelled from London for the occasion. The dean of the medical school at Queen's Professor (later Sir) John Henry Biggart, was also present. As a young man he published a textbook on neuropathology.6 DR SYDNEY ALLISON Dr Sydney Allison was born on 15th May 1899 (fig 6) in 7 Wellington Park Avenue, Belfast. His father, William Locock Allison, an Englishman from Bradford was a fashionable society photographer. He had a studio in Donegall Place in Belfast opposite the City Hall. Sydney was educated at the Royal Belfast Academical Institution and then at Queen's University Belfast, qualifying with Honours in 1921. In 1922 he became a house physician and house surgeon in the Royal in Belfast. In 1923 he was appointed house physician at the West London Hospital in Hammersmith and later became a registrar in the same hospital. He engaged in postgraduate study at the National Hospital for Paralysed and Epileptic in Maida Vale, the National Hospital Queen Square, St. George's, St Bartholomew's and Charing Cross Hospitals. In 1924 he obtained the degree of Doctor of Medicine with commendation and was elected a member of the Royal College of Physicians of London. He was a young man in a hurry and after just 4-5 months working for Dr Grainger Stewart in Maida Vale having had time to obtain his MD degree and his MRCP he went to a private hospital in North Wales called Ruthin Castle run by Dr (later Sir) Edmond Spriggs. There were only four to five on the medical staff and Dr Allison was appointed as an assistant physician. This hospital received only very wealthy patients. Many of them had neurotic conditions. Some had neurological illnesses. During his time in North Wales he obtained a grant from the Medical Research Council to investigate “The incidence, frequency, distribution and other aetiological factors of the patients with disseminated sclerosis in North Wales”. This led to a publication in “Brain”. This was the first population-based study ever published on multiple sclerosis.7 In 1930 he was appointed to the medical staff of Royal Victoria Hospital in Belfast and became a visiting physician to Claremont Street Hospital in 1939. It is interesting that he competed with Hilton Stewart and Howard Crozier for the position on the staff of the Royal Victoria Hospital. Sydney Allison in his private diaries wrote that the obvious candidates were Stewart and Crozier. A female relative of one of the members of the board of the Royal Victoria Hospital, Henry Berrington had been unwell and had been treated in Ruthin Castle by Spriggs. John Allison remembers his father saying he was particularly attentive and solicitous to the well-connected lady from Belfast. In those days it was expected that applicants for positions on the staff of the Royal Victoria Hospi tal would canvas support. Though we do not know the details of Sydney Allison's approaches to members of the Board of Management, an amusing account of this process is detailed in the recently published biography of Sir Ian Fraser.8 Though Henry Berrington supported Allison's application, Spriggs at the time was in the USA and the resourceful Allison got him to send a telegram of support. In any case, Sydney Alison was appointed, and Hilton Stewart had to wait for 26 years until 1956 before he was appointed to the visiting staff of the Royal. Sydney enjoyed working with his colleague Hilton Stewart. He was more of an organic neurologist than Stewart. Hilton Stewart was what we would now call a neuro-psychiatrist. He was interested in neurosis, psychosis and depression, treating middle class patients who felt they would have been stigmatised by attending psychiatry clinics. Sydney writes that his friend Hilton Stewart had a flair for administration, and he gladly left that to him. Sydney Allison was always interested in the sea and the navy. As a medical student he spent a year in the Royal Navy as a surgeon probationer on a destroyer. A book detailing his memories was published based on his diaries.9 The great influenza epidemic wiped out many of the crew and made a profound impression on him. Before becoming a houseman in the Royal Victoria Hospital he spent a year at sea in the merchant navy with the Blue Funnel Line in the Far East. He became a Surgeon Lieutenant in the Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve (RNVR) – Ulster Division on HMS Caroline in 1925. EARLY NEUROSURGERY AND CECIL CALVERT From the time of his appointment to the Royal, Allison conducted teaching demonstrations in neurology for students attending the hospital. There was no specialist appointment in neurology, nor was there a specialist neurosurgeon. Mr GRB Purce was a general surgeon in the Royal with an interest in thoracic and neurosurgery. In the Royal in 1930 the list of neurosurgical operations performed contains the following: removal of brain tumours, 2 (died 2); removal of cerebral cyst, 1; cerebral abcess, 1 (died 1); laminectomy, 1 (died 1). Purce gradually abandoned neurosurgery. During the 1930's Cecil Calvert was developing an interest in neurosurgery. Sydney Allison and Cecil Calvert got on well. Cecil Calvert spent his days practising general surgery in nursing homes to earn his living. He also practised general surgery in the Royal. It was his preference to operate on neurosurgical cases at night. He was a careful, meticulous surgeon, but memorably slow. In those days haemostasis within the head was difficult. Sydney Allison frequently assisted at operations. Beginning at 8.30 to 9.30pm, the operations invariably went on into the small hours of the night. The surgical outcomes gradually improved. It must be remembered that in those days none of the modern diagnostic aids were available. The preoperative assessment was based almost entirely on the bedside methods, using the clinical history and the careful consideration of the neurological examination. THE WAR AND POST-WAR PERIOD At the start of the Second World War the admiralty called up Sydney Allison employing him as a medical specialist. His wartime experiences are recorded in a paper published after his death by his son John based on his diaries.10 At Barrow Gurney near Bristol he was placed in charge of a 40-bed neurology ward. In 1944 he was appointed senior medical officer in command Royal Naval Neurological Hospital at Stonehouse, Plymouth, carrying the rank of Surgeon Captain RNVR (one of just three reservists to achieve that rank). Early in the war, during quieter postings, he studied for a qualification in psychiatry, the DPM. After discharge from the Navy, on his return to Belfast he found that his colleagues were “still in the mind-set of 1939”. Those who had not been to the war, and were in powerful positions in medicine felt that things would settle down and return to the pre-war state. Sydney Allison found this attitude infuriating. He was approached to become honorary secretary of the medical staff in 1947. At that time Professor WWD Thomson was chairman of the medical staff. There was a mutual regard. They were also near neighbours in University Square. Allison lived at number 27 and Thomson at number 25. Before the inauguration of the National Health Service, this was Belfast's equivalent of Harley Street. Incidentally, Cecil Calvert lived at number 8 University Square. An interesting account of the medical occupants of University Square is to be found in Dr Strain's presidential address to the Ulster Medical Society in 1968.11 Sydney Allison expressed a desire to Prof WWD Thomson that he wished to become a full time neurologist. Thompson initially was against this but later actively facilitated him. He writes “many of my friends thought I was being foolish, and to stake all on the success of a new venture such as neurology was courting disaster. It did not seem proper or justifiable to take over one of the general medical wards and stuff it with neurological cases,” and “neglecting other aspects of medicine”. He was also convinced that neurological cases required specialist nursing. He felt such patients would be better gathered under the care of nurses skilled and practised in the care of neurological diseases. Cecil Calvert joined the Royal Army Medical Corps in 1940. His expertise in neurosurgery resulted in a posting to Oxford, attached to St Hugh's Hospital for head injuries. This pioneering unit was run by Sir Hugh Cairns, later Nuffield professor of Neurosurgery in Oxford. While he was the honorary secretary to the staff Sydney Allison actively promoted the concept of neurology and neurosurgery working more closely together. There was no neurosurgery unit. He also became interested in the development of the hospital. Two tours of European hospitals were made. The first was to France and Switzerland in May 1947, and the second to Denmark and Sweden in June and July. These countries had escaped the worst ravages of World War II. Cecil Calvert, before the war, had developed an interest in neurosurgery. A year before the introduction of the Health Service, in 1947 he was appointed a full time neurosurgeon with a salary of £1,500 per year. This freed him of the necessity to earn his living practising general surgery. He was also permitted to see private neurosurgical cases. 25 beds were allocated to him in wards 11 & 12 in the old Royal corridor. In 1948 there was a further development. A decision was made to establish a department of neurology in the Royal with Sydney Allison as physician in charge, the appointment being on the same terms as Calvert's. Allison and Calvert brought their needs to the hospital Management Committee, which was chaired by Senator Herbert Quin. The upshot of this planning was that Quin House was to be redeveloped to accommodate neurology and neurosurgery. On the ground floor were thirty-five beds, a theatre suite, and an X-ray department run by Dr Harold Shepherd, who had been appointed in 1950. There was also a room for EEG equipment. On the second floor were sixteen beds for neurology. The advantage of having a special unit was the development of a team of specialised nurses. The close collaboration between medical, nursing and physiotherapy staff greatly benefited the patients, after the unit was opened. Sydney Allison continued his interest in MS by involving Harold Millar in a major epidemiological study. This was published in a supplement (fig 7) to the Ulster Medical Journal in 1954.12 It is perhaps the most frequently cited paper ever published in the journal. The reason for this is that the simple diagnostic criteria that they proposed were not superseded for twenty years. All papers on the epidemiology of MS for nearly thirty years quoted the Allison and Millar criteria. In 1950 it was clear that a new matron of Claremont Street should be appointed. Sydney Allison went to Queen Square and forged a formal link with the National Hospital for Nervous Diseases. The matron of Queen Square, Miss Marjorie Ling was appointed matron of Claremont Street Hospital and despite the distance visited Belfast regularly. Many of the nurses from Claremont Street benefited from periods of training in Queen Square. Miss Ruby Moore was her deputy, and acting matron. Also in 1950, Belfast City Hospital advertised sessions for consultant neurologists. Sydney Allison and Hilton Stewart were appointed. There were 15 beds, and a neurological presence twice a week. The extension to Quin House was opened 1953 when Sydney Allison was on sabbatical in London. Sydney spent the months from September to December of 1953 working with Dr McDonald Critchley in the National Hospital, Queen Square. Incidentally Critchley also served in the RNVR during the war. The fact that they were both naval men no doubt helped their friendship. The collaboration resulted in a book called the “Senile Brain”, published in 1962.13 Allison's presidential address to the Ulster Medical Society in 1969 was heavily influenced by Critchley's researches on the parietal lobes.14 Cecil Calvert died tragically as the result of a car accident at Ballygawley in1956. At that stage there was one other neurosurgeon on the staff – Mr Alec Taylor, a Scot, had been appointed in 1952. Mr Campbell Connolly had been appointed in 1950 but resigned in 1952 to take up a post in Birmingham. Mr Colin Gleadhill, an Englishman who had trained in Dublin was appointed to succeed Cecil Calvert in 1957. Mr Derek Gordon a very young man at the time of Cecil Calvert's death was appointed in 1960. Before his appointment as a consultant he gained further surgical experience in Boston. During 1957 Sydney Allison went to the USA at the request of Dr Leonard Kurland who was working at the NIH in Bethesda at the time. The invitation came after a chance meeting at a conference in Chicago in 1956 where Sydney had presented the results of his survey of MS in Northern Ireland. He was encouraged to study the prevalence of MS in Charleston, South Carolina and Halifax, Nova Scotia, assisted by a young Dr Milton Alter. Milton Alter still has fond memories of his association with the Allison family, and recalls visiting Belfast in the late 1950's. In September 1957 Dr and Mrs Allison set off on board a liner to New York. Derek and Mavis Gordon happened to be on the same ship en route to Boston. This cemented a lasting friendship. Louis Hurwitz who was in New York at the time went to visit him in Charleston. Later the Allisons spent four days in New York over Christmas with Louis and his boss Dr Wolff in Cornell before returning home by air to London on Boxing Day. In 1957 Sydney was honoured by a tribute in “Snakes Alive”, the usually disrespectful journal of the Belfast Medical Students Association. (fig 8) From 1966–1968 Allison served as President of the Association of British Neurologists. During his presidency he hosted a meeting of the association in Belfast. Following his retirement he worked as Honorary Archivist in the Royal Victoria Hospital, publishing an extensive history of the hospital “The Seeds of Time”.15 (fig 9) Derek Gordon was a gifted surgeon, who in his maturity was a great ambassador for Belfast. He was to serve as the President of the Society of British Neurological Surgeons. In the 1970's and 1980's he, Colin Gleadhill, Ian Bailey and three young registrars – Alan Crockard, Tom Fannin and Dermot Byrnes put Belfast neurosurgery on the map. The fact that Quin House was adjacent to the casualty department and the intensive care unit was influential in their pioneering work on head injuries in the early days of the civil war (in all but name) on the streets of West Belfast. DR HAROLD MILLAR Harold Millar was born in Belfast, the eldest son of Samuel Dundee Millar, a resident of Bangor, and a jam manufacturer and company director. Sheila Millar told me his friends on the Bangor train called Samuel “Lord Preserve-Us”. Harold was educated at Elm Park Preparatory School in County Armagh and from the age of fourteen at Campbell College, Belfast. He studied medicine at Queen's University Belfast 1935–1940. After qualifying he became house physician at the Royal Victoria Hospital for six months, (fig 10) and could have become fully registered on the strength of that, but he then moved to be a house surgeon at Plymouth General Hospital where one of his friends was working in Greenbank Hospital. His friend told him they were short of doctors there at the time. As a consequence he experienced at first hand the effects the blitz of the naval base. Images of that remained etched on his memory for the rest of his life. Harold had three brothers and one sister. Along with all his brothers he volunteered for His Majesty's Forces in 1941. He served as surgeon lieutenant in the Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve until 1946. His first experience was in minesweepers and destroyers in the Atlantic, then in the artic convoys. The arctic convoys helped to supply the Russian allies with munitions and were particularly hazardous. U-boats lay in wait in Norwegian fjords. If a ship was torpedoed in winter, sailors overboard faced almost certain death from hypothermia. Having survived several arctic convoys, he told me he applied for a course in tropical medicine. His application was successful and he spent the last two years of the war in the Far East, based in Ceylon. He had happy memories of “sundowners” in Trincomalee. Late in his life, shortly before he died, he received a campaign medal from the Soviet Government in recognition of his wartime service. This pleased and amused him for he carried with him all his life the memory of harrowing experiences on the Murmansk convoys. After the war he returned to Belfast to pursue postgraduate education. He quickly obtained the MD with commendation and the MRCP in London, one of the first of his generation following the war. As a registrar at the Royal Victoria Hospital he became interested in neurology. He went to the National Hospital for Nervous Diseases, Queen Square, London in 1947–1948, as a supernumerary registrar to study electro-encephalography (EEG). In 1950 he married Sheila who had trained as a nurse in the Middlesex Hospital, and later trained as a social worker. She was the daughter of Robert Hugh Clay, Regional Director of the Post Office in Northern Ireland. They had three sons and two daughters of whom one son and one daughter qualified as doctors. In 1952 he was appointed Consultant Neurologist at the Royal Victoria Hospital and Claremont Street Hospital for Nervous Diseases in Belfast. He was also visiting neurologist at the Belfast City Hospital, Thompson House (home for the long-term disabled at Lisburn) Killowen Hospital for Epilepsy (Lisburn), Tyrone County General Hospital, Omagh and the Erne Hospital, Enniskillen, – a heavy and greatly dispersed clinical commitment. He was the senior neurologist in Belfast for over 25 years, and continued to work full time until he was sixty-five. Harold Millar was a gifted clinical neurologist who greatly enhanced the reputation of neurology in Northern Ireland. His clinical acumen was remarkable. Ward rounds started in Quin house on Monday mornings on the dot of nine o'clock. They were conducted at considerable speed, frequently being completed by nine thirty, when he would travel down the main corridor of the Royal to perform consultations in other wards, and thence to the medical library. His house staff were frequently astonished at his mercurial ability to spot significant clinical signs from the end of the bed. His diagnostic skill was legendary, rather like a gifted mathematician who could leave out several lines of a complex calculation and still end up with the correct answer. His abiding passionate interest in multiple sclerosis (MS) remained with him until he died. Between 1948 and 1952 he carried out an epidemiological survey of MS in Northern Ireland with Sydney Allison.7 This was one of the first studies of its kind to be performed anywhere and was regarded as a model for other subsequent studies. He founded a register of MS in Northern Ireland that he maintained. In 1971 he was invited to write the monograph on MS on the “American Lecture Series” published by CC Thomas in Springfield, Illinois.16 To this he gave the sub-title “A Disease Acquired in Childhood”. This arose out of the interest at that time in a possible relationship between MS and measles, following the discovery of measles virus in cases of subacute sclerosing panencephalitis. He had a conviction that MS will eventually turn out to be an infectious disease. Harold Millar felt that specialists should not lose touch with general medicine. His breadth of interests was apparent in the range of his papers on many aspects of general medicine, in addition to his many contributions to the neurological literature. He produced papers on platelet stickiness in cerebrovascular disease in diabetes, the neurological manifestations of systemic carcinoma, amino-aciduria and the EEG, on epilepsy, subarachnoid haemorrhage and cerebral tumours. In 1956 with colleagues he described for the first time in Britain a family with Refsum's Disease, a rare autosomal recessive enzyme defect resulting in failure to metabolise phytanic acid, presenting clinically with a mixed polyneuropathy, blindness and deafness. He was a benign teacher who preferred to guide by example. If there were an occasion when something did not please him, he would merely chuckle and say “How extraordinary!” At academic meetings he was less benign and did not hesitate to pursue a debatable point with vigour but again with good humour. In 1977 he was appointed Honorary Reader in Neurology at Queen's University. He was elected President of the Association of British Neurologists from 1979–1980. Harold Millar was a modest man who did not tolerate pretension. He had a warm outgoing personality with a great sense of humour. He was gregarious, a generous host, a fisherman and a former captain of the Royal Belfast Golf Club at Craigavad. When he retired from the National Health Service in 1982 he kept up his active interest in research on MS and although his health was deteriorating continued to live life to the full at his farm in the County Down countryside. At all times he was supported by his wife Sheila, his constant companion and together they continued visiting MS patients in their homes as well as holding annual tea parties, fund raising, barbecues and barn dances (fig 11). Of all his many clinical attachments he was particularly fond of his work at Claremont Street Hospital, in a warm friendly and efficient atmosphere with small band of dedicated nurses. He was very upset when Claremont Street Hospital was closed a short time after his retirement. Claremont Street was based on a row of Victorian terrace houses. It became increasingly difficult to provide modern medical and nursing care. It was under threat of closure for ten years. The highly skilled band of nurses helped to postpone the inevitable through their dedication. Sydney Allison in his diaries wrote in the 1960's that it was difficult at times to practice modern medicine there. DR LOUIS HURWITZ Lewis John Hurwitz (fig 12) was born on 9th February 1926. In later life he always signed his name and was known to most of his friends as Louis. The youngest child of Barney Hurwitz, for many years president of the Jewish community in Belfast, he went to school at Belfast Royal Academy where he showed academic and athletic promise. He won the Girdwood Cup (for a best all-round performance in track events) on two occasions. He entered Queen's University medical school graduating in 1949. His first appointment was House Physician to the newly formed Department of Neurology at the Royal Victoria Hospital under Dr Sydney Allison. He showed a remarkable aptitude for the careful clinical assessment of neurological cases. Sydney Allison encouraged this. He subsequently held a house physician post at Claremont Street Hospital and Killowen Hospitals. Later he held appointments in Liverpool and Bradford in general medicine. In 1951 he spent a year in the Department of Pathology of the Queen's University Belfast gaining a BSc in 1952 and an MD in 1953. In 1954 he became registrar in the Department of Neurology and passed the MRCP of Edinburgh in 1955. Having decided to make his career in neurology he went to London and spent two years as Resident House Physician at the National Hospital for Nervous Diseases, Queen Square. In 1957 he was awarded a scholarship to work on cerebral vascular disease at Bellevue Hospital, New York and became Assistant Director of the Neurological Services at Cornell University with John Foster Kennedy who was from Belfast and was a student at the Belfast Medical School. Returning to Queen Square in 1959 he spent a year as Senior Registrar in the outpatient department. In 1960 he won a Ciba Travelling Fellowship that took him to Paris where he worked with Professor Garcin at the Hôpital de la Salpêtriàre. He absorbed much of the clinical expertise of the French neurologists and took to his heart their style of clinical demonstrations in teaching. In 1961 he was appointed Lecturer at the Institute of Neurology in London. During this time he worked with Dr Purdon Martin on cases of post-encephalitic Parkinson's disease in the Highlands Hospital where 130 patients were resident. A publication in Brain resulted from this collaboration.17 The following year he returned to Belfast as Consultant Neurologist to the Royal Victoria Hospital, Claremont Street Hospital and Belfast City Hospital. Louis had infectious enthusiasm and boundless intellectual energy. This is exemplified by the work on subacute sclerosing panencephalitis. It was his conviction that measles was to blame. The young Ingrid Allen had confirmed the diagnosis in three cases of SSPE. He pursued the virologists. Fortuitously the techniques of immunofluorescence and immunohistochemistry had been recently introduced to Belfast. Measles antigen and antibody were discovered, resulting in one of the most cited papers ever.18 John Connolly talked with pride of a special note to that effect in Excerpta Medica in the 1980's. The contribution of Dame Ingrid Allen to Belfast neurosciences is legendary. The full account of her achievements is beyond this short paper. She was awarded the DBE as a result of her original research and her contributions to national and international committees. Louis Hurwitz was a member of the Association of British Neurologists, The Association of Physicians of Great Britain and Ireland and the Louis Rapkine Association. He was Honorary Secretary of the Ulster Neuro-Psychiatric Society from 1962–1971 and a founder member of the Irish Neurological Association. He served on the council of the section of neurology of the Royal Society of Medicine of London and the Royal Academy of Medicine in Ireland. During the last two years of his life he experienced a series of heart attacks. He was encouraged to curtail his clinical activities, but his research work continued with unabated enthusiasm. He held several grants from the Medical Research Council, for work on diabetic neuropathy, amino-aciduria in relation to myopathy and to establish a register of muscular dystrophy in Northern Ireland. He was an inspirational enthusiastic teacher. The students elected him President of the Belfast Medical Students' Association (1965–1966). His contributions to neurology in Belfast and his keen interest in teaching, particularly of undergraduates, were rewarded by an appointment as Honorary Lecturer at Queen's University shortly before his death in 1971. His wife, Natalie was also medically qualified. They had two sons and a daughter. Following his death Dr Natalie Hurwitz returned to England to work in Leeds in the student health service. After his death, Michael Swallow published a volume of selected papers with a complete bibliography.19 He died when I was a medical student in my final year. In those days clinical demonstrations in neurology and neurosurgery for students were conducted on Thursday afternoons, Friday afternoons at 5pm in Claremont Street and on Saturday mornings in the Royal. These classes were attended by an enthusiastic band of students even on Saturdays. Students from the country would postpone trips home so as not to miss the classes. Dr Michael Swallow was appointed to succeed Sydney Allison in 1964. A graduate of the University of London and the Westminster Hospital he had been inspired to adopt a career in clinical neurology by Dr Swithin Meadows, a consultant neurologist with an interest in neuro-ophthalmology. While he was a house physician to MacDonald Critchley, Dr Sydney Allison was at Queen Square on sabbatical. Michael was impressed. Louis Hurwitz was also at Queen Square at the time. Friendships were formed, so when the post in Belfast became available, he applied. Michael Swallow graced the department until his retirement in 1988. A gifted teacher of undergraduate and postgraduate students, he developed interests in neuro-ophthalmology, rehabilitation, Parkinson's disease, and muscle disease. His clinical practice included the Royal, Claremont Street, Belfast City Hospital, and units for chronically disabled in Musgrave Park and Thompson House in Lisburn. He also travelled to Altnagelvin and Coleraine hospitals to conduct regular outreach clinics. A facet of neurology that particularly interested him was the assessment and management of disabled children and adults with multiple handicaps. As a boy, Michael was a chorister in the choir school of Westminster Abbey. At the start of the Second World War, the choir school was evacuated to Christ's Hospital School at Horsham. After two years when it was obvious the war was going to be prolonged, the choir was temporarily disbanded. Michael applied for a place in the choir school in Magdalen College School, Oxford. At the end of his schooling, Michael was torn between a career in music and a career in medicine. He became a medical student, but has had a passion for music all his life. In Belfast, he has enjoyed leading amateur musical productions in a wide range of styles from oratorio to jazz. The choirmaster of the Royal Victoria Hospital Choir for many years, he has also been associated with the St George's Singers and the Ulster Orchestra. He has enriched the cultural life of Belfast in very many respects, serving on the Arts and the Environment Committee in the Royal and the Northern Ireland Arts Council. An interest in music therapy has enabled him to combine neurology, rehabilitation and music. Dr John (Jo) Lyttle (fig 13) was appointed to succeed Dr Louis Hurwitz after his premature death. A son of the manse, he was brought up in rural setting in Ballyroney, Co Down, and was educated at Campbell College and Queen's University. Having obtained an MD in cardiology, Jo switched to neurology. Then he spent some time in Queen Square before returning to Belfast, where he developed a large practice. Jo developed an interest in cerebral vascular disease, and participated in international therapeutic trials of transient ischaemic attacks and stroke. He retired in 1996, and was replaced by two neurologists, Dr Tom Esmonde and Dr Michael Watt. I joined neurology in 1974 as a registrar. Mrs Ruth Baker, a daughter of Sydney Allison, published a contemporaneous account of Claremount Street Hospital in that year.20 Claremont Street was closed in early 1986, and at the same time the inpatient beds in Belfast City Hospital. Beds for acute inpatient neurological investigations were all aggregated in Quin House. Thus ended the first century of neurology in Belfast. It will be for someone else to write the next chapter.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Role: Honorary Archivist, Royal Victoria Hospital
                Journal
                Ulster Med J
                The Ulster Medical Journal
                The Ulster Medical Society
                0041-6193
                January 2006
                : 75
                : 1
                : 80-84
                Affiliations
                Office of Archives, Ground Floor, King Edward Building, Royal Victoria Hospital Grosvenor Road, Belfast BT12 6BA
                Author notes
                Article
                1891793
                16457409
                a1ed14dd-0210-4214-9025-7eb27863b3b0
                © The Ulster Medical Society, 2006
                History
                : 17 October 2005
                Categories
                Medical History

                Medicine
                Medicine

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