Greeves, Reginald Affleck (1878 - 1966)
by
 
Royal College of Surgeons of England

Asset Name
E005760 - Greeves, Reginald Affleck (1878 - 1966)

Title
Greeves, Reginald Affleck (1878 - 1966)

Author
Royal College of Surgeons of England

Identifier
RCS: E005760

Publisher
London : Royal College of Surgeons of England

Publication Date
2014-08-05

Subject
Medical Obituaries

Description
Obituary for Greeves, Reginald Affleck (1878 - 1966), Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons of England.

Language
English

Source
Plarr's Lives of the Fellows

Full Name
Greeves, Reginald Affleck

Date of Birth
23 August 1878

Place of Birth
Springtown, County Down

Date of Death
4 October 1966

Occupation
Curator
 
General practitioner
 
Ophthalmic surgeon
 
Pathologist

Titles/Qualifications
MRCS and FRCS 1906
 
BA Belfast 1900
 
MB London 1903
 
BS 1906
 
LRCP 1906

Details
Born at Springtown, Co Down, on 23 August 1878, youngest of the eleven children of Thomas M. Greeves whose family, at first Quakers and later Plymouth Brethren, had been settled in Northern Ireland since the mid-seventeenth century. Affleck Greeves was educated at Queen's University, Belfast, where he won an exhibition, and at University College Hospital and Guy's, graduating MB London in 1903 and BS with honours in 1906, when he also took the Conjoint Diploma in the summer and the Fellowship in December. For the next two years he was in general practice in the Transvaal, South Africa, where he married, in 1908, Sarah, daughter of Leonard Acutt of Natal. Returning to London he was appointed surgical tutor and registrar at Guy's, but decided to specialise in ophthalmology. After serving as pathologist and curator of the museum at the Royal London Ophthalmic Hospital (Moorfields), he was appointed assistant ophthalmic surgeon to the Middlesex Hospital in 1914 and to Moorfields in 1915. He became a consultant surgeon to both these hospitals, retiring from Moorfields at the sixty-year age limit in 1938, but from the Middlesex only in 1946. He had also been on the staff at Paddington Green Children's Hospital and at St Saviour's Hospital, had lectured on ophthalmology at Oxford, and was a Conjoint Board examiner for the DOMS. Though somewhat nervous and reserved, Greeves was a brilliant diagnostician, achieved excellent results as a surgeon, and proved a first-class teacher, particularly in clinical work with graduate students. He became an authority on lesions of the fundus, whose opinion was sought and valued by colleagues and former students long after his retirement. He published influential papers on ocular pathology and many case histories, particularly in the *Transactions of the Ophthalmological Society*, of which he was a member for fifty-five years, becoming President for 1941-42. He was Montgomery Lecturer at the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland in 1935. Greeves carried on a large private practice at 23 Wimpole Street long after giving up his hospital work, finally retiring in 1960 when he was eighty-two. His country home was at Crapstone, near Yelverton, in Devonshire. His wife had died in 1954, and he died on 4 October 1966 aged eighty-eight, survived by his daughter and two sons, the elder of whom was also an ophthalmic surgeon. Though brought up in a narrowly puritanical home, Greeves was a man of wide cultivation, a traveller and linguist, a pianist and trained musician, with a keen appreciation of painting and drawing. His students and patients became his lifelong friends.

Sources
*The Times* 6 October 1966 and 10th an appreciation by HR
 
*Lancet* 1966, 2, 956 by AJBG with portrait, and eulogy by VP
 
*Brit J Ophthalm* 1966, 50, 744

Rights
Copyright (c) The Royal College of Surgeons of England

Collection
Plarr's Lives of the Fellows

Format
Obituary

Format
Asset

Asset Path
Root/Lives of the Fellows/E005000-E005999/E005700-E005799

URL for File
377943

Media Type
Unknown