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Resource Name:
Resource Type:
External Resource
Metadata
Asset Name:
E005479 - Wardill, William Edward Mandall (1894 - 1960)
Title:
Wardill, William Edward Mandall (1894 - 1960)
Author:
Royal College of Surgeons of England
Identifier:
RCS: E005479
Publisher:
London : Royal College of Surgeons of England
Publication Date:
2014-06-16
Description:
Obituary for Wardill, William Edward Mandall (1894 - 1960), Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons of England.
Language:
English
Source:
Plarr's Lives of the Fellows
Full Name:
Wardill, William Edward Mandall
Date of Birth:
1894
Place of Birth:
Gateshead
Date of Death:
24 December 1960
Place of Death:
Newcastle on Tyne
Occupation:
Titles/Qualifications:
MRCS 13 November 1919

FRCS 10 June 1920

LRCP 1919

MB BS Durham 1918
Details:
Born in 1894 in Gateshead where his father was Mayor on several occasions, he was educated at Mill Hill School and then spent two years in training for a career in commerce before persuading his parents to allow him to study medicine which he commenced to do in 1913 at the old Newcastle medical school. In 1914, despite the inevitable disruption of his medical studies, he succeeded in serving first as a surgeon probationer RNVR, returning to qualify in 1918, serving again as a temporary surgeon RN, and after demobilisation being admitted to the Fellowship in 1920, a noteworthy achievement. On his return to Newcastle he was appointed surgical registrar at the Royal Victoria Infirmary and later to the consultant staff and assistant curator of the Medical School museum of which he made the first modern catalogue. In the Medical School he became associated with James Whillis, the ear nose and throat surgeon and a lecturer in anatomy, and together they worked on the pharyngeal musculature, which led to Wardill describing his operation of pharyngoplasty, his interest in the subject having been aroused while he was Grey Turner's house surgeon. In a Hunterian lecture in 1927 he showed that in patients with cleft palate the pharynx was abnormally wide and that the problem was how to narrow it. In his Hunterian lecture in 1932 he described further developments in his technique and suggested a classification of speech defects still used today. Much of this work was done at Tynemouth Infirmary and Newcastle Babies Hospital. In spite of his involvement in plastic surgery, he remained a general surgeon, and, following a visit to the Mayo Clinic in 1937 with T J Lane of Dublin, he started a department of urology, largely devoted to the Mayo Clinic technique of punch prostatectomy, at the Newcastle General Hospital, at that time a municipal hospital. In 1939 on the outbreak of war he started an EMS plastic and jaw unit at Shotley Bridge Hospital, but in 1948 he decided to have no part in the National Health Service and emigrated to South Africa, where he farmed in Cape Province for two years. However he never found in South Africa a satisfactory outlet for his energies and skills, and in 1952 shortly after returning to England he was appointed to the chair of surgery in Baghdad. Here he spent six happy years concentrating on teaching and relegating most of the operating to his colleagues, returning each summer to England to collect further teaching material and attempting to popularise A B Wallace's methods of the open treatment of burns. An excellent teacher, clinician and surgeon, he was continually on the lookout for new ideas and his range was widespread. He was a typical northerner, independent, blunt and resolute, but a little ahead of his time in his attitudes to the place of specialisation in surgery so that his talents were unhappily never given full scope and opportunity. He had, however, the saving grace of humour and a charm of manner which made him a delightful companion. In his leisure he was a keen field naturalist, a competent musician, an accomplished metal worker, and later an archaeologist. He retired from Baghdad in 1958 and, returning to England, died at his home in Newcastle on Tyne on 24 December 1960 aged 66. He was twice married: first to Mary Russell Campbell MB, who died in 1942 and by whom he had three sons and three daughters, and secondly to Wilhelmina who survived him.
Sources:
*The Times* 28 December 1960 p 12 d

*Lancet* 1961, 1, 58 with appreciations by J P and JAC, and p 119 by WHH

*Brit med J* 1961, 1, 135

*Brit J Plast Surg* 1961, 13, 373 by JP
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/E005400-E005499
Media Type:
Unknown