Canadian Society of Plastic Surgeons (CSPS)
- Address:
- 1469 St Joseph Blvd E 4
- Montreal
- Quebec
- H2J 1M6
- Canada
- Montreal
- Phone:
- +1-514-8435415
- Professions:
- Plastic Surgery
- Region of activity:
- National
- Canada
- Scope of membership:
- National
-
- Canada
Description
The first meeting of the Canadian Society of Plastic Surgeons was held at Queen Mary Veterans Hospital in Montreal on November 7, 1947.
Fulton Risdon, then aged 67, was elected the first president. Risdon was the father figure, the first in Canada to practice plastic surgery as a specialty. He joined Gillies and Kazanjian at the Queens Hospital, Sidcup, Kent (southeast of London) in 1916 and did facial reconstruction on Canadian, English, Australian and New Zealand soldiers, repairing the devastation caused by war. He returned to Toronto in 1919 to establish the specialty in Canada and was the only plastic surgeon in Canada until Stuart Gordon and Alfred Farmer returned from training in England in the 1930s. Surgery then broadened from facial reconstruction to hand, burn, cancer and birth defect surgery.
When war clouds darkened again in Europe and around the world, plastic surgeons were ready for the second time in a generation. Alfred Farmer directed the entire Canadian surgical war effort. Ross Tilley went to East Grinstead and Battle of Britain surgery, resurfacing faces, noses and hands and restoring hope to young men whose lives had changed forever. He worked in the newly built Canadian Wing donated by the Canadian government while civilian Archibald MacIndoe from New Zealand operated in the unit next door. They worked as a team with Tilley putting pressure on the military and MacIndoe on the politicians whenever they needed something.
At Basingstoke, Hoyle Campbell and Stuart Gordon did a great variety of plastic surgery, orthopedics and neurosurgery. Their work was filmed by anaesthetist Lloyd Hampson using a movie camera over the top of the table.
Wallace McNichol joined them at Basingstoke in 1944.
Fred Woolhouse was a medical officer in the Royal Canadian Navy during the war, with an interest in cold and burn injuries, and John Ord was in the Royal Canadian Air Force at the Christie Street Hospital and at St Thomas.
After the war the plastic surgeons in Canada were Jack Gerrie, Georges Cloutier, Fred Woolhouse and Hamilton Baxter in Montreal; John Ord, Stuart Gordon, AW Farmer, Ross Tilley, Lyman Barclay and Fulton Risdon in Toronto; and Wallace McNichol in Hamilton, Ontario.
Return to civilian life was not easy. The specialty had to be built again in an era when the general surgeon was dominant, despite the proven value of plastic reconstruction in both world wars. There was considerable pressure to practice generally but our founders did not. They believed that plastic surgery should stand on its own and began training programs while continuing to care for servicemen injured in the war.
Member benefits
Please contact our office for member benefits
