 |
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1872-1874 |
 |
Joseph Morley Drake (Institutes of Medicine – Physiology)
Joseph Morley Drake was born in London, England, in 1828. He
started his academic career studying chemistry at the London
Polytechnic Institute and was certified as an analytical chemist
at the age of seventeen. He arrived in Canada in 1845, and was
first employed as a druggist. Subsequently, he decided to enter
upon a study of medicine and graduated from McGill with highest
honours in 1861. Immediately upon graduation he was appointed
House Surgeon at the Montreal General Hospital (then located on
Dorchester Street – now boul. René Levesque), a position he held
for eight years. In 1868 he was appointed Professor of Clinical
Medicine at McGill, and in 1872 became Professor of the
Institutes of Medicine, occupying the Chair of Physiology (Note:
Following the Edinburgh tradition, the term “Institutes of
Medicine” denoted a medical course of instruction comprising
pathology, histology and physiology. This course title was, in
turn, derived from “Institutiones Medicae”, a famous work
authored in 1706 by the eminent Dutch physician Herman Boerhaave
of the influential Leyden school of medicine.) Drake resigned in
1874 due to ill health, and in 1875 was appointed Emeritus
Professor in the Faculty of Medicine. He died in Abbotsford near
Montreal on December 26, 1886. He was remembered, by both
colleagues and students, as “a mild mannered, very gentlemanly
man, of a very fair complexion, but not much force though he was
a man of good ability”.
In 1897, members of the Drake family
contributed $ 25,000 toward the endowment, in perpetuity, of the
“Joseph Morley Drake Chair of Physiology”. During the following
century, a number of eminent physiologists/Departmental Chairmen
have been named to this Chair. It is presently occupied by Dr.
Michael Mackey, Director of the Center for Nonlinear Dynamics in
Physiology and Medicine.
Sources:
1. Canadian Medical and Surgical Journal, Vol. 15 (1887)
2. The McGill News, Vol. 6, No. 2, 1925
|
|
1875-1884 |
 |
William Osler
(Institutes of Medicine – Physiology)
William Osler was born on July 12, 1849, in the small outlying
pioneer community of Bond Head north of the then small town of
Toronto. He was the eighth of nine children born to Featherstone
Land Osler, erstwhile naval officer, explorer and adventurer and
subsequently minister of the Church of England, and his wife
Ellen Free née Pickton (Interestingly, it has been reported that
Featherstone had at one time received an offer to serve as
naturalist on the Beagle before that position went to Darwin).
Osler received his early education at Dundas Grammar School, from
which he was eventually expelled – at the age of fifteen- for
shouting abuse at one of the Masters through a keyhole. In 1866
he proceeded to Trinity College School in Weston, from which he
graduated with distinction. While at Trinity, Osler was greatly
influenced by the Dean of the College School, one Reverend
William Johnson, who – apart from being a clergyman – was also
an accomplished microscopist and naturalist, and from whom the
young Osler derived his early interest in science and all things
biological.
In the fall of 1867 Osler transferred to Toronto University’s
Trinity College in order to study the classics and divinity,
with the intention of following the example of his father by
eventually entering the ministry. Early on, however, he made the
acquaintance of James Bovell who at the time was Professor at
the Toronto School of Medicine. Osler began to attend many of
Bovell’s lectures, and decided to become a physician. However,
since by 1870 the Toronto School of Medicine was mired in
controversy, and the Toronto General Hospital was forced to
temporarily close, Osler transferred that year to McGill and
graduated in 1872, having been awarded the degree of Doctor of
Medicine and Master of Surgery (MD, CM).
Having finished medical school, Osler was to obtain his
post-graduate education in Europe. He spent some fifteen months
at University College in London, England, and it was there that
he produced his major original scientific contribution to
medical literature by studying and describing the platelet as
the “third element of blood”. He subsequently proceeded to
Berlin to study with Rudolph Virchow, at the time the dean of
pathologists, who introduced Osler to clinical and cellular
pathology, and the scientific study of disease mechanisms at the
cellular level. The last leg of Osler’s post-graduate
peregrinations took him to Vienna where he was introduced to the
novel concept of clinical specialization.
In 1874 Osler returned to Canada and briefly set up medical
practice in Dundas and Hamilton. Later that year, he was offered
by Dean Palmer-Howard of McGill Medical school “the office of
Lecturer upon the Institutes of Medicine” (a course comprising
pathology, histology and physiology), to replace the ailing Dr.
Drake (see above). Osler readily accepted the offer, moved to
Montreal, and by 1875 was appointed to Drake’s vacant Chair as
Professor of Institutes of Medicine and Physiology. (Drake
eventually died of heart disease, and it is amusing to note that
much later in 1908, when shown Drake’s preserved heart in
McGill’s Pathological Museum, Osler is reported to have remarked
that “if that heart had not petered out when it did, in all
probability I would not be where I am now”.) By 1876 Osler
became the first Pathologist at the Montreal General Hospital,
and also took a position as Attendant in the small-pox ward,
where he contracted a mild form of the disease (from which he
soon recovered).
During his tenure at McGill, Osler reorganized and reinvigorated
the teaching of Medicine and Physiology by, on the one hand,
emphasizing the importance of bed-side observations on human
patients and relating specific clinical symptoms to particular
disease entities; and, on the other hand, by complementing- and
frequently substituting – the descriptive anatomy/histology
based approach to the study of organs and tissues with live
demonstrations and “hands-on” laboratory experiments involving
student participation, all designed to illustrate the real-time
dynamic nature of particular physiological systems. The novel
state-of the-art equipment for the student labs was acquired
largely from Germany and France, and in part paid for out of his
own pocket.
By 1884, Osler tried – but failed – to obtain a professorship of
Clinical Medicine at McGill, and in the fall of the same year
accepted the Chair of Clinical Medicine at the University of
Pennsylvania in
Philadelphia. In 1889 he moved to Baltimore to the newly
established Johns Hopkins School of Medicine where he became
Professor and Chairman of the Department of Medicine and
Physician-in-Chief at the University Hospital. While at Johns
Hopkins, Osler wrote “The Principles and Practice of Medicine”,
a widely used textbook that was first published in 1892 and went
through 16 editions until 1947. Also in 1892, he married Grace
Linzee Revere Gross, the great-granddaughter of Paul Revere and
widow of a Philadelphia surgeon. They had a son, Revere, who in
1917 was killed in action in France.
In 1898 Osler was elected Fellow of the Royal Society of London
(FRS). He became Regius Professor of Physiology at Oxford in
1905, and was made baronet by King George V in 1911. He died on
December 29, 1919.
During his entire life, William Osler was an avid student of the
history and evolution of medicine, and he sought out and
collected numerous volumes of classical medical literature.
Toward the end of his life he bequeathed his entire collection
of some 8000 books and manuscripts to McGill University. This
collection became the nucleus of McGill’s Osler Library which
was officially opened on May 29, 1929, and was originally housed
in the Strathcona Medical Building. It is currently located –
with a vastly enlarged collection – on the third floor of the
McIntyre Medical Building. (For more details about Osler’s life,
interests and the Osler Library, see: Lyons, Christopher and
David S. Crawford, Whatever Happened to William Osler’s Library?
JCHLA (Winter 2006): 9-13, available on-line at:
www.mcgill.ca/osler-library/about/introduction)
Sources:
1. Bliss, M., William Osler, A Life in Medicine, U. of
Toronto Press, 1999.
2. Cushing, H., The Life of Sir William Osler, Oxford U.
Press, 1940.
3. Hanaway, J. and Cruess, R., McGill Medicine, Vol. 1,
McGill- Queen’s U. Press, 1996. |
|
1886-1910 |
 |
Thomas Wesley Mills
(1st
Joseph-Morley-Drake Professor – 1897 see above)
T.W. Mills was the longest serving Physiology chairman in the
history of the Department. He was born in Brockville, Ontario,
on February 22, 1847. After having received his early education
in his native town, he entered the University of Toronto where
he attended lectures in both arts and medicine, and it was in
that environment that he met and befriended his future colleague
and benefactor William Osler (see above). After obtaining his
B.A. in 1871 – to be followed by a M.A. a year later – Mills
entered McGill in 1876 to complete his medical education, and he
graduated M.D., C.M. in 1878. This was followed by a period of
studies abroad, first at University College in London, England,
and then on the Continent. Upon returning to Canada in 1881, he
joined Osler as demonstrator in the recently established and
newly equipped physiology laboratory where students taking the
“practical” physiology course were allowed hands-on use (an
innovation introduced by Osler) of novel state-of-the-art
equipment. It is worth noting that this development – in which
Mills was an active participant - initiated the official split
at McGill between Physiology as a functional science, and
Histology as an anatomical one. Upon Osler’s departure to
Philadelphia (see above), Mills was initially appointed lecturer
in 1884, and two years later Professor of Physiology and
Chairman of the Department, succeeding Osler in that capacity.
He furthermore became the first physiologist to occupy the
Joseph Morley Drake Chair (endowed in 1897, see above). During
his tenure at McGill, Mills’ work covered a broad range of
topics. His publications included papers on heart function in
cold-blooded animals, the chemistry of oxalic acid, voice
physiology, and the physiology of the brain cortex. During one
stage of his career he became interested in comparative
physiology, in particular certain issues concerning animal
intelligence. He studied dogs in various stages of health and
disease, and within this context published seminal works
including “A Textbook of Animal Physiology”, “A Textbook of
Comparative Physiology”, and “On the Nature of Development of
Animal Intelligence”. It is worth noting that Mills’ appointment
to the Physiology Chair coincided with a substantial expansion
of the original medical building, providing more space for
Physiology, and - with further enlargements in 1895 - greatly
increasing Physiology lab quarters and adding space for a small
demonstration theatre. Thus, by the early 1900’s, the Department
under Mills had grown to consist of an assistant professor, two
lecturers, and one demonstrator, with a broadened curriculum
including Physiological Chemistry and courses for dental
students. Furthermore, the old “Institutes of Medicine” course,
which up to Osler’s time had been a key component of the
curriculum, was abandoned and replaced by separate courses for
each of its three erstwhile sections, i.e. Pathology, Histology
and Physiology. In his personal life, Mills was passionately devoted
to music and was reported to have been an accomplished violin
player (he left his violin to the McGill Conservatory of Music
“for the use of a poor student”). His musical interests, in
turn, led him to a study of laryngology and the physiology of
singing, and in 1906 he published an important work on “Voice
Production in Singing and Speaking”. In later life he devoted
much of his time to the study of various aspects of musical
education, and he was a well-respected contributor and critic to
various musical journals. Nevertheless, in many respects Mills’
was a tragic life: Despite the fact that he was a man of keen
intelligence who (as Osler noted in his obituary) “worked hard
for the university and built up an excellent department of
physiology”, he nevertheless was an earnest and humorless person
who remained aloof and unfriendly toward his colleagues and
staff. He had few teaching and human skills, was unpopular with
students, and - according to Osler - was a man with a “curious
lack of capacity for happiness”. Interestingly, Mills himself
once confided to Osler that “I have not fared too well at the
hands of men during my life”. By 1910 health concerns forced him
to resign from the Physiology Chairmanship. The same year he
went to reside in England where – during a prolonged period of
progressive illness – he penned an autobiographical article
which traced his medical history during one year. He died of a
myocardial infarction on February 13, 1915.
Sources:
1.
CMAJ, Vol. 5, No. 3, March 1915
2.
CMAJ, Vol. 5, No. 4, April 1915
3. Hanaway, J. and Cruess, R., McGill Medicine, Vol. 1,
McGill-Queen’s U. Press, 1996.
4.
F.C. MacIntosh, Physiology at McGill: Notes for a History, 1983 |
|
1910-1911 |

|
D.P. Penhallow
(Professor of Botany and Physiology) |
|
1911-1913 |
 |
Nathaniel H.
Alcock
(Joseph-Morley-Drake Professor)
Nathaniel H. Alcock occupied the Joseph-Morley-Drake Chair of
Physiology at McGill for barely two years, yet his influence on
the Department – and on physiological science in general – was
exceptional. As William Osler wrote in his 1913 obituary “…The
death of Dr. Alcock is a great loss to the Faculty of Medicine
at McGill University. During the short time of his occupation of
the Chair his work was chiefly in connexion with the
organization of his department…The energy and enthusiasm he
displayed, though suffering for nearly three years from
medullary leukaemia, were remarkable… He had made an extensive
study of his own case, and I do not remember ever to have seen
blood charts in the disease so extensive and so elaborate.
Against an implacable enemy, he put up a splendid fight, and
literally died in harness”. N.H. Alcock was born in 1871 in
Ireland. He was educated at Dublin University where he graduated
B.A. (gold medalist in natural science) in 1893, and M.D. in
1896. After serving as demonstrator of anatomy at Victoria
University in Manchester, and subsequently as assistant to the
King’s Professor of the Institutes of Medicine at Trinity
College in Dublin, he was appointed demonstrator of physiology
in London University, and in 1904 lecturer in physiology at St.
Mary’s Hospital Medical School at Paddington. In 1906 he became
Vice-Dean of the Medical School, and his administrative reforms
– especially in restoring the School’s financial viability –
became models that were subsequently adopted by several other
institutions. In 1909 he was granted the degree of D.Sc. of
London University for his research work, in the main concerned
with the influence of anaesthetics on the nervous system; and in
1911 he was chosen to succeed Wesley Mills to the Chair of
Physiology at McGill University, a post he held till his death
in 1913. Alcock’s contributions to the scientific literature
were numerous and varied, and included – amongst his early works
– a monograph on Irish Bats which contained many unique
photographs which at the time were widely reproduced in works of
British natural history; and a paper co-authored with Otto Loewi
(of “Vagusstoff” fame) on kidney function. The main body of his
scientific publications were, however, concerned with the
physical, electrical and chemical properties of nerves
(especially the Vagus), and the effects of anaesthetics on the
nervous system. Within the latter context, he designed and built
“a new apparatus for chloroform anaesthesia”, which allowed
precise calibration and control of the anaesthetic dosage
delivered to a patient. His “Textbook of Experimental Physiology
for Students of Medicine” (published in 1909 in conjunction with
E.H. Starling) became a classic in the field, while the
thoroughness, accuracy and lucidity of presentation of his
scientific work earned him the respect and admiration of his
peers, who sometimes compared him to the inimitable Helmholtz.
As a lecturer, Alcock inaugurated a new era in the Faculty’s
teaching program. He was able to establish close rapport with
both beginners and advanced students, and in the Old McGill
obituary of 1915 he was reported as having “discouraged
note-taking altogether, and by encouraging the reading of
textbooks, (he) tried to give students a broader outlook on the
field of Physiology…” (plus ça change…!). In his private life,
Alcock was a keen amateur astronomer who constructed his own
telescopes, and – in his younger days - he was a dedicated and
indefatigable sportsman and mountain climber. He died, aged
forty-two, at his home in Montreal on June 12, 1913.
Sources:
1.
The British Medical Journal, Vol.21 (1913), 1353.
2.
C.M.A.J., Vol. 3, No. 7, July 1913, 625.
3.
OldMcGill, 1915, p. 96
4.
F.C.MacIntosh, Physiology at McGill: Notes for a History, 1983. |
1914
(3 months) |
 |
George
Mines
(Joseph-Morley-Drake Professor)
George Ralph Mines was born in 1886 in England, and was educated
at Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge, where he was later elected
to a Fellowship in 1909. Mines taught at Newnham College,
Cambridge, and conducted his research at the Physiological
Laboratory in Cambridge (where he was appointed Assistant
Demonstrator) as well as at other locations in England, France,
and Italy. He was elected a member of the Physiological Society
in 1910 at the unusually young age of 24. By 1914, Mines was at
the University of Toronto, and later that same year was
appointed Professor and Chair of the Department of Physiology at
McGill. A few months following his appointment, on the evening
of Saturday November 7, 1914, he was found unconscious in his
lab, connected up to some physiologic equipment, dying later
that same night at the Royal Victoria Hospital. There has been
much speculation as to the cause of his death (see, e.g.,
Acierno & Worrell, 2001).
Mines is best known today for his work
on cardiac arrhythmias. In particular he conducted seminal work
on circus-movement reentry, which has been cited many hundreds
of times in the literature. Mines also discovered the
vulnerability period, a very specific period of time within the
cardiac cycle during which an electrical stimulus can throw the
heart into fibrillation. There has been recently a resurgence of
interest in a cardiac arrhythmia called alternans on which Mines
had carried out pioneering experimental work.
Mines was an
accomplished pianist who had seriously considered a career as a
musician. This musical talent was passed to at least one of his
three children, his daughter Anatole, who was born after his
death, and who became a professional violist.
Sources:
1.
G.R. Mines (1913).
"On dynamic equilibrium in the heart." J. Physiol. (Lond.)
46:349–83.
2.
G.R. Mines (1914). "On circulating excitations in
heart muscle and their possible relation to tachycardia and
fibrillation." Trans. Roy. Soc. Can. 8:43–52.
3.
R.A. DeSilva
(1997). "George Ralph Mines, ventricular fibrillation and the
discovery of the vulnerable period." J. Am. Coll. Cardiol.
29:1397–1402.
4.
L. J. Acierno, L. T. Worrell (2001). "George Ralph
Mines: victim of self-experimentation?" Clin. Cardiol. 24,
571–572.
5.
B. Lüderitz (2005). "George Ralph Mines (1886–1914)."
J. Intervent. Card. Electrophysiol. 12, 163–164. |
|
1915-1918 |
|
No
Chairman |
|
1919-1940 |
 |
John
Tait
(Joseph-Morley-Drake Professor)
The four year leaderless interregnum ended in 1919 with the
appointment of 41 year old John Tait as Joseph Morley Drake
Professor and Chairman of the McGill Physiology Department. A
native of the Orkney Islands, Tait was the 1906 gold medalist in
medicine at Edinburgh where he earned his M.D. degree, and where
a year later he obtained the prestigious degree of Doctor of
Science. Following a period of post-graduate studies at the
famous German research centers of Goettingen and Berlin, he
returned in 1910 to Edinburgh as lecturer in experimental
physiology. During the war of 1914-18 he saw service with the
Royal Army Medical Corps (R.A.M.C.) in Macedonia and Italy, and
was chosen to investigate front-line problems of surgical shock.
After arriving at McGill, Tait’s first task was to assist with
the planning of the new Biology Building (now the F.Cyril James
Building) which was to be attached to the surviving wing of the
old previously torched Medical Building. It was officially
opened in 1922 - with the inaugural address given by Sir Charles
Sherrington – and the Physiology Department was assigned
extensive new quarters on the fourth floor. In this new
environment, Taits initial main research interests included
mechanisms of blood coagulation with special emphasis on the
haemostatic function and turnover of blood platelets, blood flow
and particle sequestration in the spleen, and the spleen’s
innervation. However, his most productive collaboration – and
one which brought him international recognition – was with the
young otolaryngologist William James McNally. Their papers on
the frog’s vestibular apparatus and its influence on posture
became classics in the field, and in many ways foreshadowed
similar initiatives started some forty years later in
Physiology’s Aviation (now Aerospace) Medical Research Unit. By
the late 1920’s, forty-five papers by some twenty different
workers had been published from the new department, with ten
M.Sc. degrees and about half a dozen Ph.D. degrees granted
during that same period. In 1928, the Department’s research
activities were further expanded by the arrival of Boris Babkin
who – somewhat to Tait’s chagrin – was appointed Research
Professor of Physiology, and who surrounded himself with a
lively and highly productive group of collaborators (see below).
Departmental teaching activities were also greatly expanded: In
addition to first and second year courses – largely concerned
with the physiology of cold-blooded animals – a third year
mammalian physiology course was introduced using Sherrington’s
textbook “Mammalian Physiology”. In addition, hospital clinics
offering clinical/physiological correlations became part of the
new curriculum. Tait’s internationally acclaimed work brought
him many honors: He was named Fellow of the Royal Society of
Edinburgh, which awarded him the Neill gold medal in Natural
History; and Fellow of the Royal Colleges of Surgeons of
Edinburgh and London. In addition, he gained the distinction of
being made a life member of the British Association for the
Advancement of Science - an honor accorded to very few. He also
was made a member of the International Collegium, a world wide
body for the promotion of scientific learning and advancement.
Unfortunately, in 1938 Tait suffered a serious heart attack,
which in 1940 forced his early retirement from the Chairmanship.
He was named Emeritus Professor of Physiology in 1943, and went
back to Scotland for a brief period before permanently retiring
to his home in Montreal. He died there on October 21, 1944.
Sources:
1.
CMAJ, Vol. 51, No. 6, Dec. 1944
2.
McGill News, Vol. 26, No2, Winter 1944
3.
Hanaway/Cruess/Darragh, McGill Medicine, Vol. 2, McGill-Queen’s
U. Press, 2006.
4.
F.C. MacIntosh, Physiology at McGill: Notes for a History, 1983. |
|
1940-1942 |
 |
Boris
Babkin
Boris
Petrovitch Babkin was born in Russia in1877, and early in life
contemplated a career in music. However, he eventually decided
on a medical career, and received his M.D. from the
Military-Medical Academy in St. Petersburg in 1904. It was there
that he met the pioneering physiologist Ivan Pavlov who
convinced him to become an experimental physiologist, and he
worked for a number of years as Pavlov’s assistant in the
latter’s St. Petersburg lab. From 1912 until 1922, Babkin taught
physiology and held Chairs at various Russian Institutes
(including Novo-Alexandria and Odessa), but in 1922 political
considerations forced him into exile first in London, England,
and subsequently in Canada. After a short period as professor of
Physiology at Dalhousie University, he was recruited in 1928 by
McGill as Research Professor of Physiology. His appointment at
McGill was “somewhat roughly” imposed on the then Professor and
Chairman of Physiology John Tait (see above). The relation
between the two men was reported as having remained “polite but
cool”, since Tait had to surrender part of his space to Babkin,
while having no control over the latter’s research budget.
Babkin at the time was already a widely known and respected
authority on the physiology of the digestive glands and their
autonomic innervation, and he soon became surrounded at McGill
by an enthusiastic group of graduate students, associates and
visitors. One of these graduate students was Simon A. Komarov, a
trained biochemist and political exile from Riga, who in 1936
under Babkin’s supervision isolated and characterized the then
still hypothetical hormone “gastrin” – a significant milestone
in gastric physiology and endocrinology. Another graduate
student in this group was F.C. MacIntosh (see below) who in 1937
earned his Ph.D. in Physiology with Babkin. In addition to
focusing on digestive gland physiology, Babkin’s research by
1932 began to branch out into entirely new areas. On the one
hand, he co-authored a number of papers on “humoral”
transmission in the secretory innervation of the salivary gland,
and thus became one of the first investigators to supply firm
evidence for chemical transmission in mammals; and on the other
hand he embarked, with the help of a visitor from the Soviet
Union by the name of L.A. Andreyev, on a systematic experimental
study of auditory conditioned reflexes. Babkin himself succeeded
John Tait as Professor and Chairman of Physiology at McGill in
1940, but soon after had to retire from the Chair on reaching
the age limit. Nevertheless, he remained in the Department as
Professor (Post-Retirement) for several years, and subsequently
relocated to a small lab at the Montreal Neurological Institute
(MNI). During that period, he wrote a major monograph on “The
Secretory Mechanisms of the Digestive Glands”, completed an
authoritative biography of Pavlov, and spent some of his
extra-curricular time attending to Montreal’s White Russian
exile community. He died in 1950 at the age of 73.
Sources:
1. A Guide to Archival Resources at McGill (M.G.2024)
2. F.C. MacIntosh, Physiology at McGill: Notes for a History,
1983.
3. F.C .MacIntosh, The McGill Department of Physiology,
1950-1970 (Informal Notes for S.B. Frost).
4. The McGill News, Vol. 12, No. 2, March 1931
5. Departmental Correspondence |
|
1943-1948 |
 |
Hebbel
E. Hoff
(Joseph-Morley-Drake Professor)
Hebbel Edward Hoff was born on December 2, 1907 in Urbana,
Illinois. He received his Bachelor of Science degree from the
University of Washington in 1928, his B.A. (Rhodes Scholar),
M.A. and D. Phil. Degrees from Oxford University in the early
1930s, and his M.D. degree from Harvard in 1936. Hoff was a true
renaissance man whose fifty year long career spanned a wide
range of interests. His very first paper published in 1929 with
his brother E.C. Hoff described a new type of parasitic tapeworm
found in the stickleback. This was followed during 1931-34 by
investigations, in collaboration with J.C. Eccles, aimed at
elucidating some of the rhythmic properties of both spinal
motoneurons and cardiac muscle; and while at Yale University
during the late 1930s, he published a number of influential
papers (with L.H. Nahum) concerning some of the
electrophysiological properties of the heart and their relation
to specific phases of the electrocardiogram. Furthermore, his
research into the organization of the respiratory system, and
the identification of putative respiratory centers in the
medulla, did much to further the understanding of respiratory
control in mammals. Later in his career Hoff devoted much time
to the study of the history of physiology, and to aspects of
physiological principles as related to bioengineering. He
revived and demonstrated some
important classical experiments from the past, such as those of
Stephen Hales on blood pressure, Sherrington on the actions of
decorticate-decerebrate animals, and Chauveau-Marey on cardiac
catheterization. In 1943 Hoff was appointed Joseph Morley Drake
Professor and Chairman of Physiology at McGill. He immediately
started – with considerable success – to build up an active
research program, despite a (war-related) shortage of funds, a
heavy teaching load, and a critical shortage of staff. To deal
with the latter problems – which were aggravated initially by a
large influx of science students, and later in his term by the
influx of WW II veterans – he managed to recruit new staff
including Kathleen Terroux, then an assistant professor of
Zoology, who was placed in charge of the introductory B.Sc.
class with its hundreds of students, and whose connection with
the Physiology Department was to remain unbroken for forty
years. Hoff’s own research during his McGill years was largely
concerned with specific aspects of normal and abnormal
electrical activity of the heart as revealed by the EKG; the
influence of hormones (especially thyroxine), changes in
temperature, and changes in pH on cardiac function; and the
development of ventricular catheterization as a viable clinical
method for determining cardiac output in children with
congenital heart abnormalities. Within the latter context, he
began fruitful collaborations with a
number of research-minded clinicians, including Arnold L.
Johnson, a cardiologist and clinical investigator at the
Montreal Childrens Hospital; and with refugee engineer Paul
Sekelj, who pioneered the development of complex instrumentation
(including the first clinically useful whole-blood oxymeter)
designed for on-line monitoring of vital functions and cardinal
signs during open heart surgery (Sekelj later became the first
director of the Montreal Childrens Hospital Department of
Biophysics, and maintained his connection with the McGill
Physiology Department until his untimely death in 1982). Hoff
himself also contributed significantly to the (WW II) war effort
by providing training courses to members of the medical services
of the armed forces; and by helping to elucidate – under the
auspices of the Associate Committee on Army Medical Research –
some of the physiological aspects of what was then referred to
as the “Effort Syndrome”, i.e. a condition identified as
potentially leading to psycho-physiological breakdown in
soldiers exposed to elevated physical and/or mental stress. In
addition, Hoff contributed substantially to curriculum renewal.
He was highly critical of McGill’s medical education, voicing
strong objections to the largely fact-based and compartmentalized
method of teaching prevalent at the time. He noted the sparse
use students were making of the library, and was reported to
have observed that “students are suspicious of any interesting
lecture if they cannot record it in some tabular form” (plus ça
change…). He was adamant that medical education should be
conceived as a preparation for lifelong training and learning,
rather than as a method for the temporary acquisition of a host
of isolated facts. He therefore proposed – and partly achieved –
a wide ranging reform of the curriculum, including a reduction
in the time spent in class with concomitant increase in
available free time; simplified examination procedures; closer
correlation between Physiology, Anatomy and Biochemistry
offerings; introduction of live demonstrations on the clinical
applications of physiological and biochemical principles;
lectures and clinical demonstrations on the history of medicine
and therapeutics; and special courses for Dental students. Last
but not least, having been appointed Director of animal
facilities, Hoff re-organized and streamlined the acquisition
and care of animals for experimental use, and in this capacity
he had a decisive hand in successfully combating the then
nascent anti-vivisectionist movement. In 1948 Hoff left McGill
(accompanied by a number of the Department’s academic and
technical staff) to become Benjamin F. Hambleton Professor and
Chairman of Physiology at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston,
Texas, and subsequently in 1974 Dean of Faculty Affairs. He
retired in 1977, but remained Professor in Residence at Baylor
College until his death in 1987.
Sources: Biographical material and portrait: Courtesy of the
John P. McGovern Historical Collections and Research Center,
Houston Academy of Medicine, Texas Medical Center Library,
Houston, Texas. F.C. MacIntosh, Physiology at McGill: Notes for
a History, 1983. |
|
1949-1965 |
 |
Frank Campbell MacIntosh
(Joseph-Morley-Drake Professor)
‘Hank’ MacIntosh was born in Baddeck, Cape Breton Island (NS),
on December 24, 1909. He completed his studies for both BA
(1930) and MA (1932) at Dalhousie University; and then, in 1933,
he joined the laboratory of Boris P. Babkin (see above) at the
Department of Physiology of McGill University. After receiving
his McGill Ph.D. in 1937, he obtained a Royal Society of Canada
travelling fellowship and went to London to work under Sir Henry
Dale at the National Institute of Medical Research. He was
appointed to the Institute staff in 1938 and remained there
until 1949, when he returned to Canada to become Joseph Morley
Drake Professor and Head of the Department of Physiology. Under
his leadership, the somewhat moribund department gained a new
lease on life, growing rapidly in staff, teaching and research,
and quality of labs, the growth of space culminating with the
move in 1965 from the old Biology Building on the main campus to
the brand new McIntyre Centre on the lower slopes of Mt.Royal
(in the planning and design of which he played an important
part). He broadened the scope of departmental activities by
providing new courses for increasing numbers of students in the
Faculty of Science and in McGill’s new degree programs in
Nursing, Physical and Occupational Therapy, and Physical
Education. More advanced teaching was strengthened by the
introduction of new Honours Programs and joint teaching programs
with Immunology, Physics and Psychology. A good judge of
individual promise, MacIntosh brought from Britain some
outstanding scientists, notably A. Burgen and G. Melvill Jones;
and he encouraged the endeavours of more applied and
clinically-oriented researchers such as T.M.S Chang, P. Gold and
M. Levy, ultimately leading to the founding of strong and
productive centers focused on Artificial Cells and Cancer.
Together with some earlier formed, closely related groups
(Anaesthesia Research, Aviation Medicine, Biomedical
Engineering, and the hospital-based Research Institutes), the
Physiology department thus became a strong nexus for the
production and transfer of information between basic and medical
areas – which made McGill internationally pre-eminent in this
regard. Hank’s own research activities covered a number of
areas. His early work centered on humoral and hormonal
mechanisms controlling the activity of digestive glands,
resulting in important observations regarding the physiological
action of histamine - the latter work contributing significantly
to the subsequent development of histamine receptor (H2)
blocking agents now widely used in the therapeutic control of
gastric acid secretion. During and immediately after WW II he
participated in war-related work concerned with problems of
diving and respiratory exchange under adverse conditions,
especially as related to oxygen poisoning, and the narcotic
properties of CO2 under elevated pressure in flooded submarine
compartments. He was an official observer at the 1946 atomic
bomb trials at Bikini Atoll. Through his life-long pursuit of
research on acetylcholine synthesis, storage and release as
synaptic transmitter, he became widely recognized as the world
expert on acetylcholine metabolism and secretion. In this
context, he perfected the technique of perfusion of the superior
cervical ganglion of the cat and bioassay of acetylcholine.
Other research efforts in the Department at the time included
work on the electrophysiology of the cerebral cortex, cellular
secretory mechanisms, tissue transplantation, erythrocyte
development, and oxymetry – activities which increasingly
attracted international attention. Under Hank’s leadership, the
Department was much involved in the planning and organization of
the XIX International Physiological Congress in 1953 which
brought some 3000 physiologists to Montreal, and was the first
major scientific congress to be held in Canada. For all this,
and many other achievements, he was awarded Fellowships of both
the Royal Society (London) and the Royal Society of Canada, as
well as several Honorary Degrees from Canadian Universities. He was for several years a member of the Science Council of
Canada, and he was chosen to deliver the 3rd Sarrazin lecture at
the 1979 CPS winter meeting at Orford, Quebec. In conclusion , it should be noted that social cohesion
of the department was much enhanced by annual oyster parties in
Hank’s home in Montreal West; as well as Hank’s enthusiastic
promotion and personal participation in the interdepartmental
curling competition at the CPS annual winter meetings. He
retired in 1978, but stayed on as Professor Emeritus until 1989.
He died on September 11, 1993.
Source:
Biographical Memoirs of the Fellows of the Royal Society, Vol.
40 (1994), 255.
Third Sarrazin Lecture, Physiology Canada, Vol. 10 (2),
April 1979, 62-75. |
|
1965-1966 |
 |
B.
Delisle Burns
Benedict Delisle Burns, born in London in 1915, attended
Cambridge University and graduated in 1939 from the University
College Hospital medical school. His forbears were land-owners
in the island of St. Kitts, and the family produced a number of
interesting men, including Ben Burns’ father – a catholic priest
who lost his faith, married and became a distinguished
historian; an uncle in the British colonial service who was
knighted for his achievements; and another uncle who was the
long-time Secretary of the British Communist Party. As a
scientist, Ben Burns was imaginative and somewhat
unconventional. After World War II operational research in North
Africa, he joined Sir Lindor Brown’s group at the
National Institute for Medical Research in London,
where he participated in research on neuromuscular transmission
and in the process familiarized himself with a range of
electrophysiological techniques. In 1950 he joined McGill’s
Physiology Department, where he spent sixteen productive years
investigating discharge patterns and neuronal relationships in
the mammalian cerebral cortex and brainstem respiratory centers.
Furthermore, he initiated a number of highly original
cross-disciplinary studies with, on the one hand, members of D.O.
Hebb’s research group at McGill’s Psychology Department; and, on
the other hand, with Albert Uttley’s group at the Autonomics
Division of the National Physical Laboratories in London,
England, with a view of elucidating the neural mechanisms of
learning, and the physiological bases of memory and attention.
In this, he was much influenced by hypotheses regarding the
probabilistic nature of neuroelectric activity, and the
consequent necessity for statistical methods of data analysis
and quantification – seminal ideas developed in the 1950’s by
MIT’s Communications Biophysics Group; and by some of the then
current theories of synaptic plasticity based on the computation
of conditional probabilities by neuronal networks. Within this
context, he enjoyed and promoted the design and construction of
(at the time) novel electronic instrumentation for the
collection, analysis and display of experimental neuroelectric
data. He was a stimulating and popular teacher, at both the
undergraduate and graduate levels, and during his stay at McGill
was surrounded by a lively group of graduate students, including
- amongst others - T.V.P. Bliss (of subsequent LTP fame),
Bernice Grafstein (who much later made fundamental contributions
toward the elucidation of axonal transport mechanisms, and
served a term as President of the Society for Neuroscience), and
George Mandl (see below). During his last year at McGill, Ben
Burns served as Chairman of the Physiology Department. He
subsequently in 1966 returned to the National Institute for
Medical Research in the U.K.
to succeed W. Feldberg as Head of its Department of Physiology
and Pharmacology, and later (1976) was director of a research
group at the University of Bristol. He retired formally in 1980,
but remained for several years an active investigator at the
University of Newcastle upon Tyne. In 1968, he published a
monograph (The Uncertain Nervous System) in which he
tried to spell out his ideas regarding “the interdisciplinary
nature of central neurophysiology, a subject in which progress
has come to depend upon some knowledge of classical physiology,
experimental psychology, applied mathematics, and electronic
engineering”. The same year, he was elected Fellow of the Royal
Society of London (FRS). He died on September 6, 2001.
Sources:
1. F.C. MacIntosh, The McGill Department of Physiology,
1950-1970 (Informal Notes for S.B. Frost).
2. B.D. Burns, The Uncertain Nervous System, E. Arnold,
London, 1968
3. G. Mandl, personal recollections. |
|
1967-1973 |

University of British Columbia Archives, [UBC 41.1/1946] |
David
V. Bates
It was
the worst of times; it was the best of times. The decade 1960-70
was a period of political and social upheaval, resulting –
amongst other dislocations - in sometimes severe disruptions of
university life. On campus, it was characterized by student
protests, sit-ins, and occupations of administrative offices.
The growing unrest, fuelled by the Vietnam War and the Civil
Rights Movement, engendered radical student demands for a
university that would sever its purported alliance with big
business and the industrial-military complex, abandon its “ivory
tower” “elitist” existence, and save its soul by becoming a
“critical university” primarily involved in solving society’s
problems with a focus on “educating revolutionary labor
leaders”; and in a wider context, the disruption of university
life was seen by many as a first step toward much wider
political action. In Montreal, it was the time of the (in)famous
“McGill français!” public demonstration which, on March 28,
1969, laid siege to the McGill lower campus late into the night,
and had to be broken up by police. At the same time, it was also
the period of Quebec’s quiet revolution which – among other
far-reaching social, political and linguistic dislocations -
initiated fundamental reforms of the Province’s education
system, which in turn had a profound effect on McGill’s
curriculum structure, the composition of its student body, and
its position vis-à-vis Quebec society. It was a time when
established norms were being broken, and – in the minds of some
- everything seemed possible. Paradoxically, at McGill – despite
the disruptive upheavals and political tensions, and despite
stringent budgetary limitations - the 1960s were a decade of
expansion, which saw a quadrupling of the University’s physical
facilities, and a substantial increase in the numbers of
students and academic staff. And it was during this turbulent
era that David Bates assumed the chairmanship of the Physiology
Department. He was born in West Malling, UK, on May 20, 1922,
and graduated MB MCh in 1945 and MD (CANTAB) in 1954. He spent a
post-graduate year with Julius Comroe in Philadelphia, and in
1952 joined St. Bartholomew Hospital and the University of
London where he served as Senior Lecturer from 1953-56. It was
there that he experienced the1952 London Smog Disaster which,
within the course of a few days, claimed some 12000 lives; and
it was that experience which sparked his interest in respiratory
physiology. In 1956 – convinced that academic medicine in
Britain was stagnating – he decided to leave UK (carrying in his
baggage an oscilloscope and a camera) and follow his mentor
Ronald Christie to McGill University where he was appointed
Professor of Medicine, with his research based at the Royal
Victoria Hospital. During the following years, Bates and his
group at the RVH Cardio-Respiratory Center developed many new
techniques for the study of pulmonary function, providing –
among other developments – the first detailed analysis of the
toxic effects of atmospheric ozone on humans (In 1972 the RVH
Respiratory Group – the first such in Canada - expanded to
become the Meakins-Christie Laboratories for Respiratory
Research, which maintains its activities to this day). In 1967,
David Bates was appointed Chairman of Physiology, and during his
five-year term the Department’s research mission and teaching
commitments were fundamentally redefined. On the one hand,
collaborative links with the clinical sciences were
substantially increased in order to promote cross-fertilization
between physiology and medicine; and, on the other hand, a
number of younger scientists with expertise in cellular,
biophysical, chemical and mathematical disciplines were brought
in, thus emphasizing the emerging importance of the basic
physical sciences as underpinnings for an understanding of
“classical” physiological processes. As for teaching, members of
the Department fully participated in a recently established
integrated Core Biology Program concerned with the structure,
biochemistry and physiology of the cell, and largely designed to
accommodate the many first year students arriving from the
recently established CEGEP colleges (CEGEP: Collège
d’enseignement général et professionnel; introduced by the
Quebec Government during the mid-1960s to replace the old
classical colleges as part of the “Quiet Revolution” educational
reforms). As perhaps another manifestation of the Zeitgeist,
the Department’s (elitist?) Honours Programs were abolished, and
a number of short graduate courses, in conjunction with the
Dept. of Experimental Medicine and the Faculty of Education,
were introduced. Furthermore – and this at student request and
with the financial support of the Quebec Medical Research
Council – an experimental modular teaching program was
introduced: Two sections of the first-year Physiology course
(211) were presented in self-teaching format, where students
were handed the course material in the form of audio-visual
”modules” which they could study individually, and at their own
pace, in special library cubicles equipped with audio and video
play-back facilities, without attending any lectures. It was
thus not surprising that, by the early 1970s, the ever
increasing teaching commitments serving some 600 undergraduate
and 46 graduate students were beginning to place an increasing
strain on the Department’s 19 full-time and 9 associate academic
staff members, their – still highly productive and diversified –
research activities, and the Departmental base budget of some
$350,000 and research budget of $521,000. In fact, budgetary
limitations (and student anti-vivisection sentiment)
necessitated at the time a drastic curtailment of laboratory
teaching (which lasted well into the late 1980s). By 1972,
Bates’ five-year term drew to a close, and he left McGill to
become Dean of Medicine (1972-77) and Head of Respiratory
Medicine (1972-87) at the University of British Columbia in
Vancouver. During this period, he devoted much of his time to
clinical bedside teaching, and began to develop a research
program in Environmental Epidemiology which for the first time
showed a clear association between hospital admissions for acute
respiratory disease and daily levels of air pollutants. Being by
temperament a social activist, he spent a good part of his later
years combining academic science with social service by acting
as consultant in occupational and environmental medicine and
adviser to local and international communities on matters
related to the effects of air pollution on human health. He
published a total of some 200 research papers and five books.
His environmental classic, A Citizen’s Guide to Air Pollution,
went through several editions and was also endorsed by the David
Suzuki Foundation. He was a member of the Canadian and American
Physiological Societies, the Physiological Society of London,
the Canadian and American Thoracic Societies, the American
College of Physicians, the British Medical Association, the
Royal Society of Medicine, the Royal College of Physicians
(London), the American Association for the Advancement of
Science, and the National Academy of Sciences (Wash.). He was
elected Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada in 1968, and
inducted into the Order of Canada in 2003. He received numerous
awards including the Trudeau Gold Medal of the American Thoracic
Society, the C.J. Cody Medal of the BC Medical Association, the
Robert Cooke Medal of the American Academy of Allergy, the
Queen’s Jubilee Medal, and the Canadian Geographic People’s
Choice Silver Award for Environmental Health. He retired in
1987, but remained active as Emeritus Professor at the
University of British Columbia until his death on November 21,
2006.
Sources:
1. ATS Centennial Vignettes (“I remember...”), Am.
Thoracic Soc., 2004.
2. CMAJ, 98 (1968), 665-69.
3. D.V. Bates, Curriculum Vitae (courtesy Bates family)
4. F.C. MacIntosh, Physiology at McGill: Notes for a History,
1983.
5. McGill News, 52, 1971.
6. Obituary, Vancouver Sun, December 12, 2006.
7. Obituary, The Lancet, 369, Issue 9557, Jan. 20, 2007,
p. 184 (courtesy Bates family)
8. Obituary, Health and Clean Air Newsletter, Fall-Winter
2006.
9. Physiology Annual Reports 1968-72, McGill Archives.
10. S.B. Frost, McGill University-1895-1971,
McGill-Queen’s U. Press, 1984.
11. The Physiologist, 45 (4), Aug. 2002, p. 230.
|
|
1973-1978 |
 |
Joseph
Milic-Emili
It was
the time of the world-wide oil crisis, 18% interest rates, and
the emergence of OPEC as a key player in world affairs. By the
mid 1970s, campus life began to return to near-normal, with the
revolutionary fervor of the 1960s gradually dissipating, and
even the McGill Daily (reportedly reduced to publishing nothing
but “recycled radical causes”) ceasing to be a serious irritant.
Compared to the previous decade, the number of undergraduates in
Physiology’s Departmental programs had more than doubled,
academic staff had increased by some 50%, but the Department’s
base budget had increased by a mere 30% - all with predictable
results: enormous classes, the end of laboratory teaching, and
cut-backs in everything from pencils to paperclips. Fortunately,
associate Departmental membership, introduced in 1970, began to
supplement staff available for much expanded teaching duties and
simultaneously increased and enhanced a pool of resident
expertise. The Department now had well established programs in
renal, respiratory, muscle, motor and neurotransmitter
physiology, transplant immunology, and the physiology of special
senses, with cardiovascular and endocrine programs being
gradually expanded. Nevertheless, the intellectual climate of
the day continued to frown upon the more eclectic, descriptive,
“holistic” organ-centeredness of some traditional biomedical
disciplines, and to favour more rigorous reductionist approaches
that tended to transcend and to blur older established
categories, boundaries and ways of “doing things”. During the
seventies, these trends were reflected in the evolving
Departmental policy to emphasize the introduction of new basic
science capabilities into both research and teaching: the
Artificial Cells and Organs Center sprang into being in 1975,
and new staff appointments were aimed at providing expertise in
the chemistry and molecular properties of blood constituents,
biophysics of the cell membrane, and chaos theory and
mathematical models as applied to biological systems; while at
the same time the foundations were being laid for the
Department’s Biomathematics Group (which in 1989 became the
McGill Center for Non-Linear Dynamics in Biology and Medicine).
Thus, despite budgetary restrictions and heavy teaching
commitments, the 34 Departmental staff members produced some 130
journal publications during 1978. Nevertheless, the Chairman’s
overall decision-making powers were being at the time subtly
eroded, with many aspects of the Department’s administrative
machinery gradually drifting into the hands of various
“advisory” committees – most of them with student
representation, i.e. the Departmental Policy Committee (DPC –
the main thorn in the Chairman’s side), the Appointments and
Promotions Committee, the Graduate Students Selection Committee,
etc., etc. And it was during this era of academic expansion,
fiscal turbulence, and diluted administrative authority, that
Joseph Milic-Emili assumed the Chairmanship of the Physiology
Department. During his term, the work of the RVH respiratory
group became closely integrated with Physiology, and the
Department won recognition as a center for research in that
field. Milic was born in Sesana, a small town in Italy (now
Sezana in Slovenia), some 20 km north-west of Trieste. After
receiving his MD at the University of Milan in 1955, he first
became assistant professor in the Department of Physiology in
that same institution (1956-60); and it was there that he was
first introduced to research in respiratory mechanics by Prof.
Rodolfo Margaria who was a pioneer in graphical and mathematical
data analysis. Subsequently (1958-60) – while still
collaborating with Margaria at Milan - he was also appointed
assistant professor in the Department of Physiology at the
University of Liège in Belgium where he was introduced to
extensive experimental studies by Dr. J.-M. Petit. With the
latter, Milic developed the technique of measuring the
electrical activity of the diaphragm via oesophagial electrodes,
while at the same time refining the measurement of pleural
pressure using oesophagial balloons. From 1960-63 he was a
Research Fellow at the Harvard School of Public Health, working
with Dr. J. Mead and gaining additional knowledge of respiratory
mechanics. In 1963 Milic joined Dr. D.V. Bates (see above) at
McGill’s Cardio-Pulmonary Labs in the Royal Victoria Hospital in
Montreal. He became Chairman of the Department of Physiology
(1973-78), and subsequently (1978-95) succeeded Dr. Peter
Macklem as Director of the Meakins-Christie Laboratories for
Respiratory Research. Under the gentle guidance of Dr. Bates,
and with the help from many Fellows and colleagues, Milic during
his career produced a series of landmark papers dealing with
regional distribution of gas and blood within the lungs; closing
volume and mouth occlusion pressure (Po.1); chronic obstructive
pulmonary disease (COPD); and (with David Bates) the toxic
action of atmospheric ozone on human lungs. One of his papers on
regional distribution of gas was among the 100 most-cited papers
in clinical research during 1965-78; and during this period he
was one of the 1000 most-cited contemporary scientists. More
recently he has been involved in studies dealing with
respiratory mechanics in mechanically ventilated patients, and
this latter work has led to a new approach, in the form of the
so called negative expiratory pressure technique, to assessing
expiratory flow limitation. Over the years, Milic has received
many honors and distinctions: He was elected Fellow of the Royal
Society of Canada (1980); inducted into the Order of Canada
(1990); and granted the degree of Doctor Honoris Causa by the
Université Catholique de Louvain, Belgium(1987); University of
Kunming, China (1988); Université de Montpellier, France (1994;
University of Athens, Greece, (1999); and University of
Ljubljana, Slovenia (1999). He has been married to Anne since
1957, has four children, and has been Professor Emeritus in
McGill’s Departments of Physiology and Medicine since 1998. He
presently makes his home in Montreal.
Sources:
1. Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med., 167 (2003): 1167-68.
2. J. Milic-Emili, Curriculum Vitae.
3. G.M., personal reminiscences.
4. F.C. MacIntosh, The McGill Department of Physiology:
Informal Notes |
|
1978-1987 |
 |
Krešimir Krnjević
(Joseph-Morley-Drake Professor; on Sabbatical leave 1986-1987)
Born in Zagreb, had a peripatetic schooling in Geneva, Zagreb
and Capetown, before enrolling in medical school in Edinburgh.
After graduating MB ChB in 1949, went on to a PhD in Physiology
in 1953, also at University of Edinburgh. Two post-doctoral
years at University of Washington (Seattle) - spent mostly
exploring the Pacific Northwest – were followed by two much more
productive years (two sons and lots of papers) in Canberra with
John Eccles; before return to UK at end of 1958 to take up a
position at the Babraham Institute, then headed by John Gaddum.
Would probably still be there but for the proposal (by B Delisle
Burns) that he come to Montreal as Visiting Professor for a year
(1964-1965) during his own sabbatical in England. Greatly
enjoying the very lively ambiance of pre-EXPO 67 Montreal, he
decided to remain at McGill as head of the Anaesthesia Research
Department. In recognition of his contributions to studies of
synaptic transmitters in the brain, he was elected to the Royal
Society of Canada and to the Council of the International Union
of Physiological Sciences, became an Officer of the Order of
Canada, and received a Gairdner Foundation International Award
as well as a Wilder Penfield Prize (Quebec). By the time he took
up the Physiology Chair in 1978, the ambiance in Montreal was
vastly different: as a result of the new political situation and
a major migration from Montreal, many departments at McGill were
becoming seriously depleted. Fortunately, Physiology managed to
resist this general trend; but life became progressively more
difficult after the departure of Dean Freedman, when regular
budget cuts severely undermined administrative and technical
services – including the invaluable mechanical and electronic
workshops. General morale was not helped by the dearth of funds
for research. On a more positive note, in spite of the general
budgetary freeze, some outstanding new members were hired;
including A. Shrier, E. Cooper and J. Hanrahan. Also highly
rewarding was the sponsorship of a Vietnamese ‘boat people’
family, which required much trouble and effort in finding
adequate clothing, housing and employment for two adults and
four young children, quite unused to Canadian winter: perhaps
the Department’s most successful and gratifying joint endeavour
of the 1980’s. |
|
1986-1988 |
 |
George Mandl (Acting)
Born in Czechoslovakia (now Czech Republic) in 1929, George
Mandl arrived in Canada in 1951. He earned his undergraduate degree from Sir George
Williams University (now Concordia University) in Montreal in
1961, and
his Ph.D. in Physiology from McGill University in 1966. After
spending two post-doctoral years at the National Institutes for
Medical Research at Mill Hill, London, U.K., he joined McGill’s
Aviation (now Aerospace) Medical Research Unit in 1968,
initially as Assistant and subsequently as Associate director.
His research interests focused on the neural basis of
visual perception, with special emphasis on the neural encoding
of visual motion and the influence of vision on vestibulo-ocular
function. He was appointed Professor of Physiology in 1978, and
served as Acting Physiology Chairman between 1986-88. It is to
be noted that one of the truly remarkable accomplishments of
this intermediate Chairmanship was the relocation of the annual
Christmas party, from the historic premises of the Physiology
Department to Thomson House (with its in-house bar), which – so
the story goes – had an extraordinarily beneficial influence on
staff morale and was greatly appreciated by all. Dr. Mandl
retired from full-time active duties in 1994 and has since been
Professor (post-retirement) in the Physiology Department. |
|
1988-1994 |
 |
David
Goltzman
(Hosmer
Professor of Applied Physiology)
*
David Goltzman is Professor in the
Departments of Medicine and Physiology of McGill University,
Director of the McGill Centre for Bone and Periodontal Research,
and Senior Physician in the Endocrine Division of the McGill
University Health Centre (MUHC). Born in Montreal, Dr. Goltzman
received his BSc and MD degrees at McGill University and did his
internal medicine residency at Columbia Presbyterian Medical
Centre in New York. He subsequently pursued his clinical
subspecialization in endocrinology and his research training at
Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston. He returned to McGill
in 1975 and became Director of the Calcium Research Laboratory
at the Royal Victoria Hospital. From 1988-1993, he served as
Professor and Chair of the Department of Physiology at McGill.
From 1994-2004 he was Chairman of the Department of Medicine.
Dr. Goltzman’s research has focused on the hormonal regulation
of calcium and skeletal homeostasis and he has made many
important and original contributions to our knowledge of the
biology of the hormones, parathyroid hormone related peptide
(PTHRP), parathyroid hormone (PTH), calcitonin and vitamin D.
These contributions have had major impact on our understanding
of the interaction of cancer with the skeleton, on
identification of novel tumour markers and on mechanisms of
development and treatment of osteoporosis and other diseases of
excess bone resorption. In recognition of his excellent research
he has received various honours and awards including the Prix
André Lichtwitz of the Institut national en santé et recherche
medicale, election to the American Association of Physicians,
election to Fellowship in the Royal Society of Canada and an
Honorary Professorship at Nanjing Medical University. In 2000,
he was named an Officer of the Order of Canada.
Dr.
Goltzman has extensively contributed to the Canadian Institutes
of Health Research, the National Cancer Institute of Canada and
the National Institutes of Health of the U.S. in various
capacities both on grants and awards committees and on policy
making bodies. He has further served his academic community
through editorships on various journals (including the Journal
of Bone and Mineral Research, Endocrinology, Bone) and by
providing leadership to a number of scientific organizations
(e.g. as President of the Canadian Society of Endocrinology and
Metabolism, President of the Canadian Society for Clinical
Investigation and President of the American Society for Bone and
Mineral Research). He has also consulted to industry, academia
and lay organizations in his capacity as a clinician scientist
and an expert in metabolic bone disease. His contributions to
education including chairing a committee which revised the
undergraduate medical curriculum at McGill University. |
|
1994-2004 |
 |
Alvin
Shrier
(Hosmer
Professor of Applied Physiology) |
|
2004-2005 |
 |
Ellis Cooper
(Acting) |
|
2005- |
 |
John
Orlowski
(James
McGill Professor) |
|
*
The Hosmer Foundation Fund was established in 1949 by a gift to
McGill University from Miss Olive Hosmer, in memory of her
father Charles Rudolph Hosmer, a wealthy and influential
Montreal businessman and generous philanthropist. C.R. Hosmer
began his career as a telegraph operator and ended as a highly
successful financier, retiring from business at the age of 48.
According to the original Deed of Donation, funds valued close
to $ 1,000,000 were provided by Olive Hosmer primarily for “the
establishment, endowment and maintenance of the Hosmer Chair of
Applied Physiology in the Faculty of Medicine of McGill
University”. The secondary purpose was to provide Teaching
Fellowships to deserving young physicians and surgeons in the
McGill teaching hospitals. The first appointee to the Hosmer
Chair was the 27-year old Arnold S.V. Burgen from London’s
Middlesex Hospital Medical School, who – together with F.C.
MacIntosh – arrived at McGill in 1949 to join and re-invigorate
the Physiology Department (see above). When Burgen left McGill
in 1962, the Hosmer funds began to be used largely for the
secondary purpose of providing Teaching Fellowships. Thus, due
to this dispersion of the moneys, the Chair remained vacant for
the next 16 years, until in 1978 the funds of the Donation were
again consolidated and directed toward the primary purpose of
the Deed, i.e. the full implementation of the Hosmer Chair; and
in that year the then Director of McGill’s Aviation Medical
Research Unit - Professor Geoffrey Melvill-Jones - was appointed
the second Hosmer Professor. (Revised July 25, 2007)
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