Harold Borrows' First World War Patient Case Notes
TitleHarold Borrows' First World War Patient Case Notes
ReferenceMS0168
Level of descriptionfonds
Date1914-1918
Admin./ biographical historyHarold Burrows (1875—1955). C.B.E. 1919; M.R.C.S. 11 May 1899; F.R.C.S. 20 June 1901; L.R.C.P. 1899; M.B. London 1899; B.S. 1902; Ph.D. 1938.
Born on 8 April 1875 in India, son of Surgeon-Major E. P. Burrows of the Bombay Army, Harold Burrows was educated at Marlborough and St Bartholomew’s Hospital. His father had studied medicine there and two of his own sons followed him. At St Bartholomew’s he was chiefly influenced by C.B. Lockwood and Sir Lauder Brunton. After qualifying in 1899 he became a prosector at the Royal College of Surgeons and was also an assistant editor of The Hospital. His first surgical appointment was in 1903 at the Bolingbroke Hospital, Wandsworth, and in 1905 he became senior assistant surgeon to the Seamen’s Hospital, Greenwich. In 1907 he joined the staff of the Royal Portsmouth Hospital.
As a Territorial he was mobilised on the outbreak of the 1914-18 war, served in France with the 20th General Hospital and later became consultant surgeon to the First Army and to the Army of the Rhine, with the rank of Colonel. He was twice mentioned in dispatches and created C.B.E in 1919.
After the war he returned to Portsmouth, where he organised the collection of funds for providing orthopaedic clinics. In 1920 he was awarded the Jacksonian Prize of the Royal College of Surgeons for his essay, “The results and treatment of gun shot injuries of the blood vessels”. A regular worker in the Library of the Royal College of Surgeons, Burrows was also a Hunterian Professor in 1922, 1933, and 1935 He published two very successful books Pitfalls of Surgery, and Surgical Instruments and Appliances.
In 1925 a prolonged illness, following a heart attack, forced Burrows to give up surgery, and he became an experimental biologist at the research laboratories of the Royal Cancer Hospital, now the Chester Beatty Research Institute. His chief interest was the relation of sex hormones to the development of cancer, and he became an authority on the subject. At the age of 63 he obtained the Ph.D. of London University. His major work The Biological Action of Sex Hormones was published in 1944 when Burrows was 69.
Burrows married in 1898 Lucy Mary, elder daughter of Henry Wheeler; they had two sons, one of whom is Harold Jackson Burrows F.R.C.S., the orthopaedic surgeon. After the death of his first wife, Burrows married Gwendoline Mary, second daughter of Rear-Admiral 0.R. Paul C.B.E.; they had one son who died while a student at St Bartholomew’s at the age of 22.
Burrows lived at 66 North Hill, N6 until his retirement in 1945 when he moved to Marlborough, but continued his scientific writing. He died in St Bartholomew’s Hospital on 29 September 1955, aged 80. He was a modest, friendly man.
His principal publications were “Tetanus” and “Gunshot wounds of blood vessels”, in Barling and Morrison: Manual of war surgery, 1918; “Mistakes and accidents of surgery”. 1923; second edition 1925, as Pitfalls of Surgery.; “Surgical instruments and appliances used in operations”. 1905 ; 14th edition with R.W. Raven, 1952.; and “The biological action of sex hormones”. 1945; 2nd edition, 1949.
[Source: Lives of the Fellows of the Royal College of Surgeons of England, Volume IV, 1952-1964. RHOB Robinson and WR Le Fanu. (Edinburgh and London: 1970)]
Born on 8 April 1875 in India, son of Surgeon-Major E. P. Burrows of the Bombay Army, Harold Burrows was educated at Marlborough and St Bartholomew’s Hospital. His father had studied medicine there and two of his own sons followed him. At St Bartholomew’s he was chiefly influenced by C.B. Lockwood and Sir Lauder Brunton. After qualifying in 1899 he became a prosector at the Royal College of Surgeons and was also an assistant editor of The Hospital. His first surgical appointment was in 1903 at the Bolingbroke Hospital, Wandsworth, and in 1905 he became senior assistant surgeon to the Seamen’s Hospital, Greenwich. In 1907 he joined the staff of the Royal Portsmouth Hospital.
As a Territorial he was mobilised on the outbreak of the 1914-18 war, served in France with the 20th General Hospital and later became consultant surgeon to the First Army and to the Army of the Rhine, with the rank of Colonel. He was twice mentioned in dispatches and created C.B.E in 1919.
After the war he returned to Portsmouth, where he organised the collection of funds for providing orthopaedic clinics. In 1920 he was awarded the Jacksonian Prize of the Royal College of Surgeons for his essay, “The results and treatment of gun shot injuries of the blood vessels”. A regular worker in the Library of the Royal College of Surgeons, Burrows was also a Hunterian Professor in 1922, 1933, and 1935 He published two very successful books Pitfalls of Surgery, and Surgical Instruments and Appliances.
In 1925 a prolonged illness, following a heart attack, forced Burrows to give up surgery, and he became an experimental biologist at the research laboratories of the Royal Cancer Hospital, now the Chester Beatty Research Institute. His chief interest was the relation of sex hormones to the development of cancer, and he became an authority on the subject. At the age of 63 he obtained the Ph.D. of London University. His major work The Biological Action of Sex Hormones was published in 1944 when Burrows was 69.
Burrows married in 1898 Lucy Mary, elder daughter of Henry Wheeler; they had two sons, one of whom is Harold Jackson Burrows F.R.C.S., the orthopaedic surgeon. After the death of his first wife, Burrows married Gwendoline Mary, second daughter of Rear-Admiral 0.R. Paul C.B.E.; they had one son who died while a student at St Bartholomew’s at the age of 22.
Burrows lived at 66 North Hill, N6 until his retirement in 1945 when he moved to Marlborough, but continued his scientific writing. He died in St Bartholomew’s Hospital on 29 September 1955, aged 80. He was a modest, friendly man.
His principal publications were “Tetanus” and “Gunshot wounds of blood vessels”, in Barling and Morrison: Manual of war surgery, 1918; “Mistakes and accidents of surgery”. 1923; second edition 1925, as Pitfalls of Surgery.; “Surgical instruments and appliances used in operations”. 1905 ; 14th edition with R.W. Raven, 1952.; and “The biological action of sex hormones”. 1945; 2nd edition, 1949.
[Source: Lives of the Fellows of the Royal College of Surgeons of England, Volume IV, 1952-1964. RHOB Robinson and WR Le Fanu. (Edinburgh and London: 1970)]
Scope and ContentAlbum of photographs of Harold Burrow's facial reconstruction cases during the First World War, 1914-1918. The volume contains photographs of wounds to the face of patients, with follow up photographs of the patients after surgery. Most of the patients are identified by surname written in pencil on the page.
Extent1 volume
LanguageEnglish
Conditions governing accessThis collection is available to everyone for research. It can be consulted in our Research Room at the Royal College of Surgeons of England, 38-43 Lincoln's Inn Fields, London WC2A 3PE. It is essential to book in advance so we can ensure material is available. Please email archives@rcseng.ac.uk to book a Research Room appointment.
Conditions governing reproductionCopying and publication of patient records in this collection is restricted. We will grant permission for a limited number of files to be reproduced in an academic or medical context. We will not authorise reproduction for commercial purposes such as advertising. We do not allow photographs from the case notes to be shared on social media or published on websites where they can be downloaded and republished by third parties. To request images for publication please email archives@rcseng.ac.uk.
Related objectsRCS-SCH/1/3/80
SubjectSurgery, World War I, War victims