Herbert Kitchener Bourns
Male, ID #19409, b. 14 July 1916, d. 6 October 1991
Alternate Names
He was also known as Bourne registered at death.Birth, Marriage and Death information
Herbert Kitchener Bourns was born on 14 July 1916 at GAL, IRL.He married Gracie Joan Valerie Glanville, daughter of Charles Henry Justus Glanville and Elizabeth Grace Winifred Blunt, circa May 1942 at Exeter registered, DEV, ENG.
He died on 6 October 1991 at Bristol registered, GLS, ENG, (when age calculated as 75); with obituary:
OBITUARY
H K BOURNS FRCS
Herbert Bourns was a consultant in Bristol for 30 years and became a prominent figure in medicine there. His work as an emergency surgeon had brought him into frequent contact with the ambulance services, and he became a lecturer and examiner to the St John Ambulance Service and director of the service in Avon. For this work he was made a knight of the Order of St John of Jerusalem. In the university he was a clinical lecturer in surgery. He was chairman of Bristol Division of the BMA and the regional training committee and president of Bristol
Medico-Chirurgical Society and the Surgical Club of South West England. He was one of the group who helped to establish St Peter's Hospice in Bristol.
A committed Christian, Herbert was a member of the Christian Medical Fellowship. He was active in freemasonry. In his youth he had played hockey, and he remained interested in sport and was for many years president of Bristol Hospitals Rugby Club. He loved his garden, the out of doors, and his wife's family farm in Devon. His calm manner was enlivened by a ready, dry wit. He is survived by his wife, Joan, and by four sons and 10 grandchildren.-M G WILSON
Herbert Kitchener Bourns, formerly a consultant general surgeon at Bristol Royal Infirmary and Frenchay and Cossham Memorial Hospitals, died 6 October. Born County Galway, 1916; studied medicine at Trinity College Medical School, Dublin (BA, MB, BCh, BAO 1940). Served as orthopaedic specialist in Royal Army Medical Corps in Europe and Far East. Appointed surgical registrar at Bristol Royal Infirmary in 1947 and surgeon to accident and emergency department in 1952.
Other information
In 2000 The Royal College of Surgeons list him:-Bourns, Herbert Kitchener (1916 - 1991)
Identifier: RCS: E007834
Full Name: Bourns, Herbert Kitchener
Date of Birth: 14 July 1916
Place of Birth: County Galway
Date of Death : 12 October 1991
Occupation: Accident and emergency surgeon
Titles/Qualifications: KStJ, MRCS and FRCS 1949, BA 1938, MB BCh BAO Dublin 1940
Details:
Herbert Kitchener Bourns was born in County Galway on 14 July 1916, the sixth of seven children of Harry J Bourns, a farmer and landowner, and his wife Esther Josephine, née Cornwall. His early education was at St Columba's College near Dublin, after which he entered Trinity College Dublin for his medical studies. He qualified in 1940 and shortly afterwards came to England to work, initially at the Emergency Medical Service Hospital in Exminster and later as house surgeon and resident surgical officer at the Royal Devon and Exeter Hospital in Plymouth, where he was influenced by Norman Capener.
In 1942 he volunteered for service in the RAMC and at first was a trainee orthopaedic surgeon at the Military Hospital in Shaftesbury. He later became an orthopaedic specialist with the rank of major and landed in Normandy four days after the invasion in order to set up a field hospital in Caen, later moving to Brussels at the end of the campaign in North West Europe. Later still he was posted to the Far East, and served in India, Burma and Malaysia until he was demobilised in 1947. Two years later he passed the FRCS and was appointed senior registrar at the Bristol Royal Infirmary.
In 1952 he became the first casualty surgeon in charge of the Accident and Emergency department of Bristol Royal Infirmary and additionally was appointed consultant surgeon at Frenchay and Cosham Hospitals in Bristol. His close contact with the ambulance services led him to volunteer as lecturer and examiner to the St John's Ambulance Service. Later he became Director of the St John's Association in Avon and his services were recognised by his appointment as an Officer of the Most Venerable Order of the Hospital of St John of Jerusalem in 1971, later being promoted to Commander, and shortly before his death to Knight of the Order. He was President of the Bristol Medico-Chirurgical Society and of the Surgical Club of South West England. He was a popular teacher of medical students and throughout his life performed a wide range of surgical operations. His manner was calm and kind and enlivened by a quick wit and ready humour. With the advent of the hospice movement he played an active role in the foundation of St Peter's Hospice in Bristol and in setting up a domiciliary nursing service. He was a member of the Christian Medical Fellowship and an active member of St Vincent Lodge in Bristol, where he was a holder of Provincial Grand Rank.
After retiring from hospital practice in 1981 he continued to play an active part in medical appeal tribunals. He married his wife Joan, née Glanville, in 1942, having met her the previous year when she was a Red Cross nurse at Exminster, and there were four sons of the marriage. He enjoyed the country life at his wife's family farm in Devon and was a keen gardener at his home in Bristol. He died suddenly on 12 October 1991, aged 75, survived by his wife, sons and ten grandchildren.
Family | Gracie Joan Valerie Glanville b. c Aug 1919 |