James Berry (surgeon)


Sir James Berry FRCS FSA was a British surgeon.
Berry was born in Kingston, Ontario to English solicitor Edward Berry of Croydon, London and was educated at Whitgift School, Croydon and St Bartholomew's Hospital. He then served as house surgeon at St Bartholomew's to Sir Thomas Smith, and was demonstrator of anatomy.
In 1885 he became surgeon to the Alexandra Hospital for Diseases of the Hip, in Queen Square but in 1891 was elected consulting surgeon at the Royal Free Hospital. There he established a reputation for surgery of cleft palates, a condition from which he himself suffered, and the treatment of goitre. During the First World War he and his wife established six hospitals in Serbia for the treatment of wounded soldiers and refugees. He was with the Serbian army at Odessa in Russia from 1916 to 1917. For his efforts here, he was awarded the Order of the Star of Romania, Order of St Sava, and Order of Saint Anna of Russia.
He was President of the Medical Society of London, 1921–22 and President of the Royal Society of Medicine, 1926–28. He was knighted in the 1925 Birthday Honours. He retired in 1927 and was elected consulting surgeon to the Royal Free Hospital.
He died childless in 1946. He had married in 1891 Dr Frances May Dickinson, anaesthetist at the Royal Free Hospital and the daughter of Sebastian Dickinson, MP for Stroud. After her death in 1934 he had married Mabel Ingram, a doctor.

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