Frank Montgomery (rugby union) explained


Frank Montgomery
Full Name:Frank Percival Montgomery
Birth Date:10 June 1892
Birth Place:Belfast, Ireland
Death Place:Belfast, Northern Ireland
Occupation:Radiologist
School:Campbell College
University:Queen's University Belfast
University of Cambridge
Position:Fullback
Repyears1:1914
Repcaps1:3
Reppoints1:0

Sir Frank Percival Montgomery (10 June 1892 — 11 August 1972) was a radiologist from Northern Ireland and an Ireland international rugby union player.

Biography

Raised in Belfast, Montgomery was the son of Presbyterian clergyman Henry Montgomery, the founder of the Shankill Road Mission who served as moderator of the Presbyterian Church in Ireland.[1] He attended Campbell College and Queen's University Belfast. A fullback, Montgomery was a varsity rugby player, capped three times for Ireland during the 1914 Five Nations.[2]

Montgomery received a commission in the Royal Army Medical Corps after qualifying as a doctor in 1915. Serving on the Western Front, Montgomery was awarded a Military Cross and Croix de Guerre (with bar).[3]

After further studies at the University of Cambridge, Montgomery became a pioneering radiologist. He was the first person to introduce radium into Northern Ireland.[4] In 1948, Montgomery was appointed chairman of the Northern Ireland Hospitals Authority.[5] He was knighted in 1953 for his contribution to medicine.[6] From 1956 to 1967, Montgomery served as pro-chancellor of Queen's University.[2]

See also

Notes and References

  1. News: Sir Frank Montgomery . . 14 August 1972.
  2. Web site: Coleman . Marie . Montgomery, Sir Frank Percival (‘Monty’) . Dictionary of Irish Biography.
  3. Web site: RAMC: Royal Army Medical Corps WW1 . www.ramc-ww1.com.
  4. News: Sir Frank honoured at Queen's . Belfast News-Letter . 6 March 1968.
  5. News: Former Hospital Chiefs Dies At 80 . . 12 August 1972.
  6. News: Knighthood . Ballymena Weekly Telegraph . 2 January 1953.