James Wright | |
Birth Name: | John Franklin Knight |
Birth Place: | Brisbane, Queensland, Australia |
Birth Date: | 1927 12, df=yes |
John Franklin Knight (12 December 1927 – 27 November 2022), known professionally as Dr James Wright, was an Australian medical professional who was notable for his books, television and radio appearances, and regular newspaper and magazine columns. He was also sometimes nicknamed "the Merry Medic".[1]
Wright was known for his ability to demystify complex medical issues for a nationwide audience. He took TV camera crews into hospital medical theatres and neonatal intensive care clinic. He taught the nation about emerging diseases such as HIV/AIDS and Hepatitis C, whilst destigmatising prejudices and hysteria surrounding these diseases.
Wright was born on 12 December 1927 in Brisbane, Queensland.[1] When he was six months old his family moved to Sydney. He was raised on Fox Valley Road in Wahroonga, a northern Sydney suburb. His father was a Seventh-day Adventist minister. He had a "very strict, disciplinarian upbringing. (He) used to get a hiding pretty regularly".[1] As with most Seventh-Day Adventism members, his family were strict vegetarians. His mother lived to 100 and his father to 90.[1] He was educated at North Sydney Boys High School.[2] After graduating, he originally wanted to pursue a career in journalism, before deciding to become a doctor and studying medicine at the University of Sydney.
Wright was a committed Seventh-day Adventist. He was a vegetarian, did not smoke or drink alcohol and exercised daily. In 1955 he married Noreen Westlake.[1] [3]
Wright made a fortune in the millions of dollars through property investments, mainly on the Queensland Gold Coast.[1] In the early 2000s Wright was swindled out of A$57 million by a friend, New Zealander Derek Turner.[4] [5] "Turner had been his neighbour for 10 to 15 years and was a trusted acquaintance", Wright said.[6] He also owned a motel and a funeral director's company for forty years, also a printing company.[1]
Wright had surgery for throat cancer and in February 2017 surgery for bowel cancer.[7]
Wright studied medicine at the University of Sydney and first practised as a general practitioner (GP) in Tottenham, a small town in the Central West very close to the geographic centre of New South Wales.[8] As the only GP within a radius of 160km, he took on several duties including as obstetrician, surgeon, counsellor, dispensing pharmacist and vet.
Wright, whilst running his private practice, started his media career, as the local correspondent for the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, where his stories were sent to the ABC by Morse code.
On television he appeared on The Mike Walsh Show and continued when that series was replaced by The Midday Show, where he became resident doctor during the tenure of both Ray Martin and Kerri-Anne Kennerley, spanning a period of 25 years, starting from the black and white era through to the transmission of colour.[3]
Wright appeared on radio at 2GB and 2UE where he had his own radio show for almost 18 years.[3]
Wright had newspaper columns including in the Herald Sun (Melbourne), the Sunday Telegraph (Sydney), the Sunday Mail (Adelaide and Perth), the Brisbane Sunday Mail, the Sunday Territorian and the Sunday Tasmanian.
Wright also had regular column in magazines including Woman's Weekly, Women's Day, Dolly and Cleo.
In 1971, Wright and his wife Noreen established the charity Medi-Aid. It grew from an idea in Wright's teenage years to a national foundation that provides aged care accommodation for more than 700 elderly people.[9] The foundation has several villages in Sydney, and one on the Gold Coast in Queensland.[1] Its prime aim is to provide housing for the older community across all socio-economic levels.
Wright died on 27 November 2022, at the age of 94.[10]
In 1998, Wright was appointed a Member of the Order of Australia (AM) for his media outreach and the work of his foundation.[11] In 2003, he was one of the three finalists in the "Australian of the Year" awards.[3] Wright was awarded as the 2017 New South Wales Senior Australian of the Year.[12]