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Herbert Gallagher

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Herbert William Gallagher FRCS (1917–2007) was a Northern Irish medical professional, politician and World War II Royal Army Medical Corps officer.

He attended Methodist College, Belfast[1] and Queen's University Belfast, where he studied medicine, matriculating in 1939. At the onset of World War II he volunteered for the British Army's Medical Corps.[2]

In 1940, he was travelling from Northern Ireland to England when the ship struck a mine outside Liverpool. Using his medical skills he tended to the casualties. His war service took him to Egypt and India. He married a nursing sister from the same unit. After being demobbed he trained as a surgeon at Belfast City Hospital. After the National Health Service was created, he became a Consultant at Banbridge and Newtownards Hospitals.[3]

Affiliations

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Retirement/death

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He retired in 1977, aged 60. He became an Alliance Party councillor and a founding member of Comber Probus Club, which he attended till shortly before his death from throat cancer. He was a widower at the time of his death in 2007.[4]

References

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  1. ^ Logan, Hume. "Herbert William Gallagher (1917–2007)". Queen's University of Belfast. Retrieved 28 July 2016.
  2. ^ BBC archive of World War II experiences, mentioning Gallagher by name
  3. ^ Biodata for Herbert Gallagher
  4. ^ Biodata, ibid.