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Home > About the Academy > Biographical memoirs
BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIRS
Frederick Colin Courtice 1911-1992
By P.I. Korner
This memoir was originally published in Historical Records of Australian Science, vol.10, no.1, 1994.
Numbers in brackets refer to the notes at the end of the text.
Introduction
Frederick Colin Courtice
was born on 26 March 1911 in Bundaberg, Queensland. As a young
man, he spent fifteen years in England, mostly in Oxford. His
wartime work aroused his interest in the physiology of the lymphatic
system and he went on to become one of the world's leading authorities
in that field. He returned to Australia in 1948 as Director of
the Kanematsu Memorial Institute of Pathology at Sydney Hospital.
His laboratory attracted many young graduates, keen to try their
hand at medical research. Courtice had the qualities that encouraged
them to develop original lines of research of their own. In 1958,
he became Foundation Professor of Experimental Pathology in the
Australian National University at the John Curtin School of Medical
Research, where his main lines of work were in lymphatic physiology,
atherosclerosis and immunology. He held this appointment until
1974, when for the next three years, till his retirement, he became
Director of the John Curtin School. His influence on Australian
biomedical science went far beyond his personal research. He played
an important role in many national medical research organizations,
including the National Health & Medical Research Council (NHMRC),
the National Heart Foundation of Australia and the Life Insurance
Medical Research Fund. He also served on several international
bodies, including UNESCO. After his retirement he returned to
Sydney, where he continued to teach and to participate in several
committees and in the affairs of the International Society of
Lymphology. He died in Sydney on 29 February 1992.
Childhood, schooling and university
Colin Courtice was the second of six children of Frederick and
Mary Lillian Courtice. Both his grandparents came from England.
His paternal grandfather Francis Courtice came from Exeter in
Devonshire and had emigrated to Australia in 1880. The family
had at first settled near Townsville but later moved to Bundaberg,
where employment conditions were better. Colin's maternal grandparents,
after leaving England, lived for a time in the northern rivers
region of New South Wales before moving to Queensland, close to
Bundaberg. Grandfather Joseph Pegg earned his living hauling copper
ore by horse and cart from Mount Perry, before the advent of the
railway.
Colin's father Frederick worked for several years in the laboratory
of the Millaquin Sugar Refinery. Conditions were hard with long
hours and low wages and, together with his brother Benjamin, Frederick
helped form a union of sugar industry employees the Bundaberg
and District Workers Union. This later became the Australian Workers
Association and eventually merged with a larger national body,the Australian Workers Union. After several years in paid employment,
the two brothers became sugar farmers in the Bundaberg district.
Both were prominent members of the Australian Labor Party. Frederick
served as a member of the Queensland Legislative Council and was,
for many years, Chairman of the Woongarra Shire Council. Benjamin
Courtice became Senator for Queensland and later served in the
Chifley government as Minister for Customs.
The family homestead, where Colin grew up, was 10 km from Bundaberg,
not far from the sea. Colin appears to have enjoyed the rural
life of his childhood and throughout his life there was always
a golden glow when talking about Bundaberg. He attended Woongarra
Primary School and then Bundaberg High School. His scholastic
performance was outstanding and he gained first place in the Queensland
Junior and Senior Public Examinations. His excellence as a scholar
was matched by his prowess in sport. He was captain of the high
school football and cricket teams and represented the City of
Bundaberg in the Queensland inter-city sporting competitions.
Because of his good scholastic performance, Colin was awarded
a Public Exhibition in the University of Queensland. He wanted
to study medicine in order, as he often said, to return to Bundaberg
as a general practitioner. This presented problems since in 1929
there was no medical school in Queensland. He went to King's College
in Brisbane for one pre-medical year and then moved to the University
of Sydney in 1930. Courtice was in residence in Wesley College,
and continued to excel both academically and in sport. He and
a fellow student, Maurice Joseph, gained High Distinctions at
the end of the preclinical course in third year. This prompted
the new professor of physiology, H.W. Davies,
to encourage each of them to interrupt his medical course, in
order to do an Honours BSc in physiology. Davies originally came
from Adelaide, but had trained in Oxford with J.S. Haldane as
a respiratory physiologist and had later worked at Edinburgh with
the distinguished clinical physiologist J.C. Meakins. The extra
year gave Colin the opportunity to get a feel for the substantial
advances that were being made in respiratory physiology and to
learn some of the techniques, including air and blood gas analysis.
In August 1932, he graduated BSc with First Class Honours and
the University Medal and resumed his medical course. However,
in October of the same year he was awarded the Rhodes Scholarship
for Queensland and the lure of going to work in Oxford proved
irresistible.
He left by ship for England and, in September 1933, took up residence
at New College. He worked in the University Laboratory of Physiology
with Professor C.G. Douglas, who for many years had been one of
J.S. Haldane's principal collaborators. Courtice and Douglas set
out to re-examine the controversial question whether carbohydrate
was the primary fuel in muscular exercise. This had been proposed
by A.V. Hill and co-workers, who had measured changes in the respiratory
quotient (RQ) (i.e. the volume of CO2 exhaled from the lungs
per unit time, divided by the corresponding volume of O2 absorbed)
after strenuous exercise in humans. Their work seemed to support
the earlier biochemical studies by Fletcher and Hopkins and by
Meyerhof in isolated muscle. Courtice and Douglas recognized that
conclusions about the sources of metabolic activity based on changes
in RQ were valid only when there was an approximately steady state,
which did not obtain in Hill's experiments. They devised a more
suitable protocol, where the exercise was performed at a lower
rate of work but was more prolonged. They found that early in
exercise, fat accounted for 50% of the source of energy and, later
on, for an even greater proportion. Their main conclusions, that
fat and carbohydrate were both readily available energy sources,
have stood the test of time, but not quite in the way that they
imagined. In his farewell lecture at the John Curtin School in
1976, Courtice reminded his audience that physiologists of the
day had not known about energy-rich phosphate compounds, which
were the true 'primary' fuel in exercise and were rapidly derived
from fatty acids and carbohydrate during cellular metabolism.
After receiving the DPhil in 1935, Courtice resumed his medical
course. This meant moving to London, where most Oxford students
obtained their clinical training at the London Hospital Medical
School. There he met his future wife, Joyce Mary (Joy) Seaton,
an attractive young nurse at the hospital. Their romance began
when she treated a finger infection that he had acquired. They
married on 18 December 1937, a few weeks after Colin had qualified
as a doctor.
He and his bride set up house in Oxford, where Courtice continued
his research career. The idea of going into medical practice never
surfaced again, except occasionally after dinner over a glass
of port. He was awarded a Beit Research Fellowship and continued
working with Douglas on metabolic regulation during exercise,
mainly by insulin and adrenaline. They found that insulin increased
the proportion of carbohydrate utilized by the body. One anecdote,
illustrating the occasional tribulations of human physiologists,
relates to an experiment on the effects of insulin. Courtice was
the subject that day and had completed the walk and received his
insulin injection and Douglas' job was to collect the expired
air and analyse the samples, using the Haldane apparatus. Courtice's
blood sugar must have fallen to a low level and Douglas, glancing
in his direction whilst performing the analyses, wondered whether
he had stopped breathing. He shook Courtice hard with his free
hand and shouted, 'Courtice, Courtice, are you alive?', which
roused Colin sufficiently to give a grunt through the mouth-piece.
Apparently a look of relief came over Douglas' face and he said,
as he continued with the gas analysis: 'Thank heavens, you are
still alive.' At the end of the day he chortled and said: 'Courtice,
you certainly had me worried. I did not wish to see you perish,
but I know you would not have wanted to ruin a good experiment.'
Those were heady days, before the advent of Institutional Ethics
Committees!
In 1938, Courtice obtained a Nuffield Memorial Fellowship to work
with the distinguished neurosurgeon Sir Hugh Cairns
an expatriate Australian and former Rhodes scholar, who was Professor
of Surgery at Oxford. The aim was to examine the effects of cerebral
tumours on the distribution of blood flow in the brain, as assessed
from oxygen tensions of the venous blood leaving particular regions
and from the arterio-venous O2 differences. This involved measurements
in some of Cairns' patients during brain surgery. In addition,
Courtice performed parallel experiments in cats with artificial
brain tumours. Courtice found that tumours of the cerebellum and
basal ganglia often reduced average cerebral oxygen tensions,
whilst tumours of the frontal and parietal regions of the forebrain
had virtually no effect. Courtice felt uncomfortable in the clinical
environment and later remarked that the experience had taught
him about the large communication gaps between clinicians and
basic scientists.
War years and post-war period
Douglas had been Britain's leading authority on medical aspects
of gas warfare during the First World War and at the outbreak
of the Second World War he was again recruited to become the government's
chief adviser. He asked for Courtice's assistance with the scientific
work, and the latter was thereupon appointed by the Ministry of
Supply as Senior Experimental Officer at the Chemical Defence
Experimental Station in Porton, near Salisbury in the south of
England. At Porton, Courtice met many of Britain's leading medical
scientists. One, who probably had the greatest influence on his
future career, was Roy Cameron, Professor of Pathology at University
College, London, who introduced him to experimental pathology.
Joy Courtice and their daughter Rosemary, who had been born in
1938, remained in Oxford. Their son Tony was born there in 1940
but soon afterwards the family was reunited in Porton where, in
1944, daughter Susan was born.
Courtice's main project was to determine the mechanisms that caused
shock in thermal burns and after exposure to a range of chemical
warfare agents. Both damaged the capillaries and Courtice thought
that the extent of damage could be assessed from the changes in
the flow and protein composition of the lymph from the affected
region. The lymphatics are delicate vessels that are technically
difficult to cannulate and, at the time, only a handful of physiologists
were interested in studying them. These included Professor C.K.
Drinker of the Harvard School of Public Health in Boston and Professor
J.M. Yoffey of Bristol. Both had worked together and had written
an authoritative monograph on the anatomy and physiology of the
lymphatic system. By good luck Yoffey had just returned from the
United States and in 1941, taught Courtice how to cannulate the
thoracic duct, which is the main lymphatic duct carrying lymph
to the venous system. This was the start of Courtice's life-long
work on lymphatic physiology. The thoracic duct was of relatively
limited interest for the project at hand, since the noxious agents
affected predominantly the lungs and skin. Courtice taught himself
how to cannulate the even more delicate lymphatics that drain
these regions and began his experiments.
The studies confirmed that the capillaries were damaged by burns
and by contamination with mustard gas and lewisite, all of which
led to substantial loss of fluid from the vascular compartment
of the circulation. This was a major factor in the ensuing fall
in blood pressure and 'shock'. However, the severity of the latter
could be reduced by applying compression bandages to the animal's
limbs or by cooling the affected region. These simple measures
turned out to be useful emergency measures in patients with incendiary
burns.
Inhalation of phosgene gas produced massive pulmonary oedema,
which resulted in severe oxygen deficiency of the arterial blood.
Again, measurements of changes in flow and protein composition
of the lymph drained from the lungs provided an index of the extent
of capillary damage. In a study performed together with Cameron,
exposure to nitrogen mustards was found to lower the concentration
of lymphocytes in blood and thoracic duct lymph. Moreover, there
was necrosis of the germinal centres of the lymph nodes and spleen,
which they considered to be the reason for the reduction in lymphocytes.
For some years after the war, this formed the rationale for using
nitrogen mustards therapeutically in certain types of lymphoma.
During this time, Courtice found an occasional call for his skills
as a respiratory physiologist. One instance was during the large
air attacks on London in 1940 and 1941, when he was asked to go
to London to determine what were adequate levels of ventilation
in the various types of air raid shelters that were in use at
the time.
After the war, the Courtices returned to Oxford, where he was
appointed Reader in Human Physiology. With the new skills he had
acquired during the war, he wanted to continue research on a whole
host of physiological questions relating to the lymphatic system.
One study, performed in collaboration with a new DPhil student,
Wilfred Simmonds, on
a Nuffield Fellowship from Queensland, examined the rates of absorption
of protein-rich fluids from the lungs and pleural cavity. Another
study was performed with a PhD student from Canada, Ramsay Gunton,
to examine the best ways of measuring blood volume during shock.
He again worked with his old chief Douglas and helped him to eliminate
one troublesome error in the Haldane ferricyanide method of blood
gas analysis, and to revise the student manual, Human Physiology.
The University of Sydney awarded Courtice a DSc in 1946 for a thesis, 'The Effects of Chemical Warfare Agents on Capillary
Permeability', based on the experimental work at Porton.
However, Courtice longed to return to Australia, which seemed
a better place to bring up his children than England, with the
continuing food rationing and general bleakness. Most of his friends
thought that his professional prospects were better in England
and advised him to remain. Indeed Courtice loved Oxford and always
regarded it as a magical place and appreciated the proximity to
intellectual giants such as Florey.
Notwithstanding, in 1948 he accepted the position of Director
of the Kanematsu Memorial Institute of Pathology at Sydney Hospital
and, with his English wife and three young children, set sail
for Australia.
Kanematsu Institute
The Kanematsu Institute was founded in 1930 from a gift to Sydney
Hospital by a Japanese exporter, to commemorate the good medical
treatment his wife had received several years earlier. In 1948,
the hospital was one of the University of Sydney's major teaching
hospitals. The Institute occupied a small narrow block of land
on the Domain-side of the hospital, with six small floors, four
of which were devoted to the hospital's clinical pathology services,
one to the research department plus hospital library, and one
to the animal house.
Courtice's predecessor as Director of the Kanematsu Institute
had been J.C. Eccles,
who had arrived in 1937 from Sherrington's laboratory in Oxford
to continue with his neurophysiological studies. He had recruited
two quite exceptional assistants, Bernard Katz and Stephen Kuffler
and, between 1939 and 1943, this group had performed a series
of brilliant experiments on the nature of synaptic transmission.
However, after a major row with the Board of the Hospital, Eccles
left Sydney in 1943 to become Professor of Physiology in Dunedin,
New Zealand.
The Board of Sydney Hospital decided not to look for a new director
till after the war. When the time eventually came, Courtice was
by far the best applicant. His task, at the age of 37, was to
rebuild the research department from scratch. Through his ten
years in Sydney, the magnificent harbour views from the Domain-side
of the building helped maintain his optimism. It was a matter
of great relief to him that Joy and the children adapted quickly
to life in Sydney. Their home in Clifton Gardens was roomy and
comfortable and in 1950 their fourth child, Gillian, was born.
Courtice very much enjoyed the relative proximity to his parents
and relatives in Bundaberg and a Christmas visit north became
an annual ritual. In Sydney, all the young research fellows shared
in the warm family atmosphere at the Courtices'. Joy Courtice
was a particularly gracious hostess and her kindness to the young
research fellows and their somewhat neglected wives was very much
appreciated.
One problem that Colin faced was the small amount of space available
for research, which was extended only towards the end of his period
in Sydney. In 1948, the research floor consisted of the hospital
library, the director's office, a small office for his secretary,
three laboratories and a preparation room. The hospital paid for
the director's salary and that of a secretary and librarian, and
there was a small sum towards the maintenance of the laboratories
but for very little else. Soon after his arrival the New South
Wales Hospitals Commission provided funds for a full-time senior
research assistant, allowing him to appoint Wilfred Simmonds,
who came to Sydney from Oxford in 1949. A more difficult task
was to persuade the hospital to establish a new Clinical Research
Department of ten beds that was closely associated with the Institute.
But he succeeded and recruited another Queenslander from Oxford,
Malcolm Whyte, to head the new department. Whyte arrived in early
1952. Courtice hoped that the clinical research department would
eventually help alter the 'town-orientated' culture of Sydney
Hospital, by boosting some of the scholarly or 'gown-orientated'
aspects of clinical practice.
In the meantime, he was mindful of Cameron's exhortation on his
departure from England, to get research activities under way as
soon as possible. A.W. Steinbeck was the first young Sydneysider
recruited to the staff as an NHMRC research fellow, and he worked
there for three years before leaving for England for further research
training. Over the next two years the sedate atmosphere of the
Institute became livelier when three more young medical graduates
joined the group as Junior NHMRC Research Fellows (Korner
and Lake from Sydney; Darian-Smith from Adelaide), together with
a young veterinary graduate, Bede Morris,
who obtained a University of Sydney Research Fellowship. Courtice's
method of dealing with inexperienced research workers was to discuss
a project with them that he hoped would interest them, show them
(or get Wilf Simmonds to show them) one or two relevant techniques,
and then leave them to fend for themselves. From time to time
he would come to the laboratory or invite one of them to his office
to discuss progress. He was certainly the least 'intrusive' of
research directors that I have ever encountered.
Over the next few years, wide-ranging experiments on the lymphatic
system were performed, mostly in animals. Some provided quantitative
information on the rates of lymphatic absorption of fluid, plasma
proteins and red cells, from the peritoneal and pleural cavities.
Others examined the role of lymphatics in the reabsorption of
red cells from the cerebro-spinal fluid. From patients with thoracic
duct fistulae, estimates were made of the daily bulk flow of lymph
and extra-vascular proteins. There were experiments on the time-course
of attaining equilibrium between plasma and lymph protein concentrations,
and how this was affected by food intake and intravenous infusions
of electrolyte solutions and vasoconstrictor drugs. Moderate levels
of arterial hypoxia were found not to increase the permeability
of the major systemic capillaries that drain into the thoracic
duct. The introduction of various electrophoretic techniques led
to the investigation of the protein fractions in plasma and lymph
in different animal species. Eventually the focus shifted towards
atherosclerosis, with investigations on the sources of some of
the lipo-protein fractions and chylomicrons and the effects of
experimental hyperlipidaemias.
Malcolm Whyte recalls an anecdote from the latter part of Courtice's
Kanematsu period, which is recounted in The Heart Foundation
Story 1958-1960 (an oral history presented by Dr Ralph Reader):
I think the Dairy Produce Board approached the Kanematsu, saying
they would be interested to consider contributing to the research.
Colin Courtice went up and down the labs, rubbing his hands and
saying 'Oh boy, we are going to get some money out of these
people', and 'we want an ultracentrifuge to do these
lipid trials' and all this sort of thing. And the day came
when two or three of the top brass of the dairy industry came
and sat in his office. But on this day Colin wasn't in the best
of moods and opened the discussion by saying: 'Well, I haven't
eaten butter for many years'. You could feel the interest
dropping through the floor. But still we went on to talk about
the research and the prospects, and about heart disease and fats
and polyunsaturates and so on. After a while one of them loosened
up and said: 'As a matter of fact I had a touch of heart
trouble 1-2 years ago and my doctor advised me to cut down on
my dairy products too'.
The story had a good outcome and they did get the ultracentrifuge!
It was a characteristic of Colin that he hated overselling his
cause.
Parenthetically, when Courtice first taught us how to cannulate
lymphatics, this was done with a glass cannula, after which one
sat for hours collecting the lymph with a Pasteur pipette and
placing it into heparinized test tubes, from time to time a fine
wire loop with powdered heparin was placed into the cannula to
prevent it from clotting. The advent of polyethylene and polyvinyl
plastic tubing made possible the performance of chronic studies
in different species and much more imaginative experimental designs,
which were fully exploited, first by Wilf Simmonds in Sydney and
later by Bede Morris in Canberra.
Cardiovascular studies were undertaken with the aid of the gas
analysers from Oxford, to determine the mechanisms by which hypoxia
increased susceptibility to pulmonary oedema. Another set of experiments
examined the mechanisms responsible for the high cardiac output
in experimental anaemia.
Courtice spent much of his time at the Kanematsu Institute in
rewriting the monograph by Drinker and Yoffey on the lymphatic
system. Yoffey had asked Courtice in 1951 to revise Drinker's
part of the book, because the latter's health was failing rapidly.
Courtice wrote most of the physiology and some of the anatomy
of the book, which was published in 1956. This helped with international
recognition of the work of the Kanematsu group, much of which
had been published in the Australian Journal of Experimental
Biology and Medical Science. Shortly before publication of
the monograph, in 1954, Courtice was elected to Fellowship of
the Australian Academy of Science.
As Director of the Kanematsu Institute, Courtice had no formal
teaching duties, but he regularly gave lectures in physiology
at the University of Sydney. He was also involved in the courses
for the Royal Australasian College of Surgeons and was an examiner
for many years for Part I of the Fellowship. In addition, he began
a series of 'Clinical Physiology' talks for the residents and
staff of Sydney Hospital, in which his young Turks were encouraged
to participate. This initiative was not well received by C.G. Lambie,
who was Professor of Medicine in the University of Sydney. Lambie
wrote a terse letter, querying the wisdom of giving a course that
might differ from his own 'official' story in both information
content and interpretation.
Courtice was a member of numerous committees. These included the
Research Advisory Committee of the NHMRC, the Advisory Committee
of the Life Insurance Medical Research Fund, the Postgraduate
Committee in Medicine of the University of Sydney and the Research
Committee of the Red Cross Blood Transfusion Service. He was Honorary
Secretary of the Australian National Research Council and a member
of the Australian UNESCO Committee for Natural Science. He also
served as a member of a committee that advised the New South Wales
government to establish a second medical school in Sydney at what
is now the University of New South Wales.
The sheer number of these committees is a good measure of his
capacity for hard work and the esteem in which his advice was
held. He became friends with some of the grey eminences of Australian
medical research of the day including Sydney Sunderland,
Bill (E.V.) Keogh and
Edgar King, and this
gave him a very wide national perspective of what was going on.
One of his few visits abroad during his period at the Kanematsu
Institute, apart from to New Zealand, was a visit to Singapore
and Malaysia in 1957. This was followed by a visit to China, where
Courtice was a member of a medical delegation that included eighteen
Australian physicians and surgeons. Joy Courtice also went on
that trip and the slide shows for their friends that followed
their return home were instructive, perceptive and humorous.
In 1956 Courtice had applied for sabbatical leave, which he felt
was essential in order to keep up to date with recent advances
in medical science. This was regarded as unreasonable by the New
South Wales Hospitals Commission. After a series of bitter wrangles,
he decided in 1958 that enough was enough! He had been approached
on a number of occasions as to whether he would be interested
in taking on the chair of experimental pathology in the newly
established John Curtin School for Medical Research in Canberra,
after Florey's decision to turn this down. He had not been keen
because of what had been achieved at the Institute during the
previous decade, which he later referred to as his 'golden age'.
He was proud of the success of the Clinical Research Department
under Malcolm Whyte, which had helped pioneer renal dialysis and
coronary care units in Australia. However, in 1958, he suddenly
decided that it was time to go to Canberra. The Australian National
University agreed to allow him to spend a few months visiting
some of the major research centres in Britain, Europe and the
United States before moving to Canberra.
The John Curtin School of Medical Research
Courtice was Head of the Department of Experimental Pathology
from 1958 to 1974. He had asked Bede Morris, who was by far his
most gifted disciple in his own field of research, to join him
as Senior Fellow in the new department. Morris had just spent
three years at Oxford with Florey and accepted the offer with
enthusiasm. Morris arrived in Canberra late in 1958. Courtice
arrived early in 1959 and lived with the Morrises in Canberra
for a few months, whilst Joy was supervising the sale of the house
in Sydney and the builders were completing their new residence
on State Circle. Another person who accompanied him to Canberra
was Jack Harding, the highly competent head technician at the
Kanematsu Institute, who became chief technician of the new department
in Canberra and remained there throughout Courtice's reign.
The move to Canberra meant starting another department, but this
time the circumstances were entirely different from any he had
encountered previously. Now there was enough space and money for
staff and equipment to allow him to do exactly what he wanted. As in Sydney, Courtice gave his staff their head in
research and this 'laissez-faire' approach appears to have been
popular (1). Where it paid off most was that it allowed Bede Morris
to embark on new and original approaches to immunology and lymphatic
physiology. In many ways, during the first decade of Courtice's
reign. Morris's work was the jewel in the crown of the department's
research effort (2). In 1971, with Courtice's blessing, the University
invited Morris to form an autonomous Department of Immunology.
Courtice's own work extended his earlier studies on the transport
and diffusion of macromolecules. New projects included work on
vascular injury, particularly in relation to atherogenic stimuli
and collaborative studies with several distinguished scientists
from overseas who chose to spend their sabbaticals in his department.
These included Paul Nicoll, Don Zilversmit and Norman Staub, all
from the United States, and Bunsuke Osogoe from Japan. His Australian
collaborators, apart from Morris, included Lafferty, Lascelles,
W.J. Cliff, Simpson-Morgan, McCullagh, Redgrave, R. Fraser, D.G.
Garlick, J.W. Quin, J.C. Roberts, Stehbens, T.J. Heath, Schoefl,
West and Brandon. During his time in Experimental Pathology, the
university awarded forty PhD's and several other higher degrees
to scholars from the department. In 1969/70 Yoffey spent a year
in Canberra and together they completely rewrote their book, Lymphatics,
Lymph and the Lymphomyeloid Complex. This was more authoritative
than the 1956 monograph and included reference to the important
findings and techniques emanating from Canberra.
Courtice was a regular visitor to international conferences and
was often asked as an invited speaker. As chairman of the Australian
National Committee for Physiological Sciences, he represented
Australia at the international physiological congresses in Tokyo
(1965) and in Washington (1968). Following the Tokyo meeting,
he attended an international symposium in New Orleans to honour
H.S. Mayerson, the doyen of American lymphatic physiologists.
At this meeting, Courtice played a leading role in establishing
the International Society of Lymphology. In 1973, at the meeting
in Tucson, he received the Society's prize for the best scientific
paper published in its journal Lymphology. The new society
tended to go to rather exotic places, to keep up the interest
of its members. One meeting was in Rio de Janeiro and Courtice
was fond of recalling that at the dinner a troupe of dancing girls
was showing off the Samba to the members, with little reaction
from the audience. That is, until the leader of the troupe, a
beautiful girl clad in very little, dragged Colin on to the floor
to dance the Samba with her. As he was the oldest and, as he put
it, most sedate member of the party, the audience gave a mighty
roar of approval and all joined in on the dance floor to a hilarious
evening.
When Courtice took up his appointment in Canberra, there were
no clinical research activities in the John Curtin School. This
was in accordance with Florey's plan to emphasize basic medical
sciences. Courtice believed that this was no longer appropriate
and played a major role in the establishment of the Department
of Clinical Science in the School. In 1966, Malcolm Whyte became
the Foundation Professor and soon built up a strong group with
interests in atherosclerosis, metabolic disorders and selected
aspects of cardiovascular epidemiology. Interestingly, after Courtice's
departure from the Kanematsu Institute, Malcolm Whyte had been
appointed Director of Medical Research, in contrast to Courtice's
appointment as director of the entire institute. In other words,
the hospital board had fragmented the administration of this already small institution by separating its research and service functions.
Courtice served for many years on the Board of the Canberra Hospital
and the new academic unit owed much to his moderating influence
in another 'town-orientated' institution. He hoped that the Department
of Clinical Science would be the vanguard of a new type of Australian
medical school, where the students would not only receive excellent
clinical teaching, but could be fired up by their contacts with
research scientists from all departments of the John Curtin School.
He was much involved in a government advisory committee, to make
out a case for such a development. To his great disappointment,
when the decision was made in 1973 by the Universities Commission,
community medicine won and Newcastle and Townsville were recommended
ahead of Canberra.
Courtice served on many other national and international committees.
On the national scene, he served on the Council of the Australian
Academy of Science and was Vice-President in 1965-66. In 1959-60
he served on a committee charged with establishing the National
Heart Foundation and subsequently was for many years a member
of the Foundation's National Medical and Scientific Advisory Committee.
From 1965 to 1973, he was chairman of the National Radiation Committee,
which advised the Prime Minister on biological aspects of radiation.
On the international scene, he was Australian delegate at UNESCO
in 1962 and 1964 and on each occasion he stayed in Paris for six
weeks.
In 1973, Courtice became Acting Director of the John Curtin School,
following Frank Fenner's
term as Director. He had previously been in this position in 1967
when Hugh Ennor had
resigned to become Secretary to the Commonwealth Depart-ment of
Education and Science. However, on becoming Director of the School
in November 1974, he relinquished the position of Head of the
Department of Experimental Pathology. He also became Howard Florey
Professor of Medical Research the first time that this title
was conferred on the Director of the School. His period as Director
appears to have been uneventful and he retired from the position
in December 1976. At the 'Festschrift' held in 1980 to commemorate
his 70th birthday, the general comment was that he had been a
good director and an effective and scrupulously fair administrator.
After his retirement in December 1976, the Courtices returned
to Sydney and settled in St Ives. He accepted appointment as Visiting
Professor in the School of Physiology and Pharmacology at the
University of New South Wales, where he contributed to the undergraduate
teaching. He generally came in once a week to attend the departmental
seminars and often to talk to members of the staff, including
his daughter Gillian of whom he was very proud.
As always, he was involved in much committee work. He was chairman
of an Australian Academy of Science committee to report on possible
adverse effects on health, of lead in the environment, which was
published in 1981 and led to considerable changes in governmental
policy. In 1980, he was the Academy's nominee on a committee to
advise the Commonwealth Minister for Veterans Affairs on the possible
long-term effects on health of 'Agent Orange' and other herbicides
that were used in the war in Vietnam. In 1983, he was treasurer
for the successful 29th International Union of Physiological Sciences
Congress held in Sydney, at the University of New South Wales.
In 1985, he was very pleased to be elected Honorary President
for the 1985 Congress of the International Society of Lymphology.
When the Australian and New Zealand Microcirculation was formed
in 1987, Courtice became its first president. He held the position
for six years and took a keen interest in the society's scientific
activities.
The last years of his life involved him in a long-drawn out struggle
with prostatic cancer, with periods of pain and sickness that
he bore calmly, with a minimum of fuss. He was as always, interested
in the day-to-day activities of his family and grandchilden and
visits from some of his old friends. His trips to the University
became less frequent, but he still attended seminars that he thought
would interest him. The unexpected death of Bede Morris in a motor
car accident in 1988 was a great sorrow to him and the moving
tribute he wrote about his friend conveys a great sense of national
and personal loss. ['Bede Morris, 1927-1988',
Hist. Rec. Aust. Sci., 8 (1989), 15-36]
Summing up
Colin Courtice's return to Sydney from Oxford in 1948 came at
a time when biomedical research in Sydney was at a particularly
low ebb. The research vacuum was much greater than in Melbourne,
where the Walter and Eliza Hall Institute and the Baker Medical
Research Institute were firmly established. Courtice's laboratory
at the Kanematsu Institute provided a niche for young local graduates
keen to do research. Courtice understood the sociology of medical
research much better than other Sydney-siders and knew that in
order to improve matters, one had to cater for young research
workers and give them self-confidence. He understood intuitively
that the esprit de corps of an interacting research group strengthened
its overall intellectual output, and this probably accounted for
much of the success of his small band from the Kanematsu Institute.
At the John Curtin School he was happy to shoulder administrative
responsibilities to allow his younger colleagues to get on with
the job of science, but he was also a good international ambassador
for Australian science. He strongly believed that young would-be
scientists who wished to try themselves out had to be allowed
to sink or swim. He took great pride that so many of his 'survivors'
have made their mark on Australia's universities and on international
science. Malcolm Whyte has described his contribution to Australian
science as 'crossing boundaries' not just those of his beloved
capillary membrane but those between disciplines, between clinic
and laboratory and between local and international scientific
communities (3).
Acknowledgements
I am greatly indebted to Mrs Joy Courtice and to Gillian Courtice
for allowing me to study some of Colin Courtice's personal writings.
In addition, I am indebted to Peter Bishop, Malcolm Whyte, Wally
Cliff and David Garlick for their comments and observations.
Professional milestones
Frederick Colin Courtice, MA, DPhil (Oxon), DSc (Syd), LRCP (Lond),
MRCS (Eng), FRCPA, FRACS (Hon), FRACP, FAA. Born in Bundaberg,
26 March 1911: died in Sydney, 29 February 1992.
-
1929-1933 Medical student, University of Queensland (1929) and
University of Sydney
-
1932 BSc (Honours Class I) in Physiology and University Medal,
University of Sydney
-
1933 Queensland Rhodes Scholar
-
1933-1935 New College Oxford, worked in Laboratory of Physiology
-
1935 DPhil (Oxon)
-
1935-1937 Completed clinical training at London Hospital; won
Haking Prize in Gynaecology and Obstetrics
-
1937 LRCP, MRCS
-
1937-1938 Beit Memorial Fellow for Medical Research, Oxford
-
1939-1940 Nuffield Research Scholar in Surgery, Oxford
-
1940-1945 Senior Experimental Officer Chemical Defence Research
Station Porton, U.K.
-
1945-1948 Reader in Human Physiology, University of Oxford; Lecturer,
New College
-
1945 Awarded MA (Oxon)
-
1946 Awarded DSc, University of Sydney
-
1948-1958 Director, Kanematsu Memorial Institute of Pathology, Syney Hospital
-
1952 Elected Honorary Fellow of the Royal Australasian College
of Surgeons
-
1954 Elected Fellow of the Australian Academy of Science
-
1955 Elected Foundation Fellow of the Royal College of Pathologists
of Australia
-
1958-1974 Foundation Professor of Experimental Pathology, John
Curtin School of Medical Research, Australian National University
-
1960 FRACP
-
1974-1976 Director, John Curtin School of Medical Research and
Howard Florey Professor of Medical Research
-
1977 Emeritus Professor, Australian National University
-
1977-1992 Visiting Professor, School of Physiology & Pharmacology,
University of New South Wales
Notes
(1) Morris, B., 'F.C. Courtice', in Festschrift for F.C. Courtice, ed. D. Garlick (Sydney: University of New South Wales, School
of Physiology and Pharmacology, 1981), pp. 1-9.
(2) Morris, B., 'The evolution of experimental approaches to studying aspects of lymphatic physiology', Ibid,. pp. 234-244.
(3) Whyte, H.M., 'Crossing boundaries: Voluntary modifications
of autonomic functions', Ibid., pp. 102-111.
P.I. Korner, Woolwich, NSW, Australia.
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