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Home > About the Academy > Biographical memoirs
BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIRS
Robert Ford Whelan 1922-1984
By W.E. Glover
This memoir was originally published in Historical Records of Australian Science, vol.6, no.3, 1986.
Robert Ford Whelan was
born in Belfast on 22 December, 1922. His father, Robert Henry
Whelan, born in Dublin of Kilkenny parentage, was the youngest
of seven children as was his mother, Dorothy Ivy Whittington,
who was born in Shanklin, Isle of Wight. His paternal grandfather,
father and all but one paternal uncle were civil servants in the
Imperial Civil Service in Dublin. On the formation of the Irish
Free State in 1922, his father, being Protestant, transferred
to the newly-formed Government of Northern Ireland and served
in Customs and Excise and Finance, becoming Registrar in the Ministry
of Finance before retirement (about 1966). Bob in later years
was proud to attribute his own systematic and tidy habits to his
father's example. His mother died in 1964 and his father in 1974.
Bob not only inherited these habits but was also motivated by
admiration for his father and a desire to emulate him. He also
had great affection for his mother. Each year the family went
to the Isle of Wight to spend the long Civil Service vacation
with his mother's relatives. These holidays were an important
and happy aspect of his upbringing and ensured that his mother's
Englishness played a part in the formation of his character. He
had a breadth of outlook and a tolerance of other men's beliefs
which stemmed from this mix of cultures within his own family.
When asked which part of Ireland he came from he would say, 'I
was conceived in the South and born in the North', and if asked
more generally where he was from the answer would be 'I have an
Irish father, an English mother and a Scottish wife'. He had one
brother called Norman just one year younger. They looked alike
and were sometimes assumed to be twins. However, as they grew
up their paths diverged and though fond of each other they were
very dissimilar and did not have much in common. Norman also died
suddenly, but at the even younger age of 42 in 1966. He was a
BSc in Electrical Engineering and worked in research for the Marconi
company.
Bob Whelan married Helen Elizabeth MacDonald Hepburn (Betty) on
31 July, 1951. Betty's father, John Hepburn, was the Managing
Director of an engineering company in Belfast but he and her mother,
Helen (née MacDonald) were born and bred in Scotland. They
had three children. Robert John, currently lecturer in Biological
Science at the University of Wollongong, was born in London in
1952, Elizabeth Janet, was born in Belfast in 1954. The youngest,
Jack Henry, was born in Adelaide in 1960.
Bob was educated at Bloomfield Collegiate School and Knock Grammar
School in Belfast and, at first intending to follow in the family
tradition, commenced a course in preparation for the Civil Service
Entrance Examination. However, when war broke out in 1939, perhaps
because of an interest in first aid awakened by his growing involvement
with the scout movement, he decided to enrol in the Faculty of
Medicine at the Queen's University of Belfast. Although this necessitated
studying chemistry and physics for the first time, he matriculated
in March 1940 and commenced the medical course in September of
that year.
Professor Henry Barcroft was Head of the Department of Physiology
at that time, and Bob came into association with him firstly in
connection with the formation of a first aid post in the University,
and secondly when he volunteered as a subject for experiments
being carried out by Barcroft on the effects of hypoxia. He was
also a volunteer for experiments conducted by Dr. W.G. Allen on
the cardiovascular effects of amphetamine and ephedrine. However,
while he was very interested in the experiments being carried
out, and greatly influenced by Barcroft's personal interest in
his subjects and his courtly manner, he had no thought of a career
in physiology at this stage. While an undergraduate, he became
a section leader in a mobile ambulance unit, and served during
the heavy air raids on Belfast in 1941. He also found time to
run a troop of scouts, and take them on camping expeditions into
the Mourne mountains, and canoe trips on to Lough Neagh and Strangford
Lough.
On graduation in December 1946, he was appointed Resident Medical
Officer in the Belfast City Hospital, and was successively House
Surgeon in General Surgery, the Children's Surgery Unit and Gynaecology,
and House Physician in General Medicine. By the end of this year
he had decided to make a career in surgery, but before commencing
postgraduate work, signed on as a ship's surgeon with Alfred Holt
and Company. He was appointed to the M.V. Glenogle (Glen Line)
and sailed from Liverpool in January 1948 via the Far East to
Australia, returning to Belfast in September of the same year.
The Queen's University of Belfast, 1948-1957
With the intention of studying for the Primary Fellowships examination
of the Royal College of Surgeons, Whelan sought a post in physiology
at Queen's University, and was offered a half-time assistant lectureship
at a salary of £150 per annum by A.D.M. Greenfield who had
just succeeded H. Barcroft as head of the department. Greenfield
had come from St Mary's where his interest in the human circulation
had been stimulated by George Pickering and Hugo Huggett, and
he had commenced a study of the response of the human peripheral
circulation to cold in collaboration with John Shepherd who had
been appointed to a lectureship by Barcroft the previous year.
Whelan quickly became involved in assisting in these experiments.
Before the year was out, he had become fascinated by research
and, abandoning his intention to pursue a surgical career, accepted
a full-time assistant lectureship in September 1949. He later
was pleased to acknowledge that Greenfield's vigorous and critical
experimental technique, his attention to detail, his honesty of
purpose and generosity of spirit had made a considerable impression
on him, and that Shepherd's energy, drive and clarity of judgment
was an equally important influence. Their collaborative work over
three years led to the publication of eight papers on the effects
of cold on the human circulation, and three on the blood flow
in the umbilical cord of the guinea pig. However, a presage of
what was to become his special interest in the action of humoral
agents and drugs on human blood vessels was his first publication,
which was on the effects of infusions of mixtures of adrenaline
and noradrenaline on the human subject, with de Largy, Greenfield
and McCorry. Even though it meant that his name was usually last,
Whelan nearly always followed the Belfast tradition of listing
authors alphabetically .
In the department he shared a basement laboratory and office,
next to the animal house, with John Shepherd. According to John,
he displayed remarkable tolerance; his efficient organization
and filing of papers contrasting with John's scattered at random.
Even their temperature centres operated at different levels Bob,
warm even in winter, and John always cold. There was a large gas
stove and a window that opened with much effort. If John arrived
before Bob in the morning, he turned on the gas stove to the maximum
and closed the window; as soon as John left the room, Bob reversed
the process, clearly for his own preservation. Despite these differences
in their orderly approaches and climatic appreciation, their friendship
endured.
In August 1949, Whelan was the subject of an experiment in which
the effect of intravenous infusions of mixtures of adrenaline
and noradrenaline was studied. During an infusion he experienced
unexpected symptoms including pain in his chest and abdomen, and
rapidly developed an acute headache. The infusion was stopped,
but the blinding headache persisted and he commenced to vomit.
Severe cerebral congestion was diagnosed and he was admitted to
hospital. His condition improved overnight and he was discharged
the next day, but it was 10-12 days before the headache finally
disappeared. Measurements which had continued up until the infusion
stopped showed that in contrast to previous subjects his blood
pressure had risen to the high level of 230/150 mm Hg, and since
all drug doses had been double-checked the possibility that he
was hypersensitive to noradrenaline was considered. Undaunted
by his experience, Whelan insisted on putting this to the test
and the experiment was repeated four weeks later. Small doses
were tried first, and these were gradually increased until the
original amounts were being administered, but the effects were
within the normal range. Whelan therefore concluded in the description
of the incident which appeared in his M.D. thesis that an accidental
overdosage had been responsible for the reaction. As he also pointed
out, the incident also furnished first hand experience of a hypertensive
crisis as suffered by a patient with a phaeochromocytoma (a noradrenaline-producing
tumour) and for this reason was considered worthy of record.
According to Greenfield, Bob was as pleasant and enthusiastic
a colleague as it is possible to imagine. He was reliable, orderly,
generous and resourceful. He had a clear mind and the ability
to perceive and formulate simple and important questions and to
devise experiments to answer them. His desk and his experiments
were always neat and tidy. He was methodical and direct. He volunteered
for the chores and undertook more than his share of them. He had
a fine wit and humour and there was a good deal of laughter when
serious work was not in hand. On one of the long journeys to a
meeting of the Physiological Society in England, the train lights
failed. Bob, of course, just happened to have a candle in his
bag, lit it and continued to read. When examining in Cork, a candidate
applied for the rarely exercised right to be examined in Gaelic.
Bob promptly agreed, but said it would have to be Ulster Gaelic.
The candidate recoiled, and settled for English. The work in the
laboratory needed a fair amount of sterile dressings and supplies
such as needles and syringes. Bob undertook to arrange them. They
came from the City Hospital where Betty Hepburn, his future wife,
was a theatre sister.
In 1951, he was awarded the degree of M.D. with high commendation
for a thesis entitled 'Observations on the Interaction of Chemical,
Nervous, Thermal and Postural Factors in the Control of the Peripheral
Circulation'. Barcroft, who was one of the examiners of the thesis,
offered Whelan a research fellowship in the Sherrington School
of Physiology at St Thomas's Hospital, and this was taken up in
October 1951, just two months after his marriage. In London, he
investigated plasma histamine levels during adrenaline infusions
in man with J.L. Mongar and the mechanism of post-exercise and
reactive hyperaemia with A.C. Dornhorst, as well as pursuing further
studies on the effects of adrenaline and noradrenaline with Maureen
Young, H. Barcroft and P. Gaskell.
Returning to Queen's in October 1952 as lecturer in physiology
(a joint appointment between the university and the Northern Ireland
Hospitals Authority), he worked at first with Greenfield and Duff
on the mechanism of the vasodilatation produced by gas embolism,
and with Duff and Patterson on the effects of anti-histamines
on reactive hyperaemia. In 1955 he was awarded a second doctorate,
a PhD, for a thesis entitled 'Observations on the effects of certain
amines on the circulation and respiration in man.' He and John
Shepherd (who had spent the year 1953-54 at the Mayo Clinic) had
been joined in September 1954 by a recent medical graduate, Ian
Roddie. Their investigations into the peripheral circulation revealed
the role of vasomotor nerves in active vasodilatation in the skin
and the importance of reflexes arising from low pressure baroreceptors
in the control of the muscle circulation. This work resulted in
11 publications, of which eight appeared in 1957. In the same
year, Whelan also published two other papers (one with Patterson
and Shepherd and the other with Glover and Marshall) and wrote
a review on the physiology of muscle circulation. This highly
productive partnership came to an end when Shepherd returned to
the Mayo Clinic in October 1957 as Consultant in Physiology and
Professor in the Graduate School of Medicine.
During the spring of 1957, Dr Charles Best of Toronto (the insulin
co-discoverer) and his wife came to Belfast to visit the medical
school and to trace the ancestors of his wife, who was a Mahon
from Londonderry. Bob and Betty took the Bests to Londonderry
and arranged a lunch for them with the Lord Mayor. When the Bests
returned to London they chanced to meet A.P. Rowe, Vice-Chancellor
of the University of Adelaide, at the Athenaeum Club. They had
met previously in Adelaide and, hearing that Rowe was in the United
Kingdom to seek a successor to Professor Sir Stanton Hicks
who was retiring from the chair of human physiology and pharmacology,
Best said 'I have the right person for you Robert Whelan'. Rowe
telephoned Whelan, who was to recount later, 'I was taken aback.
I had a patient in the room at the time. At least I knew where
Adelaide was because of my year on the merchant ship. So I went
to see Rowe in the Athenaeum the first time I had ever entered
it to drink what he called a mug of tea with him. He told me I
was too young. Six weeks later I was offered the job.' Twenty-one
years later he was to become a member of the club.
University of Adelaide, 1958-1971
At the time of his arrival in Adelaide in January l958, the Department
of Physiology and Pharmacology was languishing; moreover, neurophysiology
was preeminent in the Australian physiological scene and cardiovascular
physiology was its poor Cinderella. Despite the bare facilities
he found on his arrival, within the first two weeks he had organized
ongoing experiments involving, of course, the measurement of blood
flow in muscle and skin. Ivan de la Lande, who took up an appointment
as senior lecturer in pharmacology a month later, found a vigorous
and stimulating research programme well under way. While they
appeared as co-authors on only five papers, Whelan acknowledged
that de la Lande's interest in autonomic pharmacology and basic
pharmacological approach were of great influence even in those
projects in which he was not directly involved, and his continued
interest and suggestions provided valuable guidance and stimulation.
At first Whelan maintained his interest in the physiological control
of the human peripheral circulation and, for example, he continued
his investigations into the mechanism of reactive and post-exercise
hyperaemia. In 1960 he was awarded the D.Sc. by Queen's University
for his collected papers on 'Studies in human physiology'. However
his interest in the action of the catecholamines, noradrenaline
and adrenaline, took him more into the realms of pharmacology.
During his 13 years in Adelaide he investigated the action of
naturally occurring hormones and autocoids such as 5-hydroxytryptamine,
angiotensin and oestrogens and of many pharmacological agents
(reserpine, bethanidine, nicotine, ephedrine, tyramine, bretylium
tosylate) on the human circulation. In doing so he contributed
to the establishment of the growing discipline of clinical pharmacology
in Australia. In addition he investigated vascular disturbances
in patients with conditions such as autonomic degeneration and
hypertension.
Part of the revitalization process he brought about was his introduction
of the B.Med.Sc.(Hons) degree into the medical course, which allowed
medical students to interrupt their studies at the end of third
year to carry out a year of research. These students augmented
the young and enthusiastic group of graduates he had attracted
to the department, and it soon became recognized as a major centre
for cardiovascular research, both in Australia and internationally.
In particular, he succeeded in attracting a succession of young
medical graduates to work with him. These included C.J. Schwartz,
S.L. Skinner, V.J. Parks, A.G. Sandison, R.L. Hodge, C.J. Cooper,
J.D. Fewings, G.C. Scroop, K.W. Brandon, J.A. Walsh, M.J.D. Hanna,
D.B. Frewin, and E.R. Lumbers. Many of these now hold eminent
academic positions but, equally important, others returned to
clinical medicine imbued with the philosophies generated during
their apprenticeship. The benefit of this to clinical medicine
in Adelaide and elsewhere in Australia cannot be overrated.
Whelan arrived in Australia at a time when research in the medical
sciences was beginning to gain momentum, and he made important
contributions on the national scene. In 1957, discussions had
taken place between V. Macfarlane,
P. Bishop, J. Eccles,
R. Wright and F. Shaw
concerning the need for an Australian Physiological Society. Whelan
joined in enthusiastically in discussions with a larger group
who were attending the 1958 meeting of ANZAAS in Adelaide. Eccles
took the chair, a draft constitution was circulated and agreement
to form a society was reached. In 1959, V. Macfarlane took on
the secretarial duties involved in planning an inaugural meeting.
This was held at the University of Sydney, 26-28 May 1960, and
Whelan was elected as one of the inaugural councillors. Because
of the close links between the two disciplines, the pharmacologists
were strongly represented in the Society from the start, although
the original name chosen was the Australian Physiological Society.
Whelan, who in an after-dinner address to the Society in 1975
was to describe himself as 'a physiologist or a pharmacologist
of sorts', was a strong- supporter of the union, and of the move
to include 'Pharmacology' in the name which was finally successful
in 1967. His contributions to the growing discipline of clinical
pharmacology was also recognized by his election as the first
president of the Australasian Society of Clinical and Experimental
Pharmacologists when it was formed in 1966. This year was marked
by his election as a Fellow of the Australian Academy of Science,
and 1967 by the publication of his book, Control of the Peripheral
Circulation in Man.
Whelan's first contribution to administration was a two year stint
as Associate Dean of the Faculty of Medicine, 1960-1961. In 1962,
he spent a sabbatical year overseas. From January to September
he was once again with Henry Barcroft at St Thomas's Hospital,
this time as visiting professor, and their work with B. Greenwood
on blood flow and venous oxygen saturation during sustained contraction
of the forearm muscles was published in the Journal of Physiology
in 1963. From September to October he was a Carnegie Travelling
Fellow in the U.S.A., and he spent November-December as a visiting
professor in the University of Southern California. Here he worked
with Professor Chester Hyman who was later to visit him in Adelaide.
The same year he was elected to Fellowship of the Royal Australasian
College of Physicians. After his return in 1967 he became progressively
more involved in administration, although there was no decline
in the output of papers from his laboratory. On the local scene,
he served as Dean of the Faculty in 1964 and 1965, and was a member
of the Standing Sub-Committee of the Education Committee of the
Professorial Board from 1963 to 1966 and chairman of the Education
Committee in 1971.
His talents as an administrator were increasingly recognized on
the national scene, and he was invited to join the advisory committee
on the establishment of a medical school in the University of
Tasmania (1964), and the Council of the newly established Flinders
University of South Australia (1966-1971). He was a consultant
for the establishment of a new medical school at the University
of Nottingham in 1969 (where his former colleague, A.D.M. Greenfield,
was foundation Dean). He also served on a number of important
State and Federal Government bodies including the Australian Drug
Evaluation Committee as an inaugural member (1963-1971) and the
Medical Research Advisory Committee of the National Health and
Medical Research Council (1966-1971). He was a member of the Board
of Directors of the Walter and Eliza Hall Institute for Medical
Research from 1968 to 1971.
University of Western Australia, 1971-1977
It was, therefore, no surprise to his colleagues when Whelan was
appointed Vice-Chancellor of the University of Western Australia
in June 1971. His appointment was at the invitation of the University
Senate and he succeeded Sir Stanley Prescott who had been the
longest serving Vice-Chancellor since the University was founded
in 1911. Never one to do anything by halves, he devoted all his
energies to his new responsibilities and was forced to drop out
of active research. Nevertheless, when he met socially with former
colleagues it was not long before the conversation would get round
to their research activities, and he could always be relied on
for helpful comments.
The 18 years of his predecessor's term had seen the university
pass through an unprecedented period of growth. Between 1953 and
1970 student numbers rose from 1,741 to over 7,500 and full-time
teaching staff increased from 115 including 16 professors to 429
including 54 professors. New faculties of Economics and Commerce,
Medicine and Architecture, with concomitant major buildings, had
been established. With acute perspicacity Whelan was quick to
realise that the heyday of unlimited government funding was drawing
to a close. He began to plan a series of changes to the university's
procedures designed to loosen the almost autocratic control over
resources of all kind held by the Vice-Chancellory.
Whelan foresaw the need for greater involvement of the academic
body in the distribution and management of resources, particularly
finance. Foremost amongst his initiatives was the setting up of
a representative group from the academic community to examine
the university's budget strategy and to advise him on budget allocation
and on financial policy matters. Following on from this was the
introduction of departmental block grants and formula funding
for teaching and research. These measures not only gave Heads
of Departments greater responsibility and flexibility in the application
of departmental resources but also removed the irksome need to
supplicate in detail for funds. In a press interview prior to
his departure for Liverpool he identified his reformation of the
pattern of government of the university as one of his main achievements.
The tradition was that of a close-knit administration, where the
Vice-Chancellor had his finger in every pie. I tried to introduce
more devolution so that the buck stopped a little bit before it
got to me. I gave departments block grants so that the best brains
in the University didn't have to spend their whole time deciding
whether or not Bloggs would get a new spectrometer.
Perhaps because of its isolation, the University of Western Australia
may have been considered one of the more conservative of Australian
universities and, as a result, did not readily answer to changes
or innovation in academic government. Whelan saw this conservative
attitude as a challenge. By the use of his ability to communicate
and engender trust and his diplomacy, he was able to have objections
set aside and achieve a number of changes in the structure that
brought a 20th-century democracy to the University. These measures
included the abolition of the appointment to permanent headships
of departments, the re-structuring of procedures for the appointment
of professors, the introduction of a promotion consultative committee
to consider cases for academic promotion at sub-professorial levels,
the issue of a manual on administrative organisation and procedures
as a means of avoiding frustrations and delays caused by submissions
being incorrectly framed or enquiries directed to the wrong section
of the administration, and the establishment of a strong Postgraduate
Student Association.
Whilst promoting a degree of decentralization he firmly believed
that the Vice-Chancellor should remain sufficiently involved in
all aspects of the University's affairs to secure the wide conspectus
necessary to enable him to take a leading part in all discussions
involving questions of major policy. He also firmly believed that
he should devote time to meeting academic staff in their departments.
A further aim was to achieve more co-ordination with the other
tertiary institutions in Perth, the Western Australian Institute
of Technology and Murdoch University, founded in 1973. While he
later was to hint that he would have liked to have gone further,
he at least succeeded in linking library and computer services
and creating joint admissions and animal breeding centres.
During his time as Vice-Chancellor in Perth, Whelan was a member
of the Tertiary Education Commission of Western Australia. He
also served on the Rhodes Scholarship Selection Committee for
the whole of this period and was a member of the Australian-Asian
Co-operative Scheme Standing Committee and the CSIRO Medical Research
Liaison Committee from 1974 to 1976. He was on the Council of
the Australian Academy of Science, 1973-1975, and acted as chairman
of its Working Party on Noise. He took particular pleasure in
the success of the University Art Collection Board which he instigated
in October 1973. This was formed by the amalgamation of the McGilvray
Bequest Committee, the Pictures Committee, the Tom Collins Memorial
Fund Committee and the Senate ad hoc Committee on the university
Art Gallery. The advantages resulting from having a single policy
when considering the purchase of works of art and exhibitions
were considerable. The supervision of the university collection
was greatly improved; it was catalogued and realistic values placed
on the pictures and artifacts for insurance purposes. Through
the Board, the University was able to encourage artistic activity
both on and off the campus. The University of Western Australia
is now justly proud of its art collection and of its gallery in
the Undercroft. It too was created at his instigation.
Whelan was 48 years of age at the time of his appointment as Vice-Chancellor
of the University of Western Australia. The Whelans had been happy
in Perth, but he was conscious of the fact that to remain until
retirement at 65 years of age would mean 17 years in one university,
a possibility that he did not wish to consider. His family were
growing up and moving away from Australia. Although this stint
as Vice-Chancellor had removed him from the research laboratory,
his undoubted administrative ability and his native Irish knack
of getting on with people was being put to good use for tertiary
education.
University of Liverpool, 1977-1984
The invitiation to be considered for appointment as Vice-Chancellor
of the University of Liverpool came at a time when he had achieved
as much as he was able in Western Australia. He had given six
years of dedicated service to the University of Western Australia
and had brought about substantial academic and administrative
development. He had exercised leadership within the University
and because of his friendship and approachability had become well
respected and admired. He had not achieved all his goals, but
he had made a substantial contribution. His appointment as Vice-Chancellor
of the University of Liverpool in succession to Dr Trevor C. Thomas
was announced in June 1976, and he took up the appointment in
Liverpool at the beginning of 1977.
It is recollected that his youngest son Jack was not anxious to
leave Western Australia and could only be prevailed upon to do
so on two grounds; first, that he be permitted to attend the same
school, in Liverpool, as the Beatles and second, that he be permitted
to return to Australia at the conclusion of his schooling. In
typical Whelan fashion both promises were honoured.
At the time Whelan left Perth, the University of Western Australia
was settled down to a period of consolidation and, like all Australian
universities, was grappling with the problem of absorbing the
standstill in expenditure imposed by the government without losing
all flexibility for new development. He was therefore well prepared
for the situation in Britain, which was to become even worse.
In Australia there had been a standstill, in the U.K. the economic
recession was to become deeper and a government onslaught on funding
began in 1981. Demographic studies had shown that student numbers
were to fall rapidly by the late 1980s, and the government decided
that universities would have to contract and reorganise themselves
in order to be able to meet the needs and opportunity of new development.
Whelan quickly developed a reputation for applying the painful
but necessary economies with skill and fairness. He achieved this
by visiting each department, many of them twice, where he spent
time with the staff listening to their problems and getting to
understand their anxieties and hopes. The personal contacts he
thus established gave him an effective basis for fairly assessing
the competing demands. Although he was the first Vice-Chancellor
of the University to have a scientific background, he was equally
concerned to safeguard the arts-based subjects at this time of
shrinking resources. There was one principal condition if a department
were to gain his full respect and support, and that was to demonstrate
a wholehearted zest for the advancement of knowledge. In this
way, he managed to win the confidence and support of students
and staff at all levels, and greatly improved their morale.
Most important of all, as Professor A.S. King was later to acknowledge
in his tribute on behalf of the Senate of the University, he showed
great foresight in recognizing from the outset the vital importance
which research would come to play. When he first arrived, the
record of the University in the competition for external grants
for research was not good. Because of his untiring efforts to
stimulate research, external funding was greatly increased. This
was a timely resurgence because of the government's subsequent
decision to redistribute funding in favour of those universities
with the best achievements in research. Characteristically, he
avoided making intemperate public statements and imposing hasty,
precipitate solutions. He developed a corporate strategy that
was fair and flexible, and avoided irrevocable damage to faculties
and departments. By being seen to lay down the groundwork for
eventual regrowth he ensured that the University would come through
the difficult period with its morale high, and with all sectors
in the University combining in their determination to achieve
the best possible future for Liverpool.
Conscious of the important lead a major civic university could
give to the city and region in which it had been established,
he encouraged fruitful association between the University and
local industry and himself set an example, serving and holding
office in many local organisations. He served the local community,
for example, as a vice-president of the Liverpool Council for
Social Services and the Merseyside Marriage Guidance Council,
and he had a particular interest in the Merseyside Enterprise
Forum, a body which had been formed to provide independent advice
to the Merseyside County Council on matters related to the economy
of the area. In 1984, he was appointed to the Board of Granada
Television.
His powers of academic leadership and his flair for patient and
firm negotiation inevitably led, as it had in Australia, to his
being asked to serve higher education at a national level, and
his influence spread far beyond Liverpool.
His notable achievements arose mainly through the Committee of
Vice-Chancellors and Principals, of which he automatically became
a member on his appointment as Vice-Chancellor in 1977. He was
appointed a member of the Committee's important General Purposes
Committee in 1978, becoming vice-chairman of the Committee itself
from 1981 to 1983, at a time when severe cuts in university financing
were causing great constraints in teaching and research. He was
also a member from 1977 to 1979 of one of the four standing committees Standing
Committee A which advises the Committee on financial matters affecting
universities, and for a further period he was a member of Standing
Committee C, the group which advises the main committee on staff
and student matters.
Whelan's major contributions to the work of the CVCP lay in the
field of medical education. Appointed deputy chairman of the Medical
Advisory Committee in 1978, he succeeded Lord Hunter as chairman
in the autumn of 1981. This is a committee of Deans of Medicine
in universities with medical schools. In his time as chairman
it had to advise the main committee on an increasing number of
complex technical matters, particularly involving the relationship
between the universities and the National Health Service. From
1981 he played a crucial role in safeguarding the interest of
universities during negotiations with the Department of Health
and Social Security and the medical profession over proposals
concerning medical manpower planning. He also succeeded Lord Hunter
as vice-chairman of the committee's Medical Sub-Committee, which
consists of the heads of all universities in the United Kingdom
with medical schools, and as chairman of the Clinical Academic
Staff Salaries Committee. This committee has to consider how best
to reflect in the salary arrangements for clinical academic staff
the decisions made by government for clinical staff in the National
Health Service. The task is difficult and complex, and it was
handled under his chairmanship with great skill, wisdom and sensitivity.
Whelan was also the Committee's nominee on the Advisory Committee
on Distinction Awards, which performs the delicate task of advising
the Secretary of State for Social Services and the Secretaries
of State for Scotland and Wales on which NHS consultants and community
physicians should receive awards for distinction.
In May 1977 he was appointed alternative to Dr R.E. (later Lord)
Hunter as representative of the CVCP on the Council for Postgraduate
Medical Education which has the responsibility of co-ordinating
and stimulating the organisation and development of postgraduate
medical and dental education in England and Wales. He was appointed
a full member in place of Lord Hunter in October 1978, and in
September 1980 succeeded Lord Richardson as chairman.
Although he was regarded by other members of the CVCP as the acknowledged
expert in all aspects relating to medical education, his influence
did not confine itself to that area, and his counsel on general
matters relating to higher education was always sought and valued
by his colleagues. This was particularly so when he held wide
responsibilities as vice-chairman of the whole committee.
He served as a member of the Review Body on Higher Education in
Northern Ireland a place for which he never lost his affection from
1978 to 1981. This group was set up by Lord Melchett, the then
Minister with responsibility for education in Northern Ireland.
It sat under the chairmanship of Sir Henry Chilver, and its terms
of reference were 'to consider the present provision of higher
education in Northern Ireland, to review both the general and
the particular needs of the Northern Ireland community in the
1980's and 1990's for higher education (including advanced further
education); and to make recommendations'. The period during which
the review was conducted was one of considerable change in Northern
Ireland and in the United Kingdom generally. Cuts in public expenditure
had put increasing pressures on higher education, and there had
been special problems stemming from civil unrest in the province.
In its report, the group recommended that within Northern Ireland
the range of higher education institutions should ensure a geographical
spread, should deploy resources flexibly and should offer a diversity
of forms of provision, and strong co-ordinating machinery should
be established to achieve these aims. Whilst it accepted the role
being played by the Queen's University of Belfast (established
as one of the Queen's Colleges in Ireland in 1845) and the Ulster
Polytechnic in the higher education sector it considered that
the New University of Ulster, founded in 1965, had not in general
proved attractive to young and well qualified students. The report
therefore concluded that the New University of Ulster should develop
a new role with a particular concern with mature students and
distance learning. Coinciding with the publication of the Review
Group's report the government issued a policy statement on the
future structure of higher education in Northern Ireland. While
it shared the Group's desire to retain a major higher education
base outside Belfast it rejected its proposal for a new role for
the New University of Ulster. Instead, it accepted one of the
other options that the Review Group had considered, namely that
the New University of Ulster and the Ulster Polytechnic should
merge, thus forming a basis for a new split-site University which
could provide the geographical and academic spread of provision
which was required. The radical step of creating a new university
was accomplished in October 1984 when the University of Ulster
came into being. During the period 1978-1980 the Review Group
also carried out a view of teacher training. It concluded that
teacher education in Northern Ireland should be reviewed as an
integrated part of the total higher education system. Its future
structure must be flexible and capable of adjusting readily to
newly defined needs in terms both of numbers and styles. One of
its recommendations on the need for rationalization led to the
amalgamation of St Mary's and St Joseph's Colleges of Education
to form a co-educational single voluntary college.
On the European scene Whelan was a leading figure in the development
of the machinery to facilitate the movement of members of the
medical profession in the Community in his capacity as the U.K.
universities' member, from 1978, of the EEC Advisory Committee
on Medical Training. This body was established following the acceptance
of medical directives within the Community regarding the mutual
recognition of qualifications. In international matters generally
Professor Whelan's advice and wisdom was widely appreciated. He
was a member of the British Council's Standing Committee for International
Co-operation in Higher Education (CICHE) which was founded following
the incorporation of the Inter-University Council for Higher Education
Overseas (later IUPC) with the British Council. In 1981 he was
elected to the Council of the Association of Commonwealth Universities
as one of the four members representing U.K. universities. As
a member of council he travelled to the West Indies in 1982 for
the annual meeting and to Birmingham in 1983 when the Annual Council
Meeting was held in conjunction with the Association's 13th Quinquennial
Congress. In November 1983 he was elected vice-chairman of the
Association and as such attended the Council meeting in Sri Lanka
in 1984, and chaired meetings of the Executive Committee in the
U.K. when the overseas chairman was absent. He was re-elected
for a further year in November 1984, shortly before his death.
The Whelans remembered their emigration to Australia in 1957 as
a tremendously exciting and stimulating experience. They had been
very happy there, both in Adelaide and Perth, and they left with
considerable sadness. Nevertheless, they found the return to Great
Britain equally exciting and re-invigorating. The Vice-Chancellor's
Lodge in Liverpool was a gracious house and contained many beautiful
antiques. Domestic and gardening help was provided. Throughout
their married life they had enjoyed entertaining and found the
formal dinner party their favorite form of relaxation. In Liverpool
they were able to enjoy this pastime in style, and entertained
not only royalty and politicians, notable academics and citizens,
but staff from all levels of the university and many students.
Soon after arriving in Liverpool in 1977 they bought a black and
white cottage-style house in Tarporley in Cheshire, parts of which
dated back to the 17th century. From then on Bob's exercise whenever
he could get there at the weekend was walking briskly behind the
motor mower. The perfectionist in him delighted in his shapely
lawn and became anxious if he was unable to keep it looking beautiful.
They enjoyed exploring the towns of Chester and Nantwich, visiting
museums and antique shops and furnishing the cottage with old
oak furniture. They read about the battles of the Civil War fought
on the Cheshire plain, and one of their proudest possessions was
a cannon ball found in their garden.
In February 1978, they also bought a small pied-a-terre in Conway
Street, London, Wl. As he became increasingly involved on the
national scene, the Whelans found themselves spending more and
more time in the little flat, doing their entertaining at the
Athanaeum of which he was now a member, and less and less time
at their cottage. In 1981 they decided to sell both and buy a
larger apartment in Devonshire Place, London, in which they could
entertain and which would be their home after retirement. In place
of the garden, Bob grew roses in tubs on the roof, but they had
compensation of access to opera, the theatre and concerts which
they loved. Bob discovered in himself a great love for classical
music and he listened to tapes on a Sony walkman in bed, in the
train, and when walking (as often as possible). He had a huge
collection of tapes. Apart from that, his main interest was in
people. He believed that his voyages to the Far East and Australia
had been of great importance in widening his horizon, and he liked
to talk to everyone students, gardeners, professors, cleaners.
This was of course also part of his job but he made no distinction
between his job and his pleasure.
In June 1981, he was elected to the Freedom of the Worshipful
Society of Apothecaries of London, and as such was admitted to
the Freedom of the City in 1982. Thereafter when asked what he
planned to do in his retirement he would say that he would exercise
his right and drive a flock of sheep over London Bridge. Once,
when asked by a colleague what he did when not working, Bob had
replied, 'I sleep'. In spite of his calm and unruffled appearance
he indeed worked almost continuously at high pressure, and had
been hypertensive for some years. Betty was always anxious about
this and, recognising that there was only three more years to
his retirement, suggested that a break of three months would give
him the refreshment and rest which would enable him to enjoy the
rest of his time. The University granted him long service leave,
creating a precedent since followed by other universities in the
United Kingdom, and the Whelans travelled to Australia at the
beginning of 1984. The principal reason was to see their son,
Robert (a lecturer in biological sciences at the University of
Wollongong) and his wife, Anna. Bob, however, also took the opportunity
to visit his old department in Adelaide and to meet his former
colleagues both there and in Perth. In Adelaide he also delivered
the Florey Memorial Lecture for 1984 and on the way back to England
attended the council meeting of the Association of Commonwealth
Universities which was held in Sri Lanka.
He died suddenly in Liverpool on 21 November 1984. He had been
talking to a meeting of students about government proposals to
cut student grants when he collapsed and fell in the foyer of
Senate House. The meeting was in no way acrimonious. The students
asked him why he would not appear on television to support them.
His reply, 'Because I am not sufficiently photogenic', were his
last words and perhaps his first untruth.
Scientific Achievements
Whelan's scientific career spanned the 23 years from 1948 to 1971
and resulted in 96 scientific publications. All but six were concerned
with the control of the human peripheral circulation and involved
studies on normal subjects, usually the investigators themselves
and student volunteers, or patients. These studies in man are
of particular significance for, unlike experiments on animals,
they were performed under physiological conditions on conscious
subjects, uninfluenced by the effects of general anaesthesia.
A further advantage was that the subject was able to participate,
for example by performing voluntary exercise, and this enabled
many experiments to be carried out which would not have been possible
with animals.
The experiments often required the insertion of needles or catheters
into arteries or veins either for the infusion of drugs or the
measurement of pressure, or the use of other invasive procedures
such as the injection of local anaesthetic in order to produce
regional nerve blocks. Accordingly, team work was essential and
most of Whelan's publications were collaborative, but there can
be no doubt as to the importance of his contribution in every
one. In most experiments, venous occlusion plethysmography was
used to measure blood flow to the forearm or hand. While this
remains the most reliable quantitive method in man, it measures
the total flow to the segment enclosed in the plethysmography.
Although the forearm is composed mainly of muscle, previous investigators
had recognised not only that it included a significant skin component,
but that the vascular beds in muscle and skin often react differently
to the same stimulus, and were subject to separate control mechanisms.
Other workers had therefore used techniques such as the suppression
of the skin circulation by iontophoresis of a vasoconstrictor
in order to distinquish between the two components, but many of
the important advances made by Whelan and his colleagues, Roddie
and Shepherd, were the result of their perfection of the 'oxygen
saturation technique'. This involved frequent and simultaneous
sampling of blood from superficial veins draining skin and deep
veins draining muscle; provided there was no change in oxygen
consumption by the tissues, changes in blood flow were reflected
by similar directional changes in the oxygen saturation of the
effluent venous blood. They were thus able to follow, at least
qualitatively, changes in the muscle and skin components while
at the same time measuring total flow by plethysmography. The
skilful use of this technique played an important part in what
were this group's most outstanding contributions, that is, the
definition of the role of vasoconstrictor and vasodilator components
in the nervous control of skin blood vessels, and of the demonstration
of the role of low pressure baroreceptors in the reflex control
of muscle vessels. However, Whelan made many other contributions
which advanced understanding in every other area of peripheral
circulatory control, ranging from the role of hormones and neurotransmitters
to that of local factors such as metabolic activity of the tissues
and temperature. In addition, he developed a special interest
in studying the effects on the human circulation not only of naturally
occurring autocoids such as 5-hydroxytryptamine and angiotensin,
but of a wide range of vasoactive pharmacological agents. In many
of these studies involving drugs, the results gave insight into
physiological mechanisms, as well as providing therapeutically
useful information.
Nervous control of skin blood vessels
Roddie, Shepherd and Whelan confirmed and extended the finding
of previous workers that the increase in forearm blood flow during
general body heating was confined to skin vessels. In particular,
they showed that after an initial rise in skin blood flow which
could be accounted for by the release of sympathetic vasoconstrictor
tone, flow increased to a level greater than that after acute
nerve block and hence was due to an active vasodilatation. Further,
a cholinergic mechanism was involved since atropine reduced the
vasodilatation. Whelan et al. therefore concluded that in contrast
to the hand, where dilatations in response to body heating can
be explained by the release of vasoconstrictor tone, both vasoconstrictor
and cholinergic vasodilator nerves contribute to the response
in the forearm. However, since the active vasodilatation was accompanied
by sweating which is known to cause the appearance of the vasodilator
polypeptide, bradykinin, in the subcutaneous space, Whelan acknowledged
that it could be explained by activation of sympathetic fibres
innervating sweat glands. Whether or not there are also cholinergic
vasodilator fibres directly innervating the blood vessels in forearm
skin still remains to be elucidated.
Nervous control of muscle blood vessels
The same technique was used to show that the fall in forearm blood
flow which occurred when a subject was tilted from the horizontal
to the vertical head-up position was due to an increase in vasoconstrictor
tone in muscle vessels. Tilting the subject into the head-down
position had the opposite effect, and even the passive raising
of the legs was sufficient to decrease vasoconstrictor tone. In
a series of elegant experiments, Whelan and his colleagues showed
that this change was dependent on the shift of blood into the
trunk. Since there was no change in arterial pressure but both
mean and pulsatile venous pressure increased, they concluded that
the stimulation of baroreceptors in the low pressure area of the
intrathoracic vascular bed was responsible for the reflex changes
in response to postural adjustments in man. This is an important
finding since there is evidence that in man, in contrast to animals,
muscle blood vessels do not participate in arterial baroreceptor
reflexes. Whelan postulated that the reflex dilatation in response
to an increase in venous return lowers peripheral resistance and
hence permits an increase in cardiac output without much change
in arterial pressure. This avoids arterial baroreceptor stimulation
which would tend to slow the heart.
Adrenaline
This hormone, which is released from the adrenal medulla at times
of stress, increases the rate and output of the heart and causes
vasoconstriction in the skin of all species which have been studied.
Given intravenously in man, adrenaline causes a sustained increase
in forearm blood flow, but when given by intra-arterial infusion
it causes only a transient increase followed by a return to or
below the resting level. This difference led Whelan initially
to conclude that the dilatation produced by intravenous adrenaline
was an indirect effect and, since it was still present after nerve
block or sympathectomy he postulated initally that it was due
to the release of another vasodilator hormone. However, the use
of drugs which blocked the vasoconstrictor effects of adrenaline
(mediated by alpha-adrenoceptors) along with oxygen saturation
measurements revealed that while adrenaline constricted skin vessels,
its effect on muscle vessels was a balance between direct vasoconstrictor
and vasodilator components. Accordingly, the effect of adrenaline
on total forearm flow depended on the level of skin blood flow
at the time of the infusion. When the skin flow was high, as in
hot subjects, the skin vasoconstriction masked any vasodilatation
in the underlying muscle; conversely, the vasodilator action was
best reflected in change in total flow when the skin flow was
low, as in cold subjects. In other experiments, Whelan showed
that the vasodilator action was not due to the release of histamine,
nor could it be explained by the release of lactic acid. While
it now appears that the discrepancy between the intra-arterial
and intravenous effects of adrenaline is due to the effect that
the route of administration has on the concentration of drug which
arrives in the forearm and to the lower threshold of the beta-adrenoceptors
responsible for vasodilatation, Whelan's detailed analysis of
the action of adrenaline remains an invaluable contribution to
our understanding of the peripheral circulatory effects of this
important hormone.
Noradrenaline
Whelan also resolved much of the conflict concerning the action
of noradrenaline the neurotransmitter released at most sympathetic
nerve endings on muscle blood vessels. As with adrenaline, its
effect on forearm blood flow depended on its route of administration.
While intra-arterial infusions caused a fall in forearm flow,
intravenous infusions were variously reported to cause an increase,
a decrease or little change. Barcroft and Whelan investigated
this in some detail and found that intravenous noradrenaline caused
an initial transient increase of variable size in most subjects,
followed by a return to the testing level or a slight sustained
increase. After acute nerve-block or sympathectomy, however, intravenous
noradrenaline caused only a sustained decline. They concluded
that noradrenaline has two opposing effects a direct constrictor
action and an indirect dilator action mediated by release of vasoconstrictor
tone. Whelan later accounted for the variability of the response
by showing that, as with adrenaline, the pattern of response of
total flow was influenced by the initial level of skin blood flow.
Local Factors
Many investigators have sought an explanation for the mechanism
of the increase in flow which follows a period of circulatory
arrest (reactive hyperaemia) or of muscular exercise (post-exercise
hyperaemia). Neither vasomotor nerves nor vasodilator hormones
can account for these responses and the hyperaemias have been
attributed to changes which occur locally in the tissues themselves in
particular, the accumulation of vasodilator metabolites. Hypoxia
has been suggested as a contributor, but Dornhorst and Whelan
showed that this was unlikely, since the hyperaemia in the calf
following either circulatory arrest or exercise was not affected
by breathing a low oxygen mixture. Whelan also provided evidence
that neither carbon dioxide, lactic acid, histamine nor the changes
which occur in transmural pressure made any important contribution
to post-exercise hyperaemia.
In contrast, Whelan showed that a myogenic response to the drop
in intravascular pressure appears to make some contribution to
reactive hyperaemia, since packing the forearm with blood by exposure
to sub-atmospheric pressure before the period of circulatory arrest
reduced the size of the subsequent hyperaemia. Whelan also concluded
that histamine release made some contribution to reactive hyperaemia
since the response to long periods of circulatory arrest was reduced
by the intra-arterial infusion of antihistamines. Many investigators
had drawn attention to the relationship between the duration and
severity of the exercise or the duration of circulatory arrest
to the size of the subsequent hyperaemia. However, Dornhorst and
Whelan concluded from the results of experiments in which blood
flow through the muscles was reduced by application of external
pressure that in neither case was there a quantitative debt-repayment
relationship, and that vascular dilatation can pass off before
the normal repayment is made. Whelan concluded that while an increased
rate of muscle blood flow was not essential for the recovery of
the tissue after a period of circulatory arrest or exercise, the
rate of recovery is dependent on the blood flow and that the purpose
of the high flow in normal circumstances is to return the tissues
to the resting state as quickly as possible.
While investigating the local effects of carbon dioxide, Duff,
Greenfield and Whelan observed that the intra-arterial injection
of a small volume of any gas produced a long lasting vasodilatation
in the forearm. The effect was not seen when equivalent amounts
of gas dissolved in saline were injected, and they concluded that
the vasodilatation was related to the physical presence of gas
emboli in the microvessels rather than to any chemical properties
of the gas. In patients with occlusive arterial disease the dilatation
produced by gas embolism was much more prolonged than that after
intra-arterial infusion of vasodilator drugs, but unfortunately
the clinical response was no better. Whelan excluded the possibility
that the vasodilatation was due to release of histamine, but the
mechanism of this most interesting phenomenon remains unknown.
Autocoids and vasoactive drugs
Whelan's systematic studies of the peripheral vascular actions
of a number of autocoids and vasoactive drugs not only extended
observations that had been made in animals to man, but in many
instances threw new light on the mechanisms involved. In particular,
his detailed analysis of the action of angiotensin in normal,
sympathectomized and nerve blocked limbs led to the important
conclusion that although angiotensin has a direct vasoconstrictor
action, its powerful pressor effect is partly due to central stimulation
of the sympathetic nervous system. Also, his observation that
reserpine administered intra-arterially produces a long lasting
vasodilatation in both normal and sympathectomized limbs provided
evidence that this drug's hypotensive action in man may not be
entirely due to the depletion of either central or peripheral
stores of noradrenaline. Among the vasoactive drugs he studied
were alcohol and nicotine. Alcohol was known to cause skin vasodilatation
and hence a sense of warmth due to central depression of vasomotor
tone. Whelan showed by giving it intra-arterially that its direct
action was to cause vasoconstriction. With oral alcohol, although
the skin flow increased, the direct constrictor effect prevailed
in the underlying muscle, and he concluded that caution should
be exercised in advocating the use of alcohol to improve the peripheral
circulation in patients with arterial disease. He also showed
that the local vascular actions of nicotine were more complicated
than had formerly been believed, and was a balance between a direct
vasodilator action on the blood vessel and a weaker indirect sympathomimetic
effect.
Bob Whelan spent more than half his academic life in Australia.
His many scientific contributions are passing the test of time,
and he is remembered by several generations of undergraduates
as a gifted teacher, He attracted many graduate students with
his infectious enthusiasm for research, and even those who returned
to clinical medicine benefited greatly from their time with him.
He had an exceptionally keen and enquiring mind, but self-discipline
was probably his key to success in every area. Consequently he
was always well prepared and never ruffled; he appeared to have
time for everything and everbody. As an administrator, he was
renowned for accessibility fairness, good judgment and decisiveness.
Above all, he will be remembered as a warm and friendly person
who was unchanged by high office.
No record of the services Bob rendered to four universities could
be complete without mention of the contributions of his wife,
Betty, and the splendid support she provided in public as well
as in private throughout their married life. All who worked with
Bob had a sense of belonging to a family, and Betty's concern
for and interest in his students and colleagues contributed greatly
to this. Shortly before he died, he was told officially that he
was to receive a knighthood in the New Year's Honours List. This
would have been a fitting public recognition for his lifetime
of service, and although not a seeker of honours Bob must have
been pleased by the fact that this was one which would be shared
by Betty. He would have been even more pleased had he known that
her personal contributions would be recognised in 1986 by the
award of the degree of Doctor of Laws, honoris causa, by
the University of Liverpool.
Acknowledgments
In writing this biographical memoir I should like to acknowledge
the assistance of Mrs. Betty Whelan, and many of Professor Whelan's
former colleagues including Professors A.D.M. Greenfield, I.S.
de la Lande, J.T. Shepherd, W.J. Simmonds, R. Cramond, Dr. G.C.
Scroop and Mr. D. Hewson.
W.E. Glover is Professor of Physiology and
Dean of the Faculty of Medicine at the University of New South
Wales.
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