

Ryan from Medical Pioneers site.
Dr. Ryan travels with Ned after the siege:
I
came down in the same van as Ned Kelly, he seemed like a man in a trance,
and
glared at any stranger he saw. He had had no sleep all the previous night.
Most
men wounded as he was would have been more prostrated than he was,
but he had a
splendid constitution. More-over his body looked as if it had been
well
nourished. When I asked him if he had been pretty well fed, he said he had,
but
he did not add where he got the food. I expected to find him, after the life he
had been leading, very dirty; but his skin was as clean as if he had come out of
a
Turkish bath.
I attended to his wounds, and now and then gave him
some brandy, and water. He seemed grateful, but gave me the idea that he wished
to die. Of course in attending to his wounds I gave him temporary pain, but he
never complained in the least. His wounds would not be likely to prove mortal in
any ordinary case, where the patient had as strong a constitution; but the
prisoner is likewise suffering from a severe mental shock, and moreover wants to
die. That must be borne in mind when considering his chances of recovery. Under
ordinary circumstances a strong man with such wounds might be expected to walk
about, not to run about, and not to have the free-use of his limbs, in some two
months time.
Albury Banner & Wodonga Express July 3
1880.
The following interesting information is from Bright
Sparcs
Biographical entry.
Ryan, Charles Snodgrass (1853 - 1926)
Sir |
| Surgeon and Ornithologist |
Born: 20 September 1853 Longwood, Victoria, Australia.
Died: 23 October 1926 at sea. |
Charles Snodgrass Ryan was a surgeon with the (Royal) Melbourne
Hospital
from 1878 until his retirement in 1913 and honorary medical officer at
the
Children's Hospital from 1883-1913. He was a grandson of John Cotton (qv)
and a brother of Ellis Rowan. A keen ornithologist and photographer,
he
enthusiastically supported bird protection, the introduction of nature
study in
schools and the holding of an annual Bird Day. |
| Career Highlights |
Born Longwood, Victoria, 20 September 1853. Died on board the "Otranto",
near Adelaide, 23 October 1926. CB 1916, CMB, KBE 1919. Educated
Universities of Melbourne (1870-72) and Edinburgh (MB, CM 1875).
Served
as a surgeon with the Turkish army 1876-78; surgeon, (Royal)
Melbourne
Hospital 1878-1913 (then consulting surgeon); honorary medical
officer,
Children's Hospital 1883-1913 (then consulting surgeon); chief
medical
officer, Victorian Railways 1903-24. Captain, Volunteer Medical
Service
1878, principal medical officer, Victoria 1902, honorary physician to
the
governor-general 1904, assistant director of medical services, 1st
Division,
Australian Imperial Force 1914-16, consulting surgeon, medical
headquarters
staff, A.I.F. 1916-17, honorary surgeon-general, Australian Military
Forces
1917-19. President, Medical Society of Victoria 1893; Turkish consul,
Victoria
for some years; President, Australasian Ornithologists' Union 1905-07. |
| |
|