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British Journal of Radiology (1960) 33, 708
© 1960 British Institute of Radiology
doi: 10.1259/0007-1285-33-395-708

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Harold Kingston Graham-Hodgson, K.C.V.O., M.B., F.R.C.P., F.F.R., D.M.R.E.

S.C.S.

This excerpt was created in the absence of an abstract.

By the death on August 21 of Sir Harold Graham-Hodgson at the age of 69, diagnostic radiology in this country has lost one of its most distinguished personalities.

Sir Harold was the son of the late Dr. G. Graham Hodgson of Eastbourne, and was educated at St. Edward's School, Oxford, and Clare College, Cambridge. His studies at Cambridge were interrupted by the outbreak of the first world war, when he went to France as a despatch rider. Six months later he resumed his medical studies and qualified M.B., B.S. Durham, in 1916. He then returned to France in the R.A.M.C. and remained there until wounded in 1917. His first interest in radiology came when he was posted to the 2nd Northern General Military Hospital at Leeds. On his return to civilian life he first engaged in private general practice in Chislehurst, but in 1922 he decided to devote himself to radiology and in 1923 obtained the Cambridge D.M.R.E.







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