Background
Lorimer Dods was born on 7 March 1900 in Southport, Queensland, the son of architect Robin Dods and Mary Dods.
Lorimer Dods was born on 7 March 1900 in Southport, Queensland, the son of architect Robin Dods and Mary Dods.
After Shore, he entered the Faculty of Medicine at the University of Sydney from which he graduated in 1923.
He is considered one of Australia"s most influential paediatricians. In 1914, when he was thirteen, his family moved to Sydney and he was enrolled at Sydney Church of England Grammar School (Shore), where he remained until 1917. After graduation, he spent a few months in the surgical wards and pathology department of the Royal Prince Alfred Hospital before a one-year appointment as senior resident medical officer at Royal Newcastle Hospital.
In December 1925 at the end of his year"s appointment, he sailed on the Steamship Moreton Bay as the ship"s surgeon between London and Sydney.
When he returned to Sydney in 1926, he began to work as a general practitioner at 233 New South Head Road, living in a flat behind the surgery. A son, Robert Lorimer Western Dods (known as Robin), was born on 11 August 1930.
In 1936, after 11 years, Dods gave up private practice, spending a year working as a child specialist at the Children"s Hospital, Birmingham, United Kingdom. In 1937 Dods qualified as Fellow of the Royal Australasian College of Physicians (FRACP) and in 1938 became an honorary physician at the Royal Hospital for Women, Paddington. He joined the 2nd AIF as a medical officer on 12 October 1939, with the rank of captain.
He was stationed at the 1st Australian General Hospital in Gaza, Palestine.
He returned from the war in late 1945 as a Lieutenant-Colonel. He returned to private practice in 1946, the same year he became personal paediatric physician to then Governor-General of Australia, Prince Henry, Duke of Gloucester, and his two young boys. On 12 February 1981, at his home in Edgecliff, New South Wales, Dods fell and fractured two ribs.
He was admitted to Street Luke"s Hospital where his condition gradually deteriorated.
He died on his 81st birthday, 7 March 1981. He was awarded a Carnegie Fellowship in Medicine in 1947.
In 1949, the year the Australian Paedriatic Society was founded, he was appointed Australia"s first Professor of Child Health. In 1967, he was voted Australian Father of the Year.
In 1976, he was featured on the Channel 7 television show "This Is Your Life".
Five days before he died, a film on his life"s work was finished by Tony Culliton and Michael Morton-Evans for Channel 7. His biography Beloved Physician, written by daughter Rosemary, was published in July 1989.