Education
He followed with a medical degree (Bachelor of Medicine) from the University of Toronto which he completed in 1927.
He followed with a medical degree (Bachelor of Medicine) from the University of Toronto which he completed in 1927.
His textbook is considered by many practitioners an indispensable reference. Ham"s early education came through Brantford Collegiate Institute and Vocational School. In 1925, Ham married Dorothy Carlotta Ross.
While interning at the Wellesley Hospital, Ham also pursued an active tennis career.
In "28 he and Wright lost 10-8 in the fifth set to the Japanese duo of Tamimo Abe and Teizo Toba, as Japan prevailed in this America Zone semi-final tie, 3-1. In 1929, Ham and Wright lost to the American team of John F. Hennessey and John Van Ryn, 1-6, 1-6, 6-1, 2-6.
Canada lost this tie as well, an America Zone first round encounter, 0-5. In the early 1930s, Ham published his first series of major papers on the formation, maintenance, and destruction of bone within the body.
The study of bone would be a theme to which Ham would return throughout his career.
The first edition of Ham"s seminal histology text–titled simply –was published in 1950. In 1951, Ham was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada. Along with Harold East. Johns, Ham played a key role in the formation of the Department of Medical Biophysics at the University of Toronto.
He served as the Department"s first chair, from 1958 to 1960.
Within the Department of Anatomy, Ham assumed the Chair in 1965. Ham was widowed once again in 1988.
The ninth edition of –known almost universally as Ham"s – was published in 1987 by Ham jointly with David H. Cormack, Doctor of Philosophy