Background
He was born in 1866 in Bristol, England and died suddenly in 1932.
He was born in 1866 in Bristol, England and died suddenly in 1932.
He served as president of the society from 1923 to 1928 and is cited as one of the founders of the society. While in Canada he had many roles in education and passionately incorporated manual training into his programs including the programs to rehabilitate soldiers returning from World War I in Canada he ran from 1916 until coming to the United States. These programs were a product of his time as the vocational secretary of the Military Hospitals Commission.
After being named vocational secretary he promptly moved to Ottawa in January 1916.
In Ottawa, he was given the duty of preparing soldiers returning from World War I to return to their former vocational duties or retrain soldiers no longer able to perform their previous duties. He developed a program that engaged soldiers recovering from wartime injuries or tuberculosis in occupations even while they were still bedridden.
Once the soldiers were sufficiently recovered they would work in a curative workshop and eventually progress to an industrial workshop before being placed in an appropriate work setting. He used occupations (daily activities) as a medium for manual training and helping injured individuals to return to productive duties such as work.
While involved with NSPOT, he used his background as an architect to help build the foundation for occupational therapy including pushing for a national registry and training standards to ensure that occupational therapists were properly trained to treat clients.
He also pushed for occupational therapy to stay within the medical field Kidner"s association with the medical professional association in the United States to head towards this goal and even helped push for the occupational therapy insignia to include components of the medical insignia. He is credited with bringing crafts, in general, as the intervention for treatment in occupational therapy beginning at the Military Hospitals Commission in Ottawa, Canada.
Within AOTA, his main concern was to establish the structure and function of the association.
He began a registry of therapists and instituted standards in education and desired all therapists to promote OT and keep the profession in the public eye. After leaving NSPOT/AOTA in 1928 he worked on the National Tuberculosis Association and worked as the head of National Tax Association, USA of the Advisory Service on Institutional Construction until 1926.
He then returned to his original occupation of architecture in 1926 until his sudden death in 1932. From Little is known about the circumstances of his death in 1932.
These programs gained the attention of Eleanor Clark Slagle, Elizabeth Upham-Davis, and members of the United States Federal Board for Vocational Education.