Jump to content

Harry Martindale Speechly

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by KasparBot (talk | contribs) at 16:30, 3 June 2016 (migrating Persondata to Wikidata, please help, see challenges for this article). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Harry Martindale Speechly (1 November 1866 - 17 March 1951) was a Canadian doctor.

Speechly was the son of John Martindale Speechly, the first Bishop of Travancore and Cochin, India, and Mary Gray née Grove. He was born in Cochin on 1 November 1866.[1]

He was educated at Monkton Combe School and The Perse School and St John's College, Cambridge.[2][3] He began his medical studies at London Hospital in 1884, graduating with the degrees of M.R.C.S. Eng. and L.R.C.P.Lon.[2]

Speechly began his medical career as a physician with England's North Sea Fishing Fleet, followed by an appointment as house surgeon, house physician, and casualty officer at the London Hospital. In 1893, he resigned to become the medical officer Mostyn Hall preparatory school in Parkgate, Cheshire[4] and practiced medicine in Parkgate until emigrating to Canada in 1901.[5] He settled at Pilot Mound, Manitoba, where he continued his medical practice and was Coroner from 1906 to 1916.[6] During the First World War he served from 1916 to 1919 as a medical officer at the Voluntary Aid Detachment (VAD) Hospital Fleet, Hampshire England. He was awarded the Red Cross Medal for meritorious service.[2]

He returned to Canada in 1919 and set up a medical practice in Winnipeg. He was appointed Provincial Coroner in 1929, a position he held until his retirement in 1942. From 1942 to 1945 he was assistant medical officer at King Edward Hospital in Winnipeg.

Speechly was known for his ongoing battle against mosquitos. In 1927 he asked the Natural History Society to appoint an expert committee to examine the feasibility of a mosquito control campaign for Greater Winnipeg. From then, almost to his death, he served permanently as president and chairman of the Greater Winnipeg Anti-Mosquito Campaign. In 1950 he was elected the first regional Director from Canada in the American Mosquito Control Association.[2]

Other posts Speechly held were Vice-President of the Manitoba Medical Association, and Secretary of the Pilot Mound Board of Trade. He was President of the Brotherhood of St. Andrew in Canada in 1922, President of the Winnipeg Boy Scouts Association, and a member of the Canadian Club of Winnipeg, the Thistle Curling Club, and the Assiniboine Lawn Bowling Club. Speechly was the first president of the Manitoba Horticultural and Forestry Association in 1911 and helped found the Natural History Society of Manitoba in 1920. In 1943 he was conferred the degree of honorary Doctorate of Laws by the University of Manitoba.[2][7]

Speechly died at Winnipeg on 17 March 1951[8] and was buried in Brookside Cemetery.

Family

Speechly married Mary Barrett, the eldest daughter of the Rev William Ferguson Barrett on 30 July 1895 in Neston, Wirral.[9] His wife, Mary Barrett Speechly, was a well-known advocate for women's rights in Manitoba for over sixty years and founded the Winnipeg Birth Control Society, to provide poverty-stricken women with access to contraceptive information. They had a daughter and two sons:

  • Margaret Mary Speechly, born 21 May 1896 at Parkgate, Cheshire,[10] married Edmund John Stansfield 14 November 1925 in Winnipeg and died 30 June 1990 in Winnipeg.
  • William Grove Speechly, born 5 July 1906 at Pilot Mound, Manitoba[11] and died 1978 in Winnipeg.
  • Leslie Barrett Speechly, born 13 April 1909 at Pilot Mound, Manitoba,[12] married Agnes Gwendoline Smith and died 14 May 1997.[13]

References

  1. ^ Transcription of Madras Baptism Indexes 1860-1871: Volume 47, Page 250
  2. ^ a b c d e H. M. Speechly, Margaret Stansfield: An Inventory of Their Papers at the University of Manitoba Archives & Special Collections (www.umanitoba.ca/libraries/archives/collections/complete_holdings/ead/html/speechly.shtml)
  3. ^ "Speechly, John Martindale (SPCY855JM)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  4. ^ Dictionary of Manitoba Biography (1999) edited by J. M. Bumsted, p 235
  5. ^ H. M. Speechly, Margaret Stansfield: An Inventory of Their Papers at the University of Manitoba Archives & Special Collections (www.umanitoba.ca/libraries/archives/collections/complete_holdings/ead/html/speechly.shtml)
  6. ^ H. M. Speechly, Margaret Stansfield: An Inventory of Their Papers at the University of Manitoba Archives & Special Collections (www.umanitoba.ca/libraries/archives/collections/complete_holdings/ead/html/speechly.shtml)
  7. ^ Memorable Manitobans: Henry Martindale Speechly (1866-1951) (www.mhs.mb.ca/docs/people/speechly_hm.shtml)
  8. ^ His obituary in Mosquito News, Journal of the American Mosquito Control Association 1951, Vol 11 No 3 , p 177 (www.archive.org/details/cbarchive_114152_obituarydrharrymartindalespeec1951)
  9. ^ GRO Marriages Sep 1895 Wirral 8a 751
  10. ^ GRO Births Sep 1896 Wirral 8a 431
  11. ^ Manitoba Vital Statistics 1907,009366
  12. ^ Manitoba Vital Statistics 1909,012018
  13. ^ http://canadianheadstones.com/on/view.php?id=231021