Frank Cook (surgeon)


Frank Cook FRCS FRCOG was a Beit Memorial Research Fellow, an eminent obstetric and gynaecological surgeon at Guy’s Hospital, Hunterian Professor of the Royal College of Surgeons in London, consulting surgeon at the Chelsea Hospital for Women and a Freeman of the Worshipful Society of Apothecaries.

Early life

Cook was born on 6 November 1888, the only son of Frank Plant Cook of Mansfield Woodhouse, Nottinghamshire. He was educated at Bedford Modern School and Guy's Hospital Medical School, University of London having won a scholarship and research studentship in Physiology where he obtained first class honours and became a Beit Memorial Research Fellow. As a Beit Fellow he worked with Marcus Seymour Pembrey FRS to produce an important paper on the effects of muscular exercise on man. He was also one of the students with whom Sir Arthur Frederick Hurst made his pioneering investigations into the movements of the gut in man.

Career

He was Dean of the Institute of Obstetrics and Gynæcology and an examiner in Obstetrics and Gynæcology to the Universities of Cambridge, London, Glasgow and Bombay, and to the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynæcologists.
Cook was a member of the boards of the SW Metropolitan Regional Hospital Board, St Thomas’ Hospital and Chelsea Hospital for Women. He served as a colonel in the Royal Army Medical Corps in both Great Wars; France, Belgium and Mesopotamia ; Palestine, Greece, Sudan, Egypt and India.
He was Hunterian Professor at the Royal College of Surgeons, consulting gynæcologist to Queen Alexandra Military Hospital and to King Edward VII Sanatorium, Midhurst. He was a medical inspector of the High Court and a Demonstrator of Pathology, Surgical Registrar and tutor at Guy’s Hospital.

Family life

In 1917 Frank Cook married Edith Harriette Wallace, youngest daughter of the late Rev. James Reid of Co. Clare, Ireland. They had one son. Frank Cook died on 25 February 1972.