Jump to content

User:Mhukahuru 1

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

I.S. Beattie [1] In a tribute to Ian Stuart Beattie <ref>(VR, June 1, p 550).<ref> Ken Head wites:

 Born in Leith in 1921 and educated at Edinburgh Academy, Ian Beattie, rather than entering the family firm of timber importers, chose to become a veterinary surgeon. A motor cycle accident when 'seeing practice' in Carlisle resulted in an ankle injury that troubled him most of his life and delayed until 1943 his qualification from the Royal (Dick) Veterinary College and Edinburgh University as MRCVS and BSc. On qualifying he joined the Carlisle practice as an assistant and worked there for two years before becoming an Agricultural Research Council research assistant under Dr J.T. Stamp in the pathology department of the R(D)VC, studying the parthenogenesis of tuberculosis of the udder and genetalia in the ox. A year later he moved with Dr Stamp to become an assistant Veterinary investigation officer at the Edinburgh and East of Scotland College of Agriculture.
 Between 1947 and 1948 the staffing of the pathology department at the 'Dick' had fallenn to a single individual following the death of Professor Mathieson and the dispersal of the six research and teaching staff to other institutes. When the last remaining pathologist left Ian Beattie returned as senior lecturer and between 1948 and 1960 he had built up the compliment of the department to six pathologists and 14 support staff. The department was run as an independent unit with a non-professorial head.
 On incorporation of the college within the university in 1951 the department was assigned to the professor of its sister department in the Faculty of Medicine, who, while giving support and advice when asked, left the day to day administration to Ian Beattie. This situation continued until the appointment of Professor Buxton to the newly created university chair of veterinary pathology in 1964 when the departments of veterinary pathology and veterinary microbiology were amalgamated. Many of the responsibilities in respect of teaching, diagnostic services and research remained largely separate so that in 1971 the contribution of Ian Beattie was recognised by his appointment as director of the unit of applied veterinary pathology.
 Flooring the death of Professor Buxton in 1979, Ian acted as head of the combined sections until the appointment of Professor McConnell.
 In 1984, he took premature retirement but continued teaching part-time as an honorary fellow for a further year, finally retiring in September 1985. Leaving the 'Dick' did not mean abandoning veterinary work. In his retirement he spent two years in Zimbabwe as a poultry diagnostic pathologist, studies which extended to ostrich farming, and then a further two and a half years teaching at the Faculty of Veterinary Science at the University of Harare.
 Ian was an able teacher who shone in small group instruction of undergraduate and postgraduate students gathered around a postmortem case or a series of specimens from the abattoir. Under his leadership students were encouraged to have 'hands-on' experience of morbid anatomy in these disease recognition and description sessions. He reintroduced into the undergraduate and post graduate courses the histopathological follow-up of such cases which had been first started by Professor Mathieson in the 1920s. The professional experience of his pathologist colleagues benefitted from the increased number of autopsies and biopsies fro the clinics, the abattoir, the zoo and general practitioners which rose fourfold to over four thousand cases a year. The material from these cases formed the basis for the expansion of the museum from 200 examples in glass jars to over 1200 perspex mounted specimens. When closed circuit television became available he was quick to utilise this technology along with a new set of student slides he had prepared to aid students' understanding of histopathology. A keen photographer, he made sure that the lesions found in the routine diagnostic service were recorded, replacing the 3 1/4 inch lantern slides by a 35mm transparency collection which rose to some forty thousand. To achieve this he purchased in junk yards redundant X-ray equipment and modified it to hold lighting and cameras. A tour of his workshop at home re-emphasised his lifelong fascination with a wide variety of tools and instruments along with many copies of 'Exchange and Mart'.
 As a result of his efficiency as an administrator and the respect in which he was held by other members of the staff, Ian became associate dean of the Faculty of Veterinary Medicine from 1968 to 1972 and dean from 1977 to 1980. Ay various times he held office at the RCVS, the BVA, the AVTRW and the Royal Zoological Society of Scotland. His interest, however, was not restricted to the UK for, over the years, he visited and collected teaching material from laboratories and veterinary schools in Kenya, South Africa and Nigeria. In 1967 he acted as an FAO expert to establish a pathology section and to train counterpart staff at Kabete in Kenya.
 Like William Dick before him, Ian was a one time deacon-convenor of the Incorporated Trades of Edinburgh, being and Architect and Mason member. Since he was a relative of (Sir) William Hamilton Beattie, who designed the North British Hotel and Jenners department store, it was not surprising that he was deeply involved in various building projects at the 'Dick'. These started with the up-grading of the department at Summerhall in the 1950s; continued with the pathology suite at the field station in 1962 and the teaching areas of the tower block at Summerhall in 1971; and concluded with the up-grading of the post mortem room complex in 1981. A serious fire in November 1965 resulted in extensive damage to the Summerhall department but Ian set to and the damage, especially to the museum, was achieved within a year. As a skilled joiner, he made many small bu practical additions to the furnishings of the department, working in his house workshop at the weekends.
 A perfectionist, he published very few articles but made his imprint on the minds of fellow veterinarians. There are many members of the RCVS, holders intercalated BScs, holders of the diploma in veterinary state medicine and the diploma in veterinary tropical medicine and veterinary pathologists who have had their thinking on veterinary pathology moulded by the self-effacing giant of a man. His last years were a struggle against progressive illness.  It is typical of the man that despite the loss of dexterity he struggled to type with two fingers the tribute to his friend and mentor, John Norval <ref>(VR,January, 28, 1995, p105).<ref>
  1. ^ (extracted from The Veterinary Record, July 6, 1996)