Sir Darcy Rivers Warren Cowan |
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Born |
Norwood, South Australia, Australia |
8 August 1885
Died | 9 June 1958 North Adelaide , South Australia, Australia |
(aged 72)
Resting place | Payneham Cemetery |
Residence | South Australia |
Occupation | physician |
Spouse(s) | Effie Hewitt Cox (1886–1971) |
Children | no children |
Parent(s) | James Cowan and Sarah Ann, née Warren |
Darcy Rivers Warren Cowan (8 August 1885 – 9 June 1958) was an Australian medical practitioner and advocate of effective treatment of tuberculosis.
The sixth of seven sons of James Cowan and Sarah Ann (née Warren) and brother of Gladys Rosalind Lewis.
He married Effie Hewitt Cox on 19 April 1910 at the home of his brother-in-law Alfred von Doussa, at Hahndorf, South Australia, Australia. They had no children.
Cowan attended Prince Alfred College and the University of Adelaide.
Cowan was in England at the start of World War I. Darcy served in the Royal Army Medical Corps and later the Australian Army Medical Corps Reserve as an honorary captain.
He championed the effective treatment of tuberculosis, including the use of Bacillus Calmette-Guérin vaccine.
He championed the establishment of Bedford Industries Inc, focusing on the rehabilitation of those afflicted with tuberculosis and also worked with the James Brown Memorial Trust which owned and managed Kalyra Sanatorium and Estcourt House, Grange.
He was knighted in 1955 in "recognition of service to medicine." He was a member of the Adelaide Club and a life member of the British Medical Association. The Australian Laennec Society commemorated him by the Sir Darcy Cowan prize for research into respiratory disease.