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Gordon Hamilton Fairley


Gordon Hamilton Fairley DM, FRCP (20 April 1930 – 23 October 1975) was a professor of medical oncology. Born and raised in Australia, he moved to the United Kingdom, where he studied and worked. He was killed by an IRA bomb intended to kill Sir Hugh Fraser.

The son of a research worker in tropical diseases (Sir Neil Hamilton Fairley), Fairley grew up in Melbourne. He later studied at Magdalen College, Oxford, and St Bartholomew's Hospital, London. Trained in hematology as Leverhulme Research Scholar at the Royal College of Physicians, he continued his research with an emphasis on immunohematology.

In 1968, he became director of the Clinical Research Unit at the Institute of Cancer Research. Two years afterward, he became director of the Medical Oncology Research Unit. In 1972, he was appointed Imperial Cancer Fund Professor of Oncology. As Professor of Medical Oncology at St Bartholomew's Hospital, he contributed a great deal to the chemotherapy and immunology of malignant disease, and, in particular, to the treatment of the malignant reticuloses.

In 1969 he delivered the Goulstonian Lecture to the Royal College of Physicians

The 45-year-old Fairley was killed by a Provisional Irish Republican Army bomb in Kensington, London, on 23 October 1975. The bomb, placed under a car outside the Fraser family home, was intended for Sir Hugh Fraser, Sir Hugh, a long time friend of the Kennedy family had been hosting Caroline Kennedy at the time. The Balcombe Street Gang were subsequently convicted of his murder.


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