Louis de Lotbinière-Harwood | |
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Dean of Medicine at Université de Montréal | |
In office 1918–1934 |
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President of the Hôpital Notre-Dame | |
President of L'Union Médicale du Canada | |
Personal details | |
Born |
Manor of Vaudreuil, Quebec |
27 April 1866
Died | 15 May 1934 564 Sherbrooke Street, Montreal |
(aged 68)
Nationality | French Canadian |
Dr Louis de Lotbinière-Harwood (1866–1934) M.D., F.A.C.S., was a Canadian gynaecologist. He was Dean of Medicine at Université de Montréal, the second campus of Université Laval. He was President of the Medical Union of Canada, President of the Hôpital Notre-Dame and President of the Radium Institute, Paris. His reputation as an educator and a surgeon extended throughout North America and Europe, recognised through his creation as an Officier de Le Légion d'honneur in France. He has been referred to as the 'Father of Canadian Gynaecology'.
Born at the Manor of Vaudreuil, he was the son of the Hon. Henry Stanislas Harwood and his wife Josephine Sydney Brauneis, daughter of Jean-Chrysostome Brauneis II. He was a nephew of Antoine Chartier de Lotbinière Harwood, Robert Harwood and Sir Henri Elzéar Taschereau; and, a first cousin of the wife of Major-General Sir Sam Steele.
Educated at the Séminaire de Ste-Thérèse and afterwards at the Séminaire de Rigaud. In 1890, de Lotbiniere-Harwood graduated in medicine from Université Laval, Quebec City. In 1894, he went to Europe to take a course of advanced studies, particularly gynaecology. In France, he had the opportunity to study under, and serve as the assistant to, Samuel Jean de Pozzi, who was then France's foremost gynaecologist and would remain his mentor.