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Katie
Louisa Ardill Brice (1886-1955), gynaecologist, was born on 3 August
1886 at Chippendale, Sydney, only daughter of two children of Louisa
(born Wales) and George Edward Ardill, evangelists. She grew up
in a household with limited means, deeply committed to evangelism
and practical charity. Her mother conducted prayer-meetings on an
interdenominational basis, was co-editor of Rescue, a suffragist
and matron superintendent of the Home of Hope Hospital (later South
Sydney Women's Hospital), where she instituted training courses
for nurses. Katie graduated MB ChM from the University of Sydney
in 1913. Katie did a year's residency at Prince Alfred Hospital
and was honorary anaesthetist and out-patients medical officer at
South Sydney Women's Hospital. When war started she offered her
services to the Australian Army Medical Service and was refused.
Travelling at her own expense she went to London and from there,
under direction of the British Red Cross Society, to a Belgian hospital.
She afterwards served with the British Army at Napbury, the Dover
military hospital, and at the Citadel hospital, Cairo. She returned
to Australia in 1920, resumed her hospital appointment and established
a practice in gynaecology in Macquarie St. On 1 June l921 in St
Andrew's Cathedral she married Charles Christie Brice, a law student
and later an accountant. There were no children. She joined the
health committee of the National Council of Women in 1922, which
lobbied strongly for thorough training of medical students in gynaecology
and obstetrics and the creation of a chair in obstetrics at the
University of Sydney. In her Macquarie St practice she provided
a free clinic for wives and children of servicemen. In 1932 she
became consultant to the Racial Hygiene Association (later Family
Planning Association of New South Wales) and an honorary at its
birth control clinic, opened in 1933. Dr Ardill Brice also joined
the St John Ambulance Brigade. She was an executive member from
1938, deputy chairman in 1947-48 and its first chairwoman in New
South Wales (1950-55). Admitted to the Order of St John of Jerusalem
as a serving sister in 1938, she was created dame of grace of the
order in 1952. With a stentorian, brash and husky voice, smoking
'perennially', she handled meetings with authority. She was awarded
an OBE in 1941. In 1952 in Britain she studied methods of treatment
for atomic blast. She died on 3 January 1955.
Heather Radi
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