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AOA
Australian Orthopaedic Association
 

A BRIEF HISTORY OF AOA

In 1936, two orthopaedic surgeons, Edmund Vance and Alexander Hamilton, conceived the idea of a specialty group for Australian members of their profession. A series of meetings with eight other surgeons followed over the next six months and at a meeting on 27 April 1937, fifteen orthopaedic surgeons were declared Foundation Members of the Australian Orthopaedic Association. At this inaugural meeting Edmund Vance was elected President, Alexander Hamilton was elected Secretary and a constitution was adopted.

Membership of the new Association was restricted to the very few who practised orthopaedic surgery exclusively. This caused some controversy in the early years of the Association 'as it meant that some surgeons, whose private practice was confined to orthopaedic surgery were debarred from full membership because of the terms of their appointments to public hospitals, where they were constrained to do some general surgery' (Orthopaedics in Australia,  H M Barry).

The first Annual General Meeting was held on 21 March 1938. At the end of the meeting scientific papers were presented to the group and so the first Annual Scientific Meeting was held. Thus began the tradition of holding the ASM at the same time as the AGM.

In 1946, steps were taken to establish regional committees and in 1964, discussion groups and specialist bodies began to form within the umbrella of the AOA.

In 1971 the Association was granted arms by the Earl Marshall under the authority of the Kings of Arms. The official arms and the Royal Charter of the Association now hang in AOA's Head Office in Sydney.

With the growth of the association, space was purchased in the William Bland Centre at 229 Macquarie Street in 1977 (with the purchase of an additional lot on the same floor in 1981), to house the AOA Secretariat. In December 2003, these rooms were refurbished and Head Office returned here from premises in Culwalla Chambers where it had been since 1992. In 2010, due to growing staff numbers, the Association sold the Macquarie Street premises and moved to modern offices at 45 Clarence Street.

 A detailed history of the Australian Orthopaedic Association and of orthopaedics in Australia can be found in Orthopaedics in Australia by H M Barry (published by the Australian Orthopaedic Association in 1983). Copies may be purchased from Head Office.

 

AOA PRESIDENTS

1938
E B M Vance

1960
W L Macdonald

1980
G R Anderson

2000
R J Bauze

1939
E B M Vance

1961
R McKellar-Hall

1981
J S Roarty

2001
M J P Fogarty

1940
L O Betts

1962
F H McCallow

1982
M B Menelaus

2002
D McNicol

1941
L O Betts

1963
B T Keon-Cohen

1983
T J Claffey

2003
M C Tiller

1945
A V Meehan

1964
Sir Douglas Parker

1984
W N Gilmour

2004
K Wilding

1946
A V Meehan

1965
W A Hugh Smith

1985
J L C Lahz

2005
J M Harrison

1947
J W Van R Hoets

1966
A L Dawkins

1986
E H Bates

2006
J M Sikorski

1948
J W Van R Hoets

1967
R L Stephen

1987
B D Shepherd

2007
J E Harris

1949
D J Glissan

1968
J M J Jens

1988
B J Dooley

2008
J B North

1950
D J Glissan

1969
H C Barry

1989
F B Webb

2009
J C Batten

1951
E F West

1970
H C Barry

1990
N L Thomson

2010
I C Dickinson

1952
E F West

1971
W D Sturrock

1991
K F King

2011
H W B Cumberland

1953
L G Teece

1972
A F McSweeny

1992
D C Davidson

2012
G E Mercer

1954
L G Teece

1973
C M Maxwell

1993
F J Harvey

1955
T King

1974
W S L Stening

1994
W J Cumming

1956
T King

1975
W J Betts

1995
D J Marshall

1957
A R Hamilton

1976
P F Williams

1996
J S Harbison

1958
J B Colquhoun

1977
Sir George Bedbrook

1997
J H Rush

1959
J R S Lahz

1978
K R Daymond

1998
I B McPhee

 

1979
G Kerridge

1999
J A L Hart