Although a young doctor when he volunteered for the Spanish Civil War in late 1936, New Zealander Douglas Jolly swiftly acquired a reputation as one of the most gifted and energetic surgeons of the Republican Army’s medical services. Over the next two years he performed countless life-saving operations on wounded combatants from both sides of the conflict, as well as on civilians. Tireless, dedicated, and courageous, he developed significant and innovative treatment systems based on the principle of working as near as possible to the front line. Jolly used this unprecedented battlefield experience to write a manual that was widely used in World War II and the Korean and Vietnam Wars.
Frontline Surgeon traces Jolly’s remarkable career from medical training in 1920s New Zealand, postgraduate study during the rise of fascism in Europe, almost a decade of frontline surgery, and into civilian life as medical director of Britain’s largest hospital for amputees. One of the greatest war surgeons of the twentieth century, Jolly has been mysteriously omitted from the ranks of pioneers of modern medicine. This engaging biography, intensively researched in many countries, both explains and redresses that omission.
List of Illustrations
Author’s Note
1. The Center of Gravity of the World
2. The Storekeeper’s Son
3. Attributes Every Battle Surgeon Should Possess
4. Christian Left
5. Bread, Peace, and Liberty
6. Nine Months of Winter
7. A River of Blood
8. Urgent Need of Salvation
9. He Does Honor to His Name
10. The Safest Place in Spain
11. Changing the Front and the Weapons
12. The System, Not the Surgeon
13. The Tobruk Plaster
14. Merry Hell
15. Phantom Pain
16. Light in the Darkness
17. Saving from Submersion
Acknowledgments
Appendix: “Surgical Curiosities in Two Wars”
Notes
Bibliography
Index