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Doctors

R

Rod

Guest
Dr Peter & Dr Kelly


Both these doctors were held in high esteem by my family. I am sure their surgery was on Aston Road/Aston Brook Street corner? Dr Peter always seemed to have rosey cheeks? I can just remember him that way.

The surgery was very old fashioned, a big wooden desk, and a examination couch were at opposite ends of the room. Mum would take me to see the doctor, but usually disagreed with the diagnosis :lol: But then, mums always did know best heheh

Dr Kelly moved to Nechells in the sixties, does anyone remember him?
 
The Villa Doc's

Dr Massey Senior, and his two sons Dr Paul and Dr Michael.

Maybe better known as 'The Villa Doctors'?
Initially practised on the corner of Park Lane Aston......later moving to Church Lane, Handsworth. Pioneering the transition from single handed GP practises to the Family Medical Centres.
Gp's always used to know the 'family members', recognising you by sight and remembering your name........and everything about you!
 
our doctor was Dr Fitzgerald a stout irish gentleman is practice was in Sutton street at the old vicarage he was an avid gambler if he came to your house he would always check out the sports page to see what was running on the horse he was a very likable person and would always help out the poor many times refusing is fee.
this surgery was later taken over by Dr Gibson another nice doctor and was my doctor till I moved to Aldridge I was still on is books after I got married and lived in Handsworth he said he would still come out to visit if I had any problems and could not get to the surgery. That would not happen today
 
dr fitzgerald and gibson were our doctors when we lived in clarendon st, i remember playing on the old bomb peck, and falling on a brick, it was half buried with the corner sticking out, i had a nasty gash, my mom and mrs rutter carried me all the way from there to the doctors, were he neatly stitched it up, i still have the scar now, mind you i did enjoy the 2 chocolates the doctor put in the pocket of my shorts for being a good girl.
also does anyone remember the smallpox scare, when we had to be vaccanated against it, we had moved to castle vale by then, but we still came to see dr gibson for the injections, there was about 4 or 5 of us in a line, just like the tiller girl waiting for our jab, bloody hell they did hurt.
 
Dr. Grayson's surgery was in the house next to Aston Park in Park Road. I remember him as being a gentle man who paced the surgery, whistling under his breath, while listening to our complaints. Also remembered (but not his name) is a doctor who practiced in Lichfield Road near Sandy Lane - this one had a reputation for rudeness!
My husband's doctor was Dr. Wiley whose surgery was near Nechells Green. At age 13 my husband walked from Cheatham Street to Nechells Green to see the doctor, was told that his appendix could burst at any time so "go home to bed and have your mother call the ambulance". He walked back home - a distance of about a mile or so- and went to bed. When the ambulance arrived, the attendants wouldn't let him walk down stairs because he had appendicitis, so after about a three-mile walk with an appendix ready to burst, he was manhandled down a spiral staircase. After almost 50 years, the logic still escapes us! :?
 
Yes i remember Drs. Peters and Kelly. i always seemed to see Dr.Peters when i suffered from tonsilitis, he would always clench his fist and gentle rub it in your stomach with it before giving you fruit type lozengers to soothe your sore throat.As for Dr.Kelly, he was a lovely man. We stayed on his books when he and us moved to Nechells, Bradburn Way? he died i believe around 1978-79
 
clenched fist?

Mick the clenched fist? well that rings bells with me, although I cant recall why? starnge how memories desert you....
Dr Kelly :cry: Its inevitable that he was dead, yet...... it makes me sad, he was a very nice guy. I would love to find out more about him, he was quite famous, I am told.
 
Rod i forgot to say; the surgery was on the corner of aston rd./aston brook st. the entrence being in aston brook st.Normally after a visit i would be carted off to my grans in aston brook st. opposite Mrs Londons a little grocery shop.
 
Ah, Dr Grayson, a lovely man , treated our family for years, like you say Jean , always whistling, he drove a Rover, it seemed all doctors in those days drove Rovers, you knew when someone was ill, when the Rover was parked outside a house, would the doctor by Sandy lane be Dr Gould?
 
It was, indeed, Dr. Gould at Sandy Lane. We actually lived a bit closer to his surgery, being at the Ansells end of Vicarage Road, but I think my Mom was a bit afraid of him; he really could be quite abrupt at times.
 
I have many memories of this austere kindly doctor who practiced at the bottom of Trinity Road adjacent to the Ratpan. His surgery was very small by todays standards and was accessed via a small flight of stone stairs at the front of the building. They are still there to this day.
His residence was a large Edwardial gentlemans residence in Trinity Rd almost opposite Fentham Rd. It is one of the few houses in the road that has not undergone modernisation.
We lived in a damp top floor flat about 50 yards on the other side of the Road. Suffering from frequent bouts of croup he was summoned regularly and always came with no hesitation. Back in 1958, my mothers father, who was on Holiday from Kent collapsed from a massive heart attack outside his house.... he was in attendance immediately. imagine a modern day doctor doing all of these things.
We moved to Aldridge in 1961 and obviously lost contact with him.
In latter years, I undertook some research about him. He was apparently a very wealthy Irish Jew that actually trained in Ireland. Presumably he his now attending the ills of angels.
If anyone could add to this I would be very intersted to know.
 
I don't know if i have spelt the name of our old family doctory correctly but those who will remember him will recognise the attempt at the spelling.

He had his surgery in Aston Road North just past the Aston Road Post Office, and near to a car show rooms, that seemed to have Aston Martins nearly always in the showroom.

However, Doctor Gouravitch - my dad always said that he was a White Russian, as apposed to Red, he also said that he came over to escape the Russian Revolution. I don't know if that is correct. But Doctor Gouravitch, had a really thick East European accent, i remember when he came to me - I was ill with rheumatic fever, and he used to come in at least every other day; my mom used to keep hens, and as it was during the summer, they were in full lay, and he never went away without at least 6 eggs all wrapped separately in newspaper, so that they wouldn't get broken. He also would make reference to our dog, who by any standards could only be described as a 'street accident', but l loved her. One day he said to my mom - "Mrs Sheargold you hef one doc and isn't she ockly" translated as "..... you have one dog and isnt she ugly?"

We would go to his surgery, and he would be sitting with one leg cushioning his seat, and an ashtray full of half smoked Players, and one burning. I know that he had a son who was a serving soldier. He had his photograph on his desk. Also he would go into his dispensary and come back with a bottle of medicine, which he had dispensed. I remember my mom used to pay a shilling a week to belong to the doctors club, and this covered all visits and medications.

I can visualise that there was a plaque over the entrance to his surgery, and it referred to the fact that Arthur Conon Doyle had resided there at some time. Cannot remember though the dates.

After he retired, we went to Dr Fitzgeralds surgery (by this time the NHS had started) but there was a practice there of one or two doctors, one being Dr Gibson, who was lovely, and the other one was Doctor Smith, who never went down very well with my dad, as Doc Smith had a real thing about smoking - he hated it. Have to say i agreed with him. However it was Doctor Gibson who i always considered was my Doctor, and later on one of his sons joined the practice. Dr Gibson and his family were a handsome lot.

But protocol, wasn't PC in those days, and he (Dr Gibson) saw my mom in the street, and told her i was expecting our first baby, I hadn't intended telling her until it was obvious, because i knew that she would have carried my baby for me if she could have done, but there ya go!

Somebody has already mentioned this, Dr Gibson, was always willing to visit, and after we left the district, and i couldn't get the GP that we were registered with, in desparation i phoned Dr Gibson, and he came to visit, we were living at The Royal Mint in Icknield street then, and my husband had suddenly collapsed with chest pains, Dr Gibson was there as fast as any ambulance, and diagnosed pleurosy, he also came back the next day to check. He and his family emigrated to Australia - he was sorely missed.

While i still lived in Birmingham, i remember an article in the Evening Mail, a pensioner named (Dr?) Gouravitch doing a language course in Yiddish. He could only have been our 'old' doctors son. Also at the Birmingham Childrens Hospital there was a ward called the Gouravitch Ward; i know because our youngest son Robert was in there in 1973.
 
I remember going to Dr. Lacey's surgery which I believe was in Potters Hill or High Street, can't remember now. This would have been around l958. I remember the place as being quite old fashioned with a big
leather chair and a drill which I am sure had a wheel to drive it!!!! I
can remember getting a dose of gas since I was having a tooth
removed once when I was there. It was a bit of a scary place and I remember sitting in the waiting room which was a bit Victorian looking.

My Mother was working at Sun Cycles in Aston Brook at that time and Dr. Lacey was recommended to her by several people she knew.
 
Lacey was just up Potters Hill on the right and occupied a corner position. Despite all the rumours and horror stories I didn't feel a thing when he removed one of my upper molars back in 1964
 
Doctor Whiley

Hello Jean

I also remember a Doctor Wiley. He used to be our doctor and had his surgery in Thimblemill lane I am sure. This doctor also had a daughter by the name of Valerie like myself so it was that he had a soft spot for me. He remained our doctor for years and when we finally moved from Aston I still went to him to have my polio needle even though It was out of his surgery area. does any of this ring a bell?
 
:D
Dr Gurevitch: the son was a professor of surgery at Birmingham University Medical School. He was marvellously generous to me - offering to teach me surgery if I would teach him economics!
Whenever there was a blow up in Israel he would drop everything and dash over there into the fray.
He held the highest record of gastrointestinal and colorectal surgery recovery at that time (a lot of grotesque stuff).
I enjoyed his tough, charismatic manner. He had a good sense of humour. His daughter, Naomi, I found enchanting and when she decided to take a gap year in New York I nearly marched along the nearest canal tow path. All children were medical doctors, except for a son whose heart was simply not in it. He was very upset and I asked what troubled him - not knowing who his father was then. He had already spent a year at medical school. I told him to him to go home and tell his popa that my prescription is simply a Eurail pass and International Hostel membership for a year and then decide. This proposal was greeted with magnanimity.

I report this without it being a breach of confidence, because it attests to a certain visionary spirit, the spark of which never fully expires - even in the most dire of cirumstances. Conditions in Aston at that time were not so different from those they had fled. Ayn Rand's brilliant study The Individual will take you right there - White Russians included.
Also The Silent Revolution (Cambridge University Press) is a revelation of the development of public health and mandatory education in Britain - both tomes are compulsive page thumbers.
Nice catch.
8)
 
I bow to your superior knowledge! What a great answer, so much i didn't know. But then our old Doc never spoke about Israel, of course the state hadn't been set up during the war. And it took until 1948 at least for it to be recognised.

Not quite sure about your comment re: Naomi - and her Gap year in NY - and your wanting to take a trip along the canal tow path - do you mean that you felt suicidal because of her absence? A bit too profound for me :?

Thanks for your interest - i was beginning to think that nobody recognised Doc G - although folks were viewing the piece.

Cheers
 
Dr. Gubbins was the doctor I remember from my school days. If I remember correctly, he had a surgery somewhere on or around Vauxhall Rd. and moved to the new health centre in Nechells for a while, before retiring (?). A big man from memory.
 
does any one remember dr tigh from nechells green health centre. lovely doctor.
 
happy days in nechells, my dad Stan Jordan was the caretaker at Greenbank House (above the health centre) when the doctors were closed our flat became the phone switchboard for the night and many people knocked on the door in the small hours of the night for help Dr Gubbins was our family doctor until he retired but I remember them all Drs Allbright, Mockler, Kelly, Tighe, Dr Allbright was our doctor until my wife and I moved from nechells in 1982 I understand Greenbank House has now been demolished in fact only 5 of my previous homes exist now camrose tower high tower chadsmore terrace humber tower and medway tower also remember the child health centre which was linked to the doctors :(
 
Dr Kelly

Doc Kelly was my Doctor, our family seemed to have two back then Kelly & Doctor Peter, I wonder what happened to him.
Kelly was a nice guy as I remember? I wish we had pictures of these guys we could use them on the site......
 
:D On moving to Nechells our Dr was Dr O'Keefe in Ashted Row, after me upsetting him by not delievering him his papers :( and Mum getting upset becouse he would no longer give her as much Valium as she thought she needed we transferred to Dr Tighe. :)
 
Dr Albright

Dr Albright was my Dads Doctor during his final years.
I used to drive Dad down to the Health Centre in Greenbank house and wait with him until he was seen, then afterwards, drop him back home.
Because Dad had had several heart attacks Dr Albright insisted that he packed up his heavy smoking and seriously cut back on the amount he had to drink as well.
To be honest Dad was a blatant liar about this and always told Dr Albright that he was following his instructions to the letter.
I can remember going into the sugery the one time and as Dad took off his Mac, a packet of Senior Service cigarettes fell out on the sugery floor.
I can see Dr Albrights fac e now as he saw them lying there and this with Dads promise he had quit smoking.
He just shook his head and said 'Well Mr Robinson, if you're not going to help yourself, then there's nothing I can do for you either'
My Dad went out the door and I stayed behind to have a word with him..
It was the first time I'd ever seen him angry and he said to me...to be quite honest, you may as well let him do what he wishes, I cant do anything for him anyway..He was right, he couldn't.....
You were still a great Doctor though...
 
does anyone know what happened to dr tigh as he was our family doctor did is son take over any one got any photos at all.
 
does anyone no if dr tighs son took over the practice also did dr tigh pass on .
 
does anyone know what happened to dr tigh from nechellshealth centre please
 
Dr Massey, the Villa doctor

When I lived in Erdington Borders, our nearest doctor was S. Orville Massey, who lived at about No. 11 Warren Road, the first house on the left coming doen the hill from Hawthorn Road, and had a surgery there as well as the Astwn place/s. It was a very swanky house for the area, built on the slope so that you normally entered from the left, where there was a drive and I believe a double garage (this was in the 1930s! The frontage of the house was about about 50 feet, and there were steps from the right hand end leading up through wide a rock garden which I seem to remember was Mrs Massey's pride and joy. There was at least one lamp post in the garden with the doctor's name etched on the glass. Before the war I can remember going with my mum (we were both a bit sickly in the chest department) for sun-ray treatment, and had to sit topless in front of a Chernobyl-style radiation machine. In have survived for over 60 years, but it didn't do my mum much good, and she didn't last 20 unfortunately.
Dr Massey senior was an elder at the Chrisadelphian (?) Chapel on Six Ways, and I remember he persuaded my mother and me to go to a bazaar there in about 1940.
I think it was just after the war that Dr Massey Senior got appointed as a police surgeon, and later to the Villa.
He came to visit us a few times to give the early Penicillin injections, for which I think my parents had to pay about two guineas a time (£2.10) plus the cost of the stuff itself. This was just before the NHS came into effect in 1948, and although we were "on the panel" they would not pay for new-fangled things like that.
In about 1948 we trasferred vto a different doctor. Thinking about it now, I suspect he had enough other work, and wasn't interested in NHS patients, but I don't mean any slight to his sons, whom I'm afraid I don't remember, only a daughter I think.
Peter
 
My Doctor was Dr Soloman, his surgery was a terraced house in Witton Road. Dr Soloman seemed about 80 years old all the time.
The patients sat on wooden benches in the front room and when he was ready to see anyone he came to the door and said 'next' in that foreign sounding voice he had. I never knew what nationality he was.

He had his main house and another surgery at the begining of Marsh Hill, a big detached house on the left just past the Hare & Hounds ? pub.
I think it was a childrens nursery last time I past.

When I was 16 and in the building I trod on a nail and had a jab at Good Hope. I had to have a follow up jab at my doctors and went on the bus to Marsh Hill. When I got there I thought I'm not having him stick a needle in me, I hung around his gate for a bit and got back on the next bus.
 
I remember his surgery Dave, on the left going towards Witton circle. I used to see him coming out and climbing into his big car. Our Docs were in Aston Lane.

In the 60's we were living in Cyprus and my mother in law was coming out to see us. She had never had a small pox vaccination, which she needed for Cyprus, so went to Dr Soloman for it in Marsh Lane. He cut her arm with a razor blade before putting the serum in. Her arm blew up like a baloon, and was septic for weeks.
 
Doctor?

I remember we went to the Doctors somewhere by Potters Hill or Whithead Rd.
Anyone remember a Doctor there?
Brown liquid always, could cure all ills, tasted awful. :x
 
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