WILLIAM SNOWBALL (1854-1902)
William Snowball was a medical practitioner, was born probably on 7 November 1854 at Carlton, Melbourne, son of
John Snowball, builder, and his wife Catharine, nee Iley, both from Durham, England. He was educated at Wesley
College and Melbourne Church of England Grammar School. Graduating (M.B., 1875; B.S., 1880) from the University of
Melbourne, he studied at University College, London (L.S.A., 1876), gained experience at the Great Ormond Street
Hospital and in Edinburgh (L.M. & L.R.C.S., 1877), and visited several continental hospitals. Returning to
Melbourne, he was appointed resident doctor at the Children's Hospital (1878), becoming an honorary there in 1882
after having commenced his own practice in paediatric medicine at Carlton.As chairman of the honorary medical staff
at the Children's Hospital, Snowball co-operated closely with management to enlarge and improve accommodation.
Infection was a constant threat, often introduced by out-patients or their parents and breeding freely among the
sick, especially in overcrowded, sunless wards. At his insistence, a new and separate out-patient block was built
in 1897 and he helped to plan a new in-patient block.
With wide windows, sunny verandahs and facing north, it was to open in 1903. Concern for the welfare of nurses
showed in Snowball's constant efforts to have their accommodation improved and in his insistence on prophylactic
injections of diphtheria antitoxin to protect them from infection. In the 1890s he introduced hospital lectures by
the honorary staff to nurses and medical students.<p>In 1895 he was president of the Victorian branch of the
British Medical Association.
Although not noted as a surgeon, as a paediatric physician and clinical teacher he was outstanding. Snowball has
been called 'the father of paediatrics in Melbourne': his professional skill, the warmth of his personality and his
instant rapport with the young quickly made his a household name. He appreciated that the child, physically, is not
a small adult, but a different person with different needs and problems. He devoted his life to children, to their
hospital and to those who cared for them.
It was said that most doctors could correctly determine nine out of ten children's ailments, but that only
Snowball could diagnose and prescribe for the tenth.Genial, with a kindly, heavily-bearded face and a fine sense of
humour, Snowball was a voracious reader and a keen ornithologist.
Always a big man who regretted that he had to stoop to reach a flower, he increasingly carried too much weight and
his health suffered. At St Philip's Anglican Church, Sydney, on 29 November 1881 he had married Mary Sophia Burton;
they lived quietly with their five children on his Narracan property in the last months before he died of Bright's
disease on 22 April 1902. His funeral, at the Melbourne general cemetery, was attended by many professional
colleagues and fellow members of the Yorick Club. His contribution as a pioneer paediatrician, would have been
greater had he lived more than forty-seven years. His death was fairly recorded as 'a national loss'.
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