The Guardian Australia

Cyril Smith obituary

- Andrew Smith

My father, Cyril Smith, who has died aged 92, was an electrical engineerin­g lecturer at Salford University. He cowrote Electromag­netic Man: Health and Hazard in the Electrical Environmen­t with the science journalist Simon Bestin 1989 and appeared on television several times in connection with his work. After appearing in a 1978 BBC Horizon documentar­y, The Vital Spark, Cyril was contacted by residents of Fishpond, Dorset, who asked him to investigat­e reports of sensitivit­y to living under power cables. He spoke about Fishpond on the Channel 4 consumer programme 4 What It’s Worth.

Born in London, Cyril was the elder son of Reg, a tax inspector, and Evelyn (nee Stobbs), who had worked at a fashion house. Reg’s job meant that he was frequently moved by the Inland Revenue, and the family lived in Ilkley, Yorkshire, then Brighton, before they were evacuated to Malvern, Worcesters­hire, in 1940 and Cyril was sent to Douai school in Berkshire. He was a fine singer and, with his father, sang Gilbert and Sullivan songs in a Malvern musical society, for which his mother made the costumes.

In 1947 Cyril joined the Royal Radar Establishm­ent in Malvern where radar had been developed. He studied physics at Exeter University from 1953, followed by postgradua­te studies of medical X-ray images at Imperial College London. At a Catholic students’ conference he met Eileen Jackson, a medical student; they married in 1958 and had three sons. From 1959 Cyril taught physics at Downside school in Somerset while completing his PhD, then in 1964 he was appointed to a lecturing position at Salford.

Eileen returned to medicine in 1969, specialisi­ng in psychiatry and, while she did the long hours of hospital house jobs, Cyril looked after me and my brothers. He took over the cooking, becoming an accomplish­ed chef. He and Eileen enjoyed caravan holidays, hill-walking and Labour party activism.

At Salford University in the early 70s, Cyril initiated the first biomedical electronic­s undergradu­ate course in the UK. He was secretary of the Internatio­nal Dielectric Society and produced 200 publicatio­ns during his career. In cooperatio­n with Professor Herbert Fröhlich,from the University of Liverpool, he explored electromag­netic effects in biological systems and water.

From 1982 he assisted diagnosis and therapy for electrosen­sitive patients at the Breakspear hospital in Hemel Hempstead, Hertfordsh­ire, and continued diagnosing electrosen­sitive patients until shortly before his death.

Cyril retired, reluctantl­y, in 1990, continuing with his research, and writing papers and giving lectures. He also completed updates for a second edition of Electromag­netic Man, which his coauthor will publish.

Eileen went into a nursing home in 2017 with Parkinson’s disease and dementia. Cyril visited her to feed her lunch, never missing a day in three years.

She died in 2020. Cyril is survived by his sons, Paul, Martin and me, grandchild­ren, Oliver and Madeleine, and brother, Jim.

 ?? ?? Cyril Smith enjoyed caravan holidays, hill-walking and Labour party activism
Cyril Smith enjoyed caravan holidays, hill-walking and Labour party activism

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