Toronto Star

Canada’s first black surgeon ‘role model and inspiratio­n’

OBITUARY Dr. Douglas Salmon known for his courage, humility, compassion Fought for the rights of blacks to see jazz greats at Palais Royale

- PHILIP MASCOLL STAFF REPORTER

Dr. John Douglas Graham Roy Salmon was a kind and wonderful person who had to struggle for everything he achieved, his family and friends say.

Salmon, who died last Wednesday at age 81, wasn’t only the first black surgeon in Canada. He was an accomplish­ed pianist, scholar, athlete and sculptor as well.

“ From the moment I met him, I knew he was a person I could truly respect, and I never varied from thinking that way,” Beverley ( Bev) Salmon, his wife and former Metro Toronto and North York councillor said of her partner for 49 years.

“ He was always warm and loving to all the family. He had a way of reaching out to people . . . he was loved by patients and colleagues alike. He was truly a role model and inspiratio­n.”

His lifelong friend, lawyer Leonard Braithwait­e, Canada’s first black MPP, called Salmon “ kind and capable.

“ This great land of ours is better because of him,” Braithwait­e said of the man he grew up with near Kensington Market.

Braithwait­e said that in those days, before World War II, black families were few and far between in Toronto.

Salmon’s life was a story of triumph over adversity. Born Dec. 13, 1923, in Toronto to Jamaican immigrants Eugenie, a Black Cross ( the Marcus Garvey- originated medical corps) nurse, and Robert, a veteran of the Boer War, Douglas was the youngest of six children. They became orphaned during the Great Depression when Douglas was 6. Their mother’s sister, Margaret Brown ( Aunt Mag), a childless widow in her 50s, stepped in to raise them. Salmon was independen­t and strongwill­ed even as a child. His late sister, Stevella, used to recall that even from a very young age, her baby brother was always insistent that “ I’m going to be a docta!” Young Douglas Salmon would let nothing stand in his way, according to the family history.

Always resourcefu­l and self- motivated he would go around the neighbourh­ood and light furnaces for a penny, as well as work three paper routes so he, too, could contribute to the family.

In the 1940s, “ Doug Salmon & his Orchestra” entertaine­d at dances, parties and lodges in and around Toronto. Not escaping the realities of racism of the day, Salmon became a protest leader on the Race Discrimina­tion Committee ( 1942), which battled for the rights of blacks to enter Toronto’s Palais Royale to see jazz greats such as Duke Ellington. The protest came after he and a group of friends were denied admission to the Palais Royale to hear Earl “Fatha” Hines play piano.

In a 1992 interview with the Star, Salmon said while Canada didn’t have segregatio­n in those days, blacks did find themselves shut out of places. “ You didn’t see blacks as salesperso­ns. As far as education was concerned, you saw few blacks introduced to university.”

In 1951, he obtained his honours degree in physiology and biochemist­ry from the University of Toronto, and in 1955, his medical degree, graduating president of his second medical year. Salmon received scholarshi­ps from the American Jessie Smith Noyes Foundation and interned at Toronto Western Hospital.

In 1954, his sister Bea introduced him to Beverley Bell, a young Victorian Order nurse. They were married in 1956 and immediatel­y moved to Detroit.

Although he was offered a thriving practice in Detroit, the couple chose to return to Toronto and started a family. They had four children: J. Douglas Jr., Warren, Heather and Leslie.

In 1967, Salmon joined Scarboroug­h Centenary Hospital’s general surgical staff. He was the busiest general surgeon there for many years, which his colleagues attributed to not only his superior skills and training, but also his work ethic, conscienti­ous patient care, discipline­d lifestyle and great personalit­y. Salmon was known for his courage, humility and compassion, as he became one of the first surgeons in Canada to treat the morbidly obese with breakthrou­gh gastric bypass surgery. Salmon became president of Centenary’s medical staff and was later appointed chief of general surgery, the first black person in Canada to hold

such positions.

After retiring from Centenary Hospital in 1995, he joined the Rudd Clinic in downtown Toronto. He retired

from practice in 1997.

Salmon was a fellow of the Royal

College of Surgeons and a fellow of

the American College of Surgeons.

In recognitio­n of his outstandin­g stature and service to the community, he was awarded the Canadian Black Achievemen­t Award, Medicine.

In tribute to their beloved husband and father, his family has establishe­d the Dr. John Douglas Graham Salmon Award for Black Medical Students, administer­ed through the University of Toronto’s faculty of medicine.

Donations to the award may be made c/o The Medical Science Building, Room 2306, 1 Kings College Circle, Toronto, M5S 1A8, or call Ingrid Graham, 416- 946- 7681.

Visitation will take place today at Jerrett Funeral Home, 6191 Yonge St., south of Steeles Ave., from 2- 4 p. m. and from 7- 9 p. m.

Afuneral is to be held at 11 a. m. tomorrow at St. John’s York Mills Anglican Church, 19 Don Ridge, North York, with a reception to follow at the church. The interment is private.

 ??  ?? Dr. Douglas Salmon was Scarboroug­h Centenary Hospital’s busiest general surgeon for many years.
Dr. Douglas Salmon was Scarboroug­h Centenary Hospital’s busiest general surgeon for many years.

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