Tudor-Hart initially studied history and economics under
John Maynard Keynes at
King's College, Cambridge, graduating with an
aegrotat degree in 1924. Later he studied orthopaedics in Vienna under the surgeon
Lorenz Böhler. He worked at
Booth Hall Children's Hospital, St. Mary Abbott's Hospital, Hampstead General Hospital, and as a
general practitioner in Llanelli, Brixton and Colliers Wood. He was an active member of the
Communist Party of Great Britain (CPGB). He represented the
South Wales Miners' Federation in a dispute. His home has been described as "a transit camp for
anti-fascist refugees from Continental Europe". During the
Spanish Civil War, he volunteered for
the Republicans' Medical Aid Committee and was put in charge of the medical unit in December 1936. He was particularly concerned with the management of fractures. He used his experience in Spain in training other doctors to deal with problems they might expect in wartime. In April 1939 he delivered a lecture to the
British Postgraduate Medical School on the
Böhler technique for dealing with fractures and open wounds which he had refined in combat situations. He was a Captain in the
Royal Army Medical Corps 1940–45 and served as assistant medical officer at Finsbury
Air Raid Precautions. He was denounced as a communist, though the informant admitted that he did excellent surgical work. In the 1960s he left the CPGB and became chairman of
anti-revisionist group, the
Working People's Party of England, founded in 1968 by former members of the
Committee to Defeat Revisionism, for Communist Unity. In 1972 he split with a section of the membership to form the Committee for a Socialist Programme, which published the "Workers Newsletter" and later renamed itself after its publication, before disbanding in the 1980s. His first wife was Dr Alison Macbeth.
Dr Julian Tudor-Hart was their son. He married the photographer
Edith Suschitzky in Vienna in 1933; the couple divorced in 1940. Tudor-Hart died in February 1992 in Oxford. ==References==