John Cade was born in
Murtoa, in the
Wimmera region of
Victoria, Australia. John's father David was Murtoa's general practitioner. Ellen, John's mother, and younger brothers David and Frank completed the family. When John was a small boy, his father left for World War I and served in
Gallipoli and
France. On return from the war, his father suffered from '
war-weariness' and had difficulty in continuing in general practice. Therefore, his father sold the practice and accepted a position with the Mental Hygiene Department. Over the next 25 years, Dr Cade Sr became medical superintendent at several Victorian mental hospitals, namely
Sunbury,
Beechworth and
Mont Park. John and his brothers spent many of their younger years living within the grounds of these institutions, which had a great bearing on John's later deep understanding of the needs of the mentally ill. John was educated at
Scotch College, Melbourne, matriculating in 1928. He then studied medicine at the
University of Melbourne, graduating at the age of 21 years with honours in all subjects. He became a House Officer at
St Vincent's Hospital and then
Royal Children's Hospital before becoming severely ill with bilateral
pneumococcal pneumonia. While he was convalescing, John fell in love with one of his nurses, Jean. They married in 1937.
World War II Like his father before him, Cade left his young family to fight for Australia in the Armed Forces in World War II. Cade was appointed
captain,
Australian Army Medical Corps,
A.I.F., on 1 July 1940 and posted to the 2nd/9th Field Ambulance. Although trained as a psychiatrist, Dr. Cade served as a
surgeon and departed for Singapore in 1941 on . He was promoted to
major in September 1941. After the
Fall of Singapore to Japan, he became a
prisoner of war at
Changi Prison from February 1942 to September 1945. During his imprisonment, he reportedly would observe some fellow inmates having strange, vacillating behaviour. He thought perhaps a toxin was affecting their brains and when it was eliminated through their urine, they lost their symptoms. ==Discovery of the effect of lithium on mania==