Forster was born in 1823 in
Lambeth,
London, where his father and grandfather before him had been local medical practitioners. He entered
Guy's Hospital in 1841, was appointed demonstrator of
anatomy in 1850, assistant-surgeon in 1855, and surgeon in 1870. He became a member of the
College of Surgeons in 1844, fellow in 1849 and president in 1884. He was a prompt and sometimes bold operator. In 1858, he performed practically the first
gastrostomy in England for a case of
cancer of the
oesophagus. Among his best-known papers were discussions of
acupressure,
syphilis,
hydrophobia, intestinal obstruction, modified obturator
hernia, torsion, and colloid cancer of the large intestine; and he published a book on
Surgical Diseases of Children in 1860, founded on his experience as surgeon to the
hospital for children and women in Waterloo Road. He died suddenly in London on 2 March 1886. ==References==