After a year's
residency at the
Royal Melbourne Hospital (1894), Ramsay spent the next year abroad in
Auckland as a resident (1895), before being appointed
house surgeon at the
Launceston General Hospital. In 1896, Ramsay and Dr.
Francis John Drake participated in the first demonstration of
X-rays by
Frank Styant Browne at Launceston General Hospital. In 1898, he became the
surgeon-superintendent of the hospital. Designing and building
St. Margaret's Hospital in Launceston, Ramsay entered private practice in 1912 upon the hospital's foundation. However, he retained his connection with the Launceston General Hospital, serving as an honorary
consulting surgeon for the hospital. During
World War I, Ramsay served, with the rank of major, as a surgeon in the
Hornsey Military Hospital in Launceston, later the 12th Australian General Hospital. For his military services, Ramsay was appointed
Commander of the Order of the British Empire in 1924. The following year in 1925, Ramsay became president of the Tasmanian branch of the
British Medical Association. In 1927, Ramsay became a foundation fellow of the
Royal Australasian College of Surgeons. Joining the board of directors of the Launceston General Hospital in 1929, Ramsay became chairman in 1933 until his death in 1944. Associated with the
Medical Council of Tasmania and the
Red Cross, Ramsay was also a director of his brother
William's company,
Kiwi Polish. ==Cricket==