After resident posts in Edinburgh he had decided on a career in obstetrics, working initially at the Vienna clinic of
Ernst Wertheim, the pioneer of
radical hysterectomy. Moving to Prague he spent time researching and studying at the clinics of von Franque and von Jaksche where his research would form the basis of a thesis for which he was awarded the degree of
MD with honours in 1906. From 1926 to 1946 he was Professor of Midwifery and Gynaecology at
Edinburgh University succeeding
Benjamin Philip Watson. He was succeeded in turn by
Robert James Kellar. His main contributions to the literature were his
Textbook of Midwifery for Students and Practitioners, first published in 1913 and which, by the time of his death had run to a remarkable 21 editions. His biography of the Scottish obstetrician
William Smellie was published in 1952. He retired in 1946 and died in Edinburgh in 1969. == Honours and awards ==