Born in
Timaru, Stanley Foster was educated at
Otago Boys' High School from 1899 to 1903, then studied medicine at the
University of New Zealand. He served as house surgeon at Wellington Hospital for 15 months before being appointed senior house surgeon at
Christchurch Hospital in June 1910. He undertook post-graduate studies in London from 1911 to 1913. He married Florence Chisholm in Wellington in December 1914. In the
First World War he served with the rank of captain as an army surgeon on the hospital ship SS
Maheno. He returned to New Zealand in October 1917. Before the war Foster had played one
first-class cricket match for
Wellington while working in the hospital there. In January 1919 he opened the batting for
Canterbury and made 31 and 13 when Canterbury beat Wellington to regain the
Plunket Shield in Wellington. In December 1919 he was selected to play for Canterbury against Wellington in Christchurch. During the first day's play, while Wellington were batting and Foster was fielding, he was called away to perform an urgent surgical operation in
Waikari, a small town north of Christchurch. As Foster had neither batted nor bowled, the Wellington captain allowed a
full substitute, and
Harry Whitta took his place in the Canterbury team. It was Foster's last first-class match, though he continued to play club cricket in Christchurch. A pioneer of
neurosurgery in New Zealand, Foster was the director of surgical services at Christchurch Hospital from 1934 to 1946. He served as President of the New Zealand branch of the
BMA in 1939–40, and as Chairman of the New Zealand Medical Council from 1948 to 1957. He was appointed a
Companion of the Order of St Michael and St George in the
1953 Coronation Honours. ==References==