Thomas George Roddick attended the
Model and Normal Schools in
Truro, Nova Scotia, and graduated from the Medical Faculty of
McGill University in 1868 with the highest honours, winning the Holmes Gold Medal and Final Prize. From 1868 to 1874, he was Assistant House Surgeon at the
Montreal General Hospital. In 1872, he was appointed Lecturer on Hygiene at McGill University. He was appointed a Demonstrator of Anatomy in 1874 and in 1875 was named Professor of Clinical Surgery. Earlier in 1877, Roddick traveled to Edinburgh to witness
Joseph Lister's medical antiseptic system. Roddick returned to Montreal later that year and introduced
Joseph Lister's antiseptic system, primarily his 'carbolic spray,' revolutionizing the way medicine was practised in Montreal's Hospitals. In 1894 Roddick, with the aid of fellow specialist James Bell, created the Department of Surgery and became the first chief surgeon of the
Royal Victoria Hospital. However, by 1901 Roddick found himself no longer able to practise surgery, having become allergic to the new antiseptic replacing the carbolic acid he had introduced to Montreal, iodoform. He was instead given the position of Dean of the Faculty of Medicine at McGill University from 1901 to 1908, where he could contribute to medicine without practising surgery. In subsequent years Roddick would play an instrumental role in the creation of the
Medical Council of Canada as well as establishing a common system of examinations for students graduating with medical degrees in Canada. ==Military service==