As a youth Openshaw became a member of the
British Army's volunteer force (the then equivalent of the
Territorial Army), eventually being appointed
lieutenant colonel in the
Lincolnshire Yeomanry. Having been appointed surgeon to the Volunteer Medical Staff Corps in 1888, when the
Second Boer War broke out in
South Africa in October 1899, Openshaw left his duties at the London Hospital and went there as surgeon to the Imperial Yeomanry Field Hospital. Openshaw was taken prisoner by the
Boers, but was released after two weeks of confinement during an exchange of prisoners. He was subsequently appointed Principal Medical Officer at the Number Three Medical School Hospital in
Pretoria. For his services during the Second Boer War Openshaw was awarded the Companion of the Most Distinguished
Order of St Michael and St George (CMG) by
Queen Victoria. As Openshaw was 58 years old when the
First World War broke out in 1914, he was considered too old to serve abroad in the front line. Nevertheless, he was determined to contribute to the war effort and therefore served with the rank of
colonel in the
Royal Army Medical Corps (Territorial Force) as a consulting surgeon based in the United Kingdom. Openshaw later received the
Territorial Decoration (TD) for his services. He was elected surgeon to the King Edward VII Hospital, and later, as an acknowledged expert in
orthopaedic surgery, he was instrumental in establishing the Queen Mary Convalescent Auxiliary Hospital for the Limbless at
Roehampton, where he oversaw the development of effective artificial limbs for the thousands of men who had become amputees because of injuries sustained during the war. In 1917 he was awarded the Companion of the Most Honourable
Order of the Bath (CB) for this important work. ==Interests==