Following his graduation from the University of Toronto in 1896, Goldie taught in the university's pathology and bacteriology departments, later transferring to the department of medicine. Goldie also took up positions as a clinician at the
Toronto General Hospital and chief of the infection division at the
Hospital for Sick Children. With the publication of the
Flexner Report in 1910, he became an enthusiastic advocate for its recommendation that medical schools appoint full-time clinical professors. He convinced
Sir Robert Falconer, President of the University of Toronto, and
Sir Joseph Flavell, chairman of the Board of Directors of Toronto General Hospital, of the need for such an appointment in the
Faculty of Medicine, and set about to secure the required funding.
The Sir John and Lady Eaton Professorship and Chair of Medicine In 1918, Goldie persuaded two of his patients,
Sir John and
Lady Eaton, to donate $500,000 to establish the first endowed chair at the University of Toronto, and the first full-time Chair in Clinical Medicine in what was then the British Empire. Having declined the position himself, Goldie insisted that the position should be occupied by a younger physician rather than someone with an established reputation. That same year, Goldie travelled to
Basingstoke where he met
Dr. Duncan Archibald Graham at the No. 4 General Hospital there. Of Graham, Goldie wrote to Sir John that "he is not only respected but liked even though he is an exacting task-master." == References ==