Following the overthrow of the
Governor of New South Wales William Bligh in January 1808, the rebel administration made
Joseph Foveaux the NSW Lieutenant Governor. In August 1808 Foveaux appointed Redfern as a government surgeon at the Sydney general hospital on George Street. The appointment was conditional on proof of his medical qualifications. Redfern's medical records had been lost in the mutiny, so he agreed to be examined by a colonial medical board composed of Principal Surgeon
Thomas Jamison, NSW Corps Surgeon
John Harris and Corps Assistant Surgeon William Bohan. Redfern passed the examination and was awarded the first medical diploma issued in Australia. Foveaux then wrote to the British Colonial Secretary
Lord Castlereagh seeking confirmation of the appointment. King
George III confirmed Redfern as a government surgeon in February 1812. Among his other official duties, Government Surgeon Redfern treated the imprisoned Governor Bligh and his daughter Mary. Bligh was a captain of a warship that mutinied at the Nore but had insisted his crew be pardoned. It is likely the two men had much to reminisce about. In September 1809 Redfern vaccinated children across the colony against
smallpox, after ensuring that the community was well informed of the advantages of the
inoculation. Redfern treated mostly convicts and the disadvantaged at the general hospital, but he also ran a busy private medical practise. His reputation as a physician, surgeon and obstetrician made his low-cost private services highly sought after. The appointment of
Lachlan Macquarie as Governor of NSW in January 1810 was a major turning point in Redfern's life. Macquarie considered hardworking well-behaved emancipists to be among the most useful members of the colony, and he prioritised rehabilitation over punishment, seeing personal repatriation into the society of freemen as an ultimate goal for convicts. To emphasise this commitment, Macquarie invited prominent emancipists to dine at Government House and these occasions often included Redfern. Within months of his arrival Macquarie had approved the construction of a new general hospital on
Macquarie Street and appointed Redfern as the health inspector of incoming convict ships. He later became the governor's personal physician, travel companion and close confidant. In March 1811 William married Sarah Wills and they had two sons; William Lachlan Macquarie was born in 1819 and Robert Joseph Foveaux in 1823. In 1812 Redfern accepted James Sheers as a surgeon apprentice at the hospital. This made Sheers Australia's first medical student and Redfern its first medical teacher. Improving sanitary conditions aboard convict ships is considered one of Redfern's greatest achievements. In 1814 the three convict ships,
General Hewitt,
Three Bees and
Surry, arrived in Sydney with major outbreaks of
scurvy,
typhus and
dysentery. It was greatly feared that the typhus rampant on the
Surry would affect the colony and Australia's first quarantine camp was created on the north shore of the harbour opposite Dawes Point (today in the vicinity of
Jeffreys Street,
Kirribilli). In this camp D'Arcy Wentworth and Redfern treated infected seamen from the
Surry. Later Redfern was appointed to lead an inquiry into the infections and high death rate on the three ships and he recommended major reforms to sanitation, diet, air circulation and medical assistance on convict transports. In 1815 the British Government adopted most of these reforms and they improved conditions aboard all subsequent transport ships, significantly reducing convict morbidity and mortality. A new
Sydney General Hospital was officially opened on Macquarie Street in April 1816. The central block of the three-winged building contained the hospital wards. The north wing was assigned as the residence of Principal Surgeon Wentworth and the south wing as the residence of the Assistant Surgeon Redfern and his wife Sarah. Today, these two outer buildings remain – the southern wing is now
The Mint and the northern wing is the
Parliament House of New South Wales. == Bank director ==