Frank Cook (surgeon)

[2] As a Beit Fellow he worked with Marcus Seymour Pembrey FRS to produce an important paper on the effects of muscular exercise on man.

[4] He was also one of the students with whom Sir Arthur Frederick Hurst made his pioneering investigations into the movements of the gut in man.

He served as a colonel in the Royal Army Medical Corps in both Great Wars; France, Belgium and Mesopotamia (1914 Star with Bar); Palestine, Greece, Sudan, Egypt and India.

He was Hunterian Professor at the Royal College of Surgeons (1917 and 1924), consulting gynæcologist to Queen Alexandra Military Hospital and to King Edward VII Sanatorium, Midhurst.

He was a medical inspector of the High Court (Divorce Division) and a Demonstrator of Pathology, Surgical Registrar and tutor at Guy's Hospital.