), 2nd Division, and was awarded the Distinguished Service Order[5] for supervising the evacuation of the wounded while under constant shell-fire at Pozières and Sausage Valley in July–August of that year.
He returned to Australia in 1918, where he married Dorothy Editha Deeley with Anglican rites at the Church of the Epiphany, Crafers on 21 October 1918.
[2] In 1920, Fry established a private practice in Eastwood in a house of his own design which incorporated a surgery, laboratory and one of the first X-ray units in the State.
In 1926, Fry was a founder member of the Board for Anthropological Research, along with Draper Campbell,[6] (Sir) John Cleland,[7] Frederic Wood Jones,[8] Robert Henry Pulleine,[9] and Archibald Watson.
Moving to Crafers in 1937, he was appoint public health officer for the City of Adelaide, a position he occupied part-time.