Maud Forrester-Brown

[3] Once back in England, Sir Harold Stiles recognized Maud's skills and offered her a job as resident surgeon at the Bath and Wessex Orthopaedic hospital in 1925.

To this day Forrester-Brown Ward at The Royal United Hospital in Bath, North Someret, still cares for patients within the Trauma and Orthopaedic discipline.

[5] One of the studies were tendon transplants, which she said had a 99% success rate in terms of restoring function to the damaged limb.

She noticed the areas that were being neglected within the medical field and focused her research on those specialties, such as defects and deformities that were not being resolved until the children were older and stronger.

In 1931, the Annual Meeting for the British Medical Association was held, which Maud was a member of for over 50 years, and she was appointed Secretary.