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Buried in
the same plot as his parents, Wettenhall was born on 18 September 1915 in
England the son of Roland
(q.v.), a medical practitioner serving with the Royal Army Medical Corps and
Jane née Creswick (1884-1928); after his education at Geelong College
(1930-34), he graduated with honours at the University of Melbourne (M.D.,
M.B.B.S., 1940) before being appointed resident medical officer at
the Royal Melbourne Hospital. The following year he enlisted as
surgeon-lieutenant in the Royal Australian Navy (1941-44) on HMAS
Nepal
(U.K and East Africa) and HMAS
Shropshire
(New Guinea) until ill-health forced his discharge. On his return
Wettenhall began a lifelong association with the Royal Children’s Hospital
(1948-90) where he became fascinated with paediatric endocrinology - the
science of hormonal disorders in children - he recognised an association
between neonatal goitre and maternal asthma; he served as senior physician
(1948-73), endocrinologist (1973-80) and honorary consulting endocrinologist
(1980-90). As Australia’s first specialist paediatric endocrinologist, in
1962 he established the Endocrine Clinic at the hospital and internationally
recognised for his clinical trials of oestrogen for tall girls and
oxandrolone for short boys; in later years he found it distressing that a
minority of those felt they had suffered as a result of treatment and
supported follow-up studies. Wettenhall was a keen ornithologist and
conservationist. His love of birds was ignited by yellow robins at the
family’s beach-house at Mount Martha; his private collection of some 300
fine volumes covering natural history, Australiana and Antarctica was sold
in 1995 to fund the Norman Wettenhall Foundation to support “the protection,
maintenance and understanding of Australian living nature and the
environment and habitat with which it exists, with particular emphasis on
bird life”. Described as “urbane, involved, talkative, persistent,
gregarious, generous and fun”, he was associated with many organisations
including National Trust (1956-77), Australian Conservation Foundation
(1965-69), National Museum of Victoria (1963-78) and council (1978-83),
inaugural chairman Heide Park and Art Gallery (1980-88) and Geelong College
(1960-91) of which Wettenhall House is named. Dr. Gary Warne who succeeded
Wettenhall as Director of Endocrinology said “as a clinician, Norman was
warm and compassionate, and a meticulous observer and recorder of
information. As a person he was blessed with an extraordinary good nature,
boundless energy and enthusiasm for a wide range of causes, and youthful
exuberance. He had a profound sense of contentment about him and was never
remotely envious of anyone else, yet neither did he ever doubt his own
ability. He was generous to his colleagues and never sought fame or
recognition for himself”. Wettenhall died on 27 November 2000 after a short
illness. In 1947 he married Joan née Lamb and they had four
children; Gilbert (b 1948), Adam (b 1951), Jane and Helen. |

Monumental Headstone (enlarge
image) |
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Source:
The Age 9 December 2000.
Endocrine Society of Australia newsletter
(April 2001).
Bright Sparcs Biographical entry -
(http://www.asap.unimelb.edu.au/bsparcs/biogs/P003207b.htm).
Corfield, J & Persse, M., “Geelong
Grammarians. A Biographical Register Vol I 1855-1913” (1996). |
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