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The Honourable Dr Arthur Hutton
McShine was Trinidad and Tobago's first qualified
specialist eye surgeon and consultant. A “Renaissance
Man”[1], Dr McShine was
also passionately involved in politics, economics and
education. This humanitarian served his country,
especially the nation’s poor, for over 40 years.
Arthur Hutton McShine was born on
2nd December, 1876 east of the Dry River in
Port-of-Spain, Trinidad. He was educated at Eastern
Boys’ Government School and obtained a college
exhibition to Queen's Royal College in 1888. In 1896,
he won an Island Scholarship and elected to study
medicine at the University of Edinburgh, Scotland. His
nights of studying under the street lamp near his home
had paid off!
Within five years, McShine became a
prize winning student under the tutelage of the famous
Professor Wylie, and attained his primary
qualifications in medicine and surgery. He immediately
returned to Trinidad where he worked at the General
Hospital in Port-of-Spain. He left again in 1902 to
pursue postgraduate studies at the Moorfields Eye
Hospital in London. In 1903, he completed his thesis on
glaucoma at the University of Edinburgh, which
qualified him as a Doctor of Medicine (MD), making him
the country's first trained specialist in
ophthalmology.
He established his own clinic on
Frederick Street, and performed free surgery twice a
week at the General Hospital. In 1925, he was appointed
the first Honorary Ophthalmic Surgeon at the hospital.
He also helped to form the Trinidad Association for the
Prevention and Treatment of Tuberculosis[2]
aimed at improving living conditions in Port-of-Spain
to reduce transmission of the infection. He was a
member of the Council of the Medical Board for 20 years
and served as Vice President and President. Up to a
short time before his death, he was the Trinidad
Representative on the Editorial Panel of the West
Indian Medical Journal.
Dr McShine served at the
newly-founded Trinidad Co-operative Bank for 32 years,
28 of which he was President of the Board. During these
years, the Bank became known as the "Poor Man's
Friend", allowing persons with low incomes to
participate in its goals of “Thrift and Co-operation”.
The Bank pioneered low-cost housing in Trinidad and, in
his honour, one of its housing settlements in Belmont
was named McShine Terrace.
He was a founding member of the
Board of Industrial Training which was established in
1931. As Chairman of the Board, he led the
establishment, in 1943, of the first full-time
technical school, located in San Fernando. Many of the
school’s graduates entered the petroleum and sugar
industries.
Dr McShine had, however, decided
early on that he could best help his country through
entry into politics. In 1914, when the City Council of
Port-of-Spain was re-established, he was among its
first elected members. He was a member of the Council
for 14 years, and was elected Mayor from 1921 to 1922
and Deputy Mayor on three occasions between 1920 and
1926. Due to his efforts, a piped water system was
installed on Laventille Hill. The McShine Reservoir
still services the area today. He also served as an
unofficial member of the Legislative Council from 1921
to 1943 and an appointed member of the Executive
Council from 1937 to 1943.
Upon retirement, His Majesty, George
VI declared that Dr McShine would retain the title "The
Honourable". He also received the Order of the British
Empire and later the title Commander of the Most
Excellent Order of the British Empire.
Dr Arthur McShine died on 4th
August, 1948.
1-An
individual who is highly educated or skilled in
multiple areas
2-An infectious and often
fatal disease that usually affects the lungs, causing
chest pain, coughing, fever and weight loss
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