At Queen Mary’s Hospital, Sidcup, with Fry looking after the hard tissues, and plastic surgeon Gillies caring for the soft, they revolutionised the treatment of the facial injuries from explosive shells and high velocity missiles that were suffered by 15 per cent of all WWI soldiers who survived and were sent for treatment.
Their work was recorded by the surgeon and artist Henry Tonks, who made a series of pastel drawings recording injuries and stages of treatment, now displayed at the headquarters of the Royal College of Surgeons.
Fry returned to Guy’s after the war and became one of the leading oral surgeons in the country, developing new treatment techniques for patients with cleft palates and other facial deformities. He became President of the British Dental Association, and his book The Dental Treatment of Maxillofacial Injuries (1942) became a leading textbook in the field. He was knighted in 1951.
Fry’s work has paved the way for decades of innovation at the Faculty of Dentistry, Oral & Craniofacial Sciences at King’s, helping to understand disease, enhance health, restore function in the mouth, jaw, neck and neck.