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Biographical
statement
The second
son of John Dillon and grandson of James Blake Dillon, Theo Dillon
was educated at Belvedere and Mount St Benedict, Gorey and entered
University College Dublin with a scholarship in classics and mathematics
in 1915. He graduated in medicine in 1921 and was awarded a travelling
scholarship in pathology. However he had not been in good health
for some time and went instead to continental sanatoria in search
of treatment for what was suspected, mistakenly, to be bone tuberculosis.
He spent a year at Berk-Plage in the north of France and four years
at Leysin, Switzerland, first as a patient and then as assistant
to Dr Rollier, a pioneer in the use of heliotherapy. He married
Marie Berringer and spent 1928ñ29 in Vienna studying modern methods
in medicine. They moved to Dublin in 1929. In 1932 Dillon was appointed
Professor of Therapeutics and Pharmacology in U.C.D.
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Scope
and content
Mainly letters
from Theo Dillon to his father John, 1922ñ7, from France and Switzerland
where he had gone to recuperate and where he married. Letters concern
a wide range of topics from the Civil War and British and European
post-war politics; medical education, particularly in Dublin; the
nature and progress of his own treatment; his marriage and career
prospects; and family matters. Also includes some letters to Theo
from contemporaries; and documents relating to his literary, religious
and social interests.
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