Psychiatric Bulletin (2001) 25: 453. doi: 10.1192/pb.25.11.453
© 2001 The Royal College of Psychiatrists
Psychiatric Bulletin (2001) 25: 453
© 2001 The Royal College of Psychiatrists
Thomas Galla
Former Consultant Psychiatrist North Staffordshire Hospital Centre
Edward Myers
Thomas Galla, who died from a cerebral tumour on 11 February 2001, was born
in Budapest on 12 June 1923. In the autumn of 1938 his parents arranged, with
the help of a Scottish clergyman in Hungary, for Tom to be accepted at the
Dollar Academy in Clackmannanshire. Tom, aged 15, arrived at the Dollar
knowing only a few words of English, but with intensive tuition from his
housemaster he rapidly learned the language. Against the advice of his parents
he returned to Budapest for the summer holiday and left again in September
1939 "with only about 12 to 15 hours before it would have become
impossible".
After 2 further years at the Dollar Academy he won the class prize in
English and was subsequently awarded a scholarship to study medicine at
Edinburgh University. His parents (who died during or shortly after the war)
had both been doctors and it had always been his ambition to follow in their
footsteps. He graduated MBChB in 1947. After house jobs and National Service
in the Royal Army Medical Corps in Singapore, where he was a graded
psychiatrist, he came to Stoke-on-Trent in 1952 as the first psychiatric
registrar in the psychiatric unit of the City General Hospital. He completed
his psychiatric training as senior registrar in the Bristol Mental Hospitals
and returned to Stoke-on-Trent in 1957 as Consultant Psychiatrist and Deputy
Superintendent of St Edward's Hospital, Cheddleton. He had obtained the DPM
(England) in 1954 and became FRCPsych in 1971.
In 1969, Tom was appointed Chairman of the St Edward's Hospital Medical
Staff Committee, a post he occupied until he retired in 1989. In this post he
carried out assiduously, and without remuneration, the duties of what were, in
fact, those of a superintendent, uncomplainingly spending long hours sorting
out staffing and administrative problems. At the same time he carried a full
clinical load and, later, a busy private practice and his opinion was eagerly
sought by solicitors from North Staffordshire and further afield as he had
built up a considerable reputation as an expert in forensic psychiatry.
Tom was a highly intelligent, modest and unassuming man. He played chess
for the County of Staffordshire, was an ardent supporter of Stoke City
Football Club and had a keen interest in music, literature and travel. In
recent years he had, by his own account "become very active in the
grandfather business", a role that he embraced with great enthusiasm. He
had a dry sense of humour and a vast fund of humorous stories; as a friend and
colleague for 35 years' duration I shall miss hearing the latest joke from
him. An astute clinician and able administrator, he made a significant
contribution to psychiatry in North Staffordshire.
In 1948 Tom married Mary Benecke whom he had met when she was a nurse at
the Western General Hospital in Edinburgh. The marriage was a very happy one
and they were blessed with two sons, Andrew and Max. Sadly, Mary died in 1984,
a loss that left Tom badly shaken but in which he was sustained by his family,
good friends and his ability to lose himself in his work. He is survived by
his sons and two grandchildren, with one more on the way.