CONTACT LENS HISTORY
THE UK PIONEERS
Frederick
Ridley (1904-1977)

Frederick Thomas Ridley was born and educated in
Ridley worked with Alexander Fleming on lysozyme and devised a system of purification and concentration. His rooms in Harley Street were bombed in 1940 and he was given temporary accommodation with Dixey's.

In 1948 Ridley set up the contact lens dept at Moorfields,
High Holborn. He was appointed
Medical Officer in June 1950 and the department began to see patients in
September 1951 with three assistant medical officers and a full-time technician
the following year. Using PMMA, he
worked with both unfenestrated flush fitting shells and the newly developing
micro-corneal lenses, ultimately fitting several thousand therapeutic cases for
conditions including indolent corneal ulcers, dry eyes and symblepharon.
The Ministry of Health agreed to purchase his production method for £2,500
on condition that he continued research work at the hospital.
Ridley addressed the question of veiling and preferred channels in the
haptic portion to fenestrations in order to relieve the negative pressure under
a sealed lens which he felt caused corneal oedema.
In the late 1940s to early 1950s, Ridley worked in conjunction with
Charles Keeler in designing a slide rule for calculating lens parameters,
similar in appearance to that produced by Nissel.
His rule was never produced on a commercial basis but the prototype is
now in the Contact Lens Collection of the
Ridley was President of the ophthalmological section of
Royal Society of Medicine in 1963 and retired as Director of the Moorfields
contact lens clinic in 1968 at which time 14,000 new cases a year were being
seen. He was succeeded by Montague Ruben
Modern
Trends in Ophthalmology, Ridley
Recent development in the manufacture, fitting and prescription of contact lenses of regular shape. Proceeding of the Royal Society of Medicine 39, 1946 842-848.
Developments in Contact lens Theory and Practice-Moulding, computation and Veiling, Trans. Ophthalmol. Soc. UK xviii, 1947.
Veiling with Contact Lenses Brit. J. Ophthalmol, January 1948.
Contact lenses in Keratoconus, Brit. J. Ophthalmol. 40, 295, (1956)
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