Frank Fairchild Wesbrook, the first president of the University of British Columbia, was born in Brant County, Ontario, on July 12, 1868. In 1887, he graduated from Manitoba University. Wesbrook received his M.D. in 1890. Subsequently, he spent a year at the Rotunda Hospital, Dublin and in 1892, he was elected John Walker student in pathology at Cambridge. He was appointed Professor of Bacteriology at the University of Minnesota in 1895 and in 1906 became the first full-time Dean of Medicine there. In 1913, he accepted the post of President of the nascent UBC. He guided the University through the first difficult years, hiring a staff and striving to make the University successful. The boom that had lasted for a decade in B.C. collapsed with the outbreak of war in 1914. Work on the new campus begun at Point Grey to replace the Fairview campus used by UBC's predecessor, McGill University College of B.C., was suspended for several years. As a consequence when the University of British Columbia began operations in 1915 it had to do so in the less than adequate facilities. As well as his University activities, President Wesbrook was Officer Commanding the Officers' Training Corps. He helped establish the Vancouver Institute, toured the province examining its resources and was active in the Patriotic Fund Drive in the Autumn, 1915. Failing health forced him to take a long break in early 1918. He died on 20 October, 1918.
From the description of Frank F. Wesbrook fonds. 1893-1918. (University of British Columbia Library). WorldCat record id: 606455523