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George
A Savoy, Visionary Benefactor of Canadians with Epilepsy, and
the History of the Savoy Foundation for Epilepsy
CM Rémillard, BG Zifkin, A Sherwin and W Feindel
Abstract:
George A. Savoy was born in Cohoes, New York, in 1873.
He left the U.S.A. in 1921 to manage the Canadian branch of
a large manufacturer of ledgers and looseleaf registers. This
company was asked to supply Professor Jasper's laboratory with
rolls of plain unlined paper and it was George Savoy who later
developed fanfolded and lined EEG paper, which was first used
at the Montreal Neurological Institute. He also had personal
contacts with Wilder Penfield concerning their mutual interest
in the needs of patients with epilepsy. He was a successful
industrialist involved with several charitable organizations
funding programmes for people with epilepsy. He was opposed
to the sectarianism then prevalent in Quebec, which was unfamiliar
to him, and in reaction built his own institution, Dieppe House,
a home for people with epilepsy, later renamed «Foyer Savoy»
as to operate without regard to race, language or religion.
In 1971, his son Harold and other generous donors decided to
create a foundation to support research in epilepsy. The Foyer
Savoy was sold in 1988 and the proceeds used to increase the
endowment of the foundation. His grandson George M. Savoy is
the current president. The fourth generation is also represented
by Caroline Savoy, daughter of the president, who joined the
board of directors in 1992. The foundation will distribute from
$300,000 to $400,000 yearly to researchers from many different
countries working in the field of epilepsy in universities and
hospitals throughout Canada.
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Can.
J. Neurol. Sci. 1996; 23: 80-82
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