Frederick Spicer
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Frederick Spicer (c. 1820 – 7 May 1905) was a medical doctor and politician in the colony of South Australia.

Spicer was one of five brothers, four having been trained as doctors, and emigrated to Victoria in the early 1850s. He practised in St. Kilda, Victoria for a while before moving to South Australia in 1862[1] to take a position of House Surgeon with the Adelaide Hospital. He took over the practice of Dr. Taylor at Kensington in 1864,[2] and was followed by Dr. John Benson both as House Surgeon and, in 1866, at Kensington. Spicer next had a practice in Adelaide with Dr. Augustus Davies, formerly of Clare.[3]
He was appointed in 1867 to a panel of enquiry into the operation of the Hospital, which, over the objections of the Colonial Surgeon, Robert Waters Moore MRCS (1820–1884), recommended sweeping reforms.[4]
He returned to England around 1871, died at Tufnell Park and is buried in a family vault in Highgate Cemetery (west side).