Category: Education (page 2 of 6)

MHC Quick Info Session Wednesday

Location: First floor collaborative space, Prior Hall

Join us for the Quick Information Session on Wednesday, December 12 from noon-1:00pm in the first floor collaborative space behind the Desk:

“Treasures from the Medical Heritage Center”

Curators will be showcasing hidden treasures from the MHC collections. If you are curious about the services and artifacts that the Medical Heritage Center houses on the fifth floor of Prior Hall, this is a great opportunity to learn more!

Featured treasures will include

–          Swamp root cure

–          Dental cabinet (shown through images, not in person)

–          Jimmy Buffet eyewear

–          Bound human skull

–          Wax moulage and book

–          Suppository pill press

–          Newton’s Opticks (1704)

–          Nightingale’s Notes on Nursing (1860)

–          OSUWMC Service Board poster

–          Dr. Pavey Collection booklet

Conestoga Club Lecture

The Medical Heritage Center and the Ohio Historical Society’s Conestoga Club present:

Dr. Steve Gabbe

A Story of Two Miracles, the Impact of Insulin on Pregnant Women with Diabetes Mellitus

October 11, 2012

Reception at 4:00pm; Lecture begins at 4:30pm

Room 550 of Prior Hall
376 W. 10th Ave.
Columbus, OH 43210

The event is free and open to the public.

Parking: We suggest parking in the SAFEAUTO Hospitals Garage. Please visit http://medicalcenter.osu.edu/pdfs/maps/finding_prkng_pad.pdf for maps and parking information.
Visit go.osu.edu/mhc or call (614) 292-9966 for event information.

OSU Harding Hospital

OSU Harding Hospital was built in 1991 and houses clinical inpatient, outpatient, partial, and research facilities. It is located at 1670 Upham Drive and has seven stories.

In 1916, George T. Harding II, MD, founded a hospital in Worthington, Ohio, and the Harding name has been synonymous with leadership in mental health care and education ever since. In 1999 Ohio State and Harding Hospital united their services and moved the hospital facility to the OSU campus.

Today, OSU Harding Hospital offers the only academic program in central Ohio providing child, adolescent, adult and geriatric inpatient services.

Centennials and Timeline of Medical Education in Central Ohio

2014 marks 100 years of health sciences education on the Columbus campus of The Ohio State University. This education includes colleges of nursing, optometry, dentistry, and medicine.

The College of Medicine legacy really began in 1834, however. Below is a Timeline of Medical Education in Central Ohio.

Willoughby University of Lake Erie, 1834-1846

 1834: Dr. George W. Card and Dr. John M. Henderson found Willoughby University of Lake Erie in honor of their friend Dr. Westel Willoughby. Drs. Card and Henderson believed Willoughby’s name would give prestige to the university and would aid in securing teachers and students.

Willoughby University operates in Willoughby, Ohio until 1846. Willoughby Medical University of Lake Erie had approximately 618 graduates.

 

Willoughby Medical College of Columbus, 1847

 1846: Willoughby University moves to Columbus, Ohio and the name changes to Willoughby Medical College of Columbus.

The session of 1847-48 opened in Columbus under the name of the Willoughby Medical College of Columbus located in a building on the northwest corner of Gay and High Streets. The building is not adequate, but before the session was completed Mr. Lyne Starling, an attorney in Columbus and well connected with the older established families, offered to give money to erect a proper building. An entirely new charter was secured for the medical school, which, out of gratitude to the donor, was called Starling Medical College (SMC). Shortly after it has organized all of the trustees of the Willoughby Medical College of Columbus resigned in January 1848 and the class of 1848 was graduated under the charter of Starling Medical College. Willoughby Medical College of Columbus continued less than one complete session and had no graduates.

 

Starling Medical College, 1847-1907

 1847: Starling Medical College (SMC) replaces Willoughby Medical College as the majority of the trustees, faculty, and students connected with Willoughby Medical College moved to SMC. Starling Medical College is located in St. Francis Hospital in downtown Columbus. It operates until 1907.

In the year 1848 the college was rechartered under the name of Starling Medical College in honor of Mr. Lyne Starling, who donated a building site and $35,000 for a new building: about two-thirds of the building assigned to St. Francis Hospital. During the sixty years of its career under this name the college graduated 2,600 students.

 Columbus Medical College, 1876-1892

 1876: Columbus Medical College is established.

In 1875 a sharp dispute arose about making Dr. James Fairchild Baldwin professor of physiology in the Starling Medical College. Dr. Baldwin seemed to some of the faculty well-suited for the job, but Dr. Starling Loving and the administration thought otherwise. Dr. Howard Jones of Circleville was chosen. As a result of this defeat, Drs. John W. Hamilton, D. N. Kinsman, H. C. Pearce and Davis Halderman resigned and organized the Columbus Medical College. During the first seven years the college was conducted in the Sessions Block of High Street. In 1882 Dr. W. B. Hawkes gave four lots on Columbus’ west side and $10,000 toward a hospital to serve the Columbus Medical College. In 1886 the Hawkes Hospital of Mt. Carmel was erected.

About 500 students graduated from this college. In 1892, carrying with it its hospital facilities, Columbus Medical College was merged into Starling Medical College, but some of the faculty could not go along with the merger and joined Dr. J. F. Baldwin and others in the organization of the Ohio Medical University.

 Ohio Medical University, 1892-1907

 1892: Ohio Medical University (OMU) was founded. OMU was located on Park Street across from Goodale Park. It operates until 1907.

Coincident with the mergement of the Starling Medical College and the Columbus Medical College, the Ohio Medical University was organized, and from the first maintained a high place among the educational institutions of the State. It had colleges of medicine, dentistry and pharmacy, with a charter enabling it to establish a department of midwifery and a school for the training of nurses. From its inception the University adopted the recitation plan of instruction with modifications to suit the subject, and gave clinical work and laboratory exercises prominent places in its courses. Besides erecting large and spacious buildings for the several departments the university donated the ground upon which the Protestant Hospital Association erected a substantial hospital building; the hospital and university cooperating in promoting the welfare of each other. The university sent forth about 1,200 graduates.

 

Starling-Ohio Medical College, 1907-1914

 1907: Starling Medical College and Ohio Medical University merge and become Starling-Ohio Medical College (SOMC). SOMC operates until 1914.

During the winter of 1906 and 1907 the trustees of the Starling Medical College and of the Ohio Medical University, recognizing the great advantages that would accrue to the cause of education and to the entire medical profession by union and co-operation, transferred the property and equities of these two corporations to a Board of their own selection with power to incorporate a new college. This action was taken March 13, 1907, the name agreed upon, Starling-Ohio Medical College, being a happy combination of the names of the only medical colleges in central Ohio at the time of the union. The new corporation included a Medical College, a Dental College and a Pharmacy College, designated as Departments. There were 303 graduates while SOMC was in operation.

 

 The Ohio State University College of Medicine, 1914-Present

 1914: The Ohio State University College of Medicine begins.

Recognizing the great advantage that might accrue to the cause of medical education in Ohio and to the entire medical profession and citizenship through the establishment of a College of Medicine by the Ohio State University, the Trustees of the Starling-Ohio Medical College gave to the State of Ohio all its properties, both real and personal, for this purpose. The College of Medicine, therefore, began its career with an honorable history, with an alumni body of more than three thousand, and an established reputation and position. The buildings on the Ohio State University campus that comprised the medical school in 1914 were Hamilton Hall, Kinsman Hall and Starling-Loving University Hospital.

The College of Medicine, through its predecessors, ranks as the second oldest medical college in the state and incorporates all the best medical college interests in central Ohio. The College stands upon a foundation of six medical schools with a continuity of college life spanning 178 years.

Cyclotron Labs

The Cyclotron Labs also called the Industrial X-Ray Laboratory and the Betatron Laboratory were built in 1947. The Cyclotron Labs consisted of two buildings that connected via a tunnel at the basement level. Both buildings had a basement and one story. The buildings were located at 1933 Cannon Drive. The building was never officially named by the Board of Trustees.

The cyclotron, a type of particle accelerator first manufactured in 1932, was given to the University by Julius F. Stone and was moved to this building in 1947 from its original location in building 027.

This lab no longer exists.

New Exhibit in Graves Hall

The MHC has installed a new exhibit in Graves Hall depicting  “A Year in the Life of a Medical Student” in 1907. The exhibit will be up through the end of September.

 

 

Kinsman Hall

Kinsman Hall was built in 1922 and was demolished in 1963. It served as the Homeopathic Science Building and a Research Animal Facility. The building was located at 374 West 10th Ave. The building had two stories and a basement.

The building was named for David Nathaniel Kinsman, AM, MD, AB, LLD (1834-1910). Dr. Kinsman was a Professor of Diseases of the Nervous System at Starling Medical College from 1890-96; Professor of Theory and Practice of Medicine at Columbus Medical College (CMC) from 1876-90; Dean of CMC from 1876-90; Professor of Principles and Practice of Medicine at Ohio Medical University (OMU) from 1897-1906; Chancellor at OMU from 1899-1905; and, Emeritus Professor of Practice of Medicine at Starling-Ohio Medical College from 1907-11.

Fry Hall

Fry Hall was built in 1951 as the Optometry Building and still serves as such. The name was changed to Fry Hall after Glenn Ansel Fry in 1983. The building has had one addition.

Glenn Ansel Fry (1908-1996) received an AB degree from Davidson College in 1929, and a MS and PhD from Duke University in 1933. Fry became director of the OSU College of Optometry in 1937 and remained here as a professor and major leader in the optometry program until 1966.

Atwell Hall

Atwell Hall was completed in 1971. The building was known as both the School of Allied Professions Building and the Allied Medical Professions Building until 2000 when it was officially named Robert J. Atwell Hall.

Robert James Atwell (1919-2006) received his BS in 1941 and his MD in 1944 from Duke University. He became a faculty member at OSU in 1950. He was Chief of Medical Services at the Ohio Tuberculosis Hospital in Means Hall and was the founding director of the OSU School of Allied Professions (SAMP). Atwell served as director of SAMP from 1971 to 1983.

Dodd Hall

Dodd Hall was built in 1961. When it was built it carried the name Ohio Rehabilitation Center but the official name was changed in 1963 to Dodd Hall after Verne A. Dodd.  The building has had one addition. Dodd Hall is the location of The Ohio State University Medical Center’s Inpatient Rehabilitation Services, a 60-bed inpatient facility providing the most comprehensive and recognized rehabilitation programming in the region.

Verne Adam Dodd (1881-1957) received his MD in 1903 from Ohio Medical University (OMU). He was a professor at OMU (1905-1907); Starling-Ohio Medical College (1907-1914); OSU (1914-1951). He served as Chief of Staff for Starling Loving Hospital (1921-48). Dodd was a beloved surgeon and teacher.

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