Meharry Medical College
Meharry Medical College is a graduate and professional institution that is affiliated with the United Methodist Church and located in Nashville, Tennessee. Founded in 1876 as the Medical Department of Central Tennessee College, it was the first medical school for African Americans in the South, which then held the highest proportion of this ethnicity.
Former names | Medical Department of Central Tennessee College |
---|---|
Type | Private, HBCU |
Established | 1876 |
Affiliation | United Methodist Church [1][2] |
Endowment | $159.1 million (2020)[3] |
Dean | Veronica Mallett |
Students | 831 |
Location | , , United States 36.167°N 86.807°W |
Website | www |
Meharry Medical College was chartered separately in 1915. In the early 21st century, it has become the largest private historically black institution in the United States solely dedicated to educating health care professionals and scientists.[4][5] The school has never been segregated.[6]
Meharry Medical College includes its School of Medicine, School of Dentistry, a School of Allied Health Professions, School of Graduate Studies and Research, the Harold R. West Basic Sciences Center, and the Metropolitan General Hospital of Nashville-Davidson County. The degrees that Meharry offers include Doctor of Medicine (M.D.), Doctor of Dental Surgery (D.D.S.), Master of Science in Public Health (M.S.P.H.), Master of Health Science (M.H.S.), and Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) degrees. Meharry is the second-largest educator of African-American medical doctors and dentists in the United States.[7] It has the highest percentage of African Americans graduating with Ph.Ds in the biomedical sciences in the country.[8]
Journal of Health Care for the Poor and Underserved is a public health journal owned by and edited at Meharry Medical College. Around 76% of graduates of the school work as doctors treating people in underserved communities.[5] School training emphasizes recognizing health disparities in different populations.[8]
History
Meharry Medical College was one six medical institutions established between the years of 1876 and 1900 in the state of Tennessee.[9] These schools were founded after the end of the Civil War when slaves had been freed and there were as yet few African-American physicians, and many freedmen in need of health care.[10] In the common segregation, most hospitals would not admit African Americans and many white physicians often chose not to serve freedmen. During the late 19th century and into the early 20th century, most medical institutions accepted few, if any, African-American students. To combat this shortage of health care and the lack of accessibility to medical education, individuals, such as Samuel Meharry, and organizations, such as the Medical Association of Colored Physicians, Surgeons, Dentists, and Pharmacists (later renamed the National Medical Association), helped to found medical schools specifically for African Americans.[11]
The college was named for Samuel Meharry, a young Scots-Irish immigrant who first worked as a salt trader on the Kentucky-Tennessee frontier.[5] After achieving some success, he and four of his brothers later made a major donation to help establish the college.[12] As a young trader, Meharry had been aided by a family of freedmen, whose names are unknown.[13] Meharry reportedly told the former slave family, "I have no money, but when I can I shall do something for your race."[14]
Students at Central Tennessee College (CTC) approached the college president about setting up a medical school in 1875.[13] The president, John Braden, approached Samuel Meharry to discuss the proposal.[13] In 1875, Meharry, together with four of his brothers, donated a total of $15,000 to assist with establishing a medical department at (CTC), a historically black college in Nashville, Tennessee.[14] With the contribution of the Freedman's Aid Society of the Methodist Episcopal Church North, George W. Hubbard and Braden,[15] they opened the Medical College at CTC in 1876 with a starting class of nine students.[16] The classes took place in the basement of the Clark Memorial Methodist Episcopal Church.[17] The first regular year of classes began in October of 1876 and had eleven students in that group.[16] The medical program was initially two years long, but they added an additional year in 1879 and a fourth year to the course of study in 1893.[17]
Hubbard, a physician, served as the founding president of the medical college.[16] The first student graduated in 1877.[5] The second class, which had its commencement in 1878, had three graduates.[18]
In 1886, the Dental Department was founded, followed by a Pharmacy Department founded in 1889.[19][20] The Dental and Pharmaceutical Building was dedicated on October 20, 1889.[21] By 1896, half of all "regularly educated physicians then practicing in the South" had graduated from Meharry.[22] A nurse-training school was also developed during the 1900-1901 school year and the first class had eight students.[21] A training hospital, Mercy Hospital, was built during the 1901-1902 school year.[21] This hospital was replaced in 1916 and named the George W. Hubbard Hospital.[23] Meharry Auditorium, with a 1,000 person capacity was built in 1904.[21]
In 1900, CTC changed its name to Walden University.[21] In 1915, the medical department faculty of Walden University received a separate charter to operate independently as Meharry Medical College.[19] The college continued to be privately funded.[12] The Medical College remained in its original buildings, and Walden University moved to another campus in Nashville in 1922.[24]
In 1910, Meharry absorbed medical students from Flint Medical College when that school was closed.[25] Meharry also graduated a large number of women physicians for the time period, with 39 women having graduated by 1920.[26] In 1923, Meharry was recognized as a "grade-A institution" by the American Medical Association (AMA).[12]
Since its founding, Meharry Medical College has added several graduate programs in the areas of science, medicine, and public health. In 1938, the School of Graduate Studies and Research was founded. The first master's degree program, a Master of Science in Public Health, was established in 1947. In the 1950s, the nursing school and dental technology school were ended.[5] The department of Psychiatry was established in 1961 by school president, Lloyd Charles Elam, a psychiatrist.[27] During the 1960s, Meharry began to focus on fighting health disparities.[17] In 1968, Meharry created the Matthew Walker Health Center to provide health services to the community.[28] Also in 1968, the school added a Ph.D. degree in basic sciences.[19]
By the late 1960s and early 1970s, 83 percent of all African American physicians had been trained at Meharry Medical College and Howard University School of Medicine.[29] In 1970, more than 60 percent of black medical students worked as residents at these two colleges.[30] In 1972, Meharry started receiving federal distress grants which were given to medical schools with deficits in operating costs and problems with accreditation.[31] By 1976, the school campus took up space on 65 acres.[32]
In 1981, the accrediting body of the AMA put Meharry on probation because there were not enough patients in the Hubbard Hospital for students and the student to teacher ratio was too high.[31] In 1983, president Ronald Reagan allowed the school to work with patients in the nearby veterans' hospitals and the Blanchfield Army Community Hospital and the college regained full accreditation.[31] By 1986, around 46 percent of all black faculty members in medical schools had graduated from Meharry.[33]
In 1972, a Ph.D. program was implemented. A decade later in 1982, Meharry established an M.D/Ph.D. program. In 2004, Meharry created a Master's of Science in Clinical Investigation program (2004).[34]
The Hubbard Hospital, belonging to Meharry Medical College, closed in 1994 and was renovated as the new site for the Metropolitan Nashville General Hospital, opening November of 1997.[35] The year 1994 was also a start for more renovations of campus buildings initiated by campus president, John E. Maupin Jr.[36] The school was also suffering from a $49 million dollar deficit and morale at the school was low.[36] The Nashville General Hospital's lease money, however, helped bring money into the school and eventually, by June of 1995, the finances of the school were stabilized.[36] In 1999, the college partnered with Vanderbilt University Medical Center.[36]
In 2005, Meharry was censured by the American Association of University Professors for not observing generally recognized principles of academic freedom and tenure.[37][38]
On November 9, 2017, Meharry, under president James E.K. Hildreth, signed a memorandum of agreement with Hospital Corporation of America (HCA), America's largest for-profit operator of health care facilities. Under the agreement, Meharry's medical students will gain clinical training at HCA's TriStar Southern Hills Medical Center in Nashville.[39] Meharry students had previously received clinical training at numerous sites, primarily Nashville General Hospital, which had moved on-campus in the 1990s.[40] Withdrawal of the alliance with Meharry is thought to threaten the provision of inpatient care at Nashville General Hospital.[41] A board member resigned over this surprise decision and announcement.[42]
Presidents
George W. Hubbard served as Meharry Medical College's first president from its founding in 1876 until his retirement in 1921.[43]
The second president of the school was John J. Mullowney, who served from 1921 to 1938.[44] He implemented changes in order to improve Meharry’s overall academic rating. Admission requirements were tightened and strictly enforced, a superintendent was installed at the hospital, and the number of faculty, research facilities, and hospital facilities were all expanded. Two years after Mullowney took leadership, Meharry Medical College received an ‘A’ rating.[19]
Succeeding Meharry Medical College presidents have been:
- Edward Lewis Turner (1938–1944),[44]
- M. Don Clawson (1944–1950),[44]
- Harold D. West (1952–1966),[44]
- Lloyd C. Elam (1968–1981),[19]
- Interim president, Richard G. Lester (1981-1982),[19]
- David Satcher (1982–1993),[5]
- John E. Maupin (1994–2006),[19]
- Wayne J. Riley (2006–2013),
- A. Cherrie Epps (2013-2015),
- James E.K. Hildreth (2015–present)
From 1950-1952 a committee guided the institution instead of a president. In 1952, Meharry welcomed its first African-American president, Dr. Harold D. West.[19] West made numerous changes, made possible by his successful $20 million fund drive. He added a new wing to Hubbard Hospital, eliminated the nursing and the dental technology programs, and purchased land adjacent to the campus for expansion.[19]
Research
Meharry Medical College spent $96 million dollars on research during fiscal years between 2013 and 2017.[8] The school has a Graduate Studies and Research department.[5]
Research centers include:
- Asthma Disparities Center
- Center for Molecular and Behavioral Neurosciences
- Center for Women's Health Research
- Clinical Research Center
- Export Center for Health Disparities
- Meharry Center for Health Disparities Research in HIV
- Sickle Cell Center
BS/MD Program
Ten universities are in partnership with Meharry to help recruit and better prepare their pre-med students to enroll at Meharry. The ten universities are Alabama A&M University, Albany State University, Alcorn State University, Fisk University, Grambling State University, Hampton University, Jackson State University, Southern University, Tennessee State University, and Virginia Union University.[45]
Notable alumni
Name | Class year | Notability |
---|---|---|
Willie Adams Jr. | First black mayor of Albany, Georgia.[46] | |
Hastings Kamuzu Banda | 1937 | President of the Republic of Malawi.[47] |
Carl C. Bell | 1971 | Professor of psychiatry.[48] |
Clive O. Callender | Transplant surgeon, chairman of Department, Howard University College of Medicine and founder Minority Organ Tissue Transplant Education Program (MOTTEP).[49] | |
Donna P. Davis | 1975 | First African-American woman doctor to enter the United States Navy.[50] |
Renita Barge Clark | 1992 | Founder of the Cotillion Society of Detroit Educational Foundation.[51] |
Tameka A. Clemons | 2003 | Biochemist and professor at Meharry.[52] |
Edward S. Cooper | 1949 | First African American president of the American Heart Association (AHA).[53] |
Lillian Singleton Dove | 1917 | Early Chicago physician and surgeon.[54] |
James J. Durham | 1882 | Founder of Morris College.[55] |
Winston C. Hackett | First African American physician in Arizona.[56] | |
Corey Hébert | 1994 | Celebrity physician, radio talk show host, chief medical editor for National Broadcasting Company for the Gulf Coast, first Black chief resident of pediatrics at Tulane University, chief executive officer of Community Health TV.[57] |
Robert Walter Johnson | Tennis Instructor for Althea Gibson and Arthur Ashe, Physician and Educator.[58] | |
Alonzo Homer Kenniebrew | 1897 | Founder of New Home Sanitarium, the first African-American-owned and -operated surgical hospital in America.[59] |
Robert Lee | 1944 | South Carolina-born dentist who emigrated to Ghana in 1956 and operated a dental practice there for nearly five decades until his retirement in 2002.[60] |
John Angelo Lester | 1895 | Professor emeritus of physiology, hospital surgeon for Company G, unattached, (colored) of Tennessee State Guard, secretary of Meharry Alumni Association, member of Colored Methodist Episcopal Church. |
Monroe Alpheus Majors | 1886 | Physician and writer and civil rights activist in Texas and Los Angeles, California.[61] |
Eleanor L. Makel | 1943 | Supervising medical officer, St. Elizabeths Hospital.[62] |
Audrey F. Manley | 1959 | Surgeon General of the United States, President Spelman College.[63] |
John E. Maupin Jr. | Ninth president of Meharry Medical College in 1994.[64] | |
Conrad Murray | Personal physician of Michael Jackson, convicted of involuntary manslaughter in Jackson's death on June 25, 2009.[65] | |
Louis Pendleton | Dentist and civil rights leader in Shreveport, Louisiana.[66] | |
James Maxie Ponder | First African American physician in St. Petersburg, Florida.[67] | |
Theresa Greene Reed | 1949 | First African-American woman epidemiologist.[68] |
Charles Victor Roman | 1899 | Founder and head of the Department of Ophthalmology and Otolaryngology at Meharry Medical College.[69] |
Frank S. Royal | 1968 | Chair of Meharry Medical college's board; director of public companies; former president of the National Medical Association.[70] |
C. O. Simpkins Sr. | Dentist and civil rights leader in Shreveport; member of the Louisiana House of Representatives from 1992 to 1996.[71] | |
Walter R. Tucker Jr. | Former mayor of Compton, California.[72] | |
Matthew Walker Sr. | 1934 | Former professor and chairman of the Department of Surgery, Meharry.[73] |
Georgia E. L. Patton Washington | 1893 | First African American woman licensed to practice medicine in Tennessee.[74] |
Emma Rochelle Wheeler | 1905 | Founder of Walden Hospital and school of nursing, both serving African Americans, in Chattanooga.[75] |
Charles H. Wright | 1943 | Founder of the Charles H. Wright Museum of African American History.[76] |
Joyce Yerwood | 1933 | Physician and social justice advocate. First female African American physician in Fairfield County, Connecticut. Founded the Yerwood Center, an African American community center in Stamford, Connecticut.[77] |
References
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- "About Meharry". Meharry Medical College. Archived from the original on 2012-10-27. Retrieved 2007-06-29.
- https://www.nacubo.org/-/media/Nacubo/Documents/EndowmentFiles/2019-Endowment-Market-Values--Final-Feb-10.ashx?la=en&hash=9E941CF13A17783282F46626C72FE7AFB63F9D82
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- Black and African American Physicians in the Workforce, February 21, 2017, Association of American Medical Colleges, Retrieved August, 2019
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- Watson 1999, p. 38.
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- "The Salt Wagon Story", Meharry Medical College website (accessed September 12, 2007)
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- "CENTER OF EXCELLENCE". Meharry Medical College. Retrieved 2020-07-17.
- Mauldin, Alan (22 January 2020). "Willie Adams recounts journey from tobacco fields to Albany's first black mayor". Albany Herald. Retrieved 2020-07-14.
- "Hastings Kamuzu Banda | president of Malawi". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 2020-07-14.
- "Carl C. Bell, M.D. '71 Named 2018 President's Circle of Scholars Award Winner". Meharry Medical College. 2018-04-12. Retrieved 2020-07-16.
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- Simmons, William J., and Henry McNeal Turner. Men of Mark: Eminent, Progressive and Rising. GM Rewell & Company, 1887. p878-883
- Jones, Jae (2020-07-03). "Dr. Winston Clifton Hackett: First African American Physician in Arizona". Black Then. Retrieved 2020-07-14.
- "Dr. Corey Hébert". drcoreyhebert.com. Retrieved 2017-03-06.
- Boyd, Herb (6 July 2017). "Dr. Robert Walter Johnson, the 'godfather' of Black tennis". New York Amsterdam News. Retrieved 2020-07-14.
- "Lecture Series to Honor Alumnus" (PDF). Meharry Alumni. 12 (4): 12. Winter 2017.
- Dogbevi, Emmanuel (2010-07-13). "Dr Robert Lee passes on". Ghana Business News. Retrieved 2020-07-14.
- Russel, Thaddeus, "Majors, Monroe Alpheus", in Appiah, Anthony, and Henry Louis Gates Jr (eds), Africana: The Encyclopedia of the African and African American Experience, Oxford University Press, 2005, pp. 694–696.
- "71 Will Graduate at Meharry Today". The Tennessean. June 6, 1943. p. 48. Retrieved June 18, 2019 – via Newspapers.com.
- "Audrey Manley". Spelman College. Retrieved 2020-07-14.
- "Maupin, John E., Jr. | Encyclopedia.com". www.encyclopedia.com. Retrieved 2020-07-14.
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- "Dr. Louis Christopher Pendleton". The Times. 18 January 2007. Retrieved 14 July 2020.
- Arsenault, Kathy (January 17, 2001). "The Ernest Ayer Ponder Collection" (PDF). University of South Florida St. Petersburg: Digital Archive. University of South Florida St. Petersburg. Archived from the original (PDF) on February 6, 2016. Retrieved 2016-09-20.
- Webster, Raymond B. (1999). African American Firsts in Science & Technology. Farmington Hills, MI: Gale Group. p. 229. ISBN 978-0-7876-3876-4. OCLC 41238505 – via Internet Archive.
- Morrison, Sheena M.; Fee, Elizabeth (2010). "Charles V. Roman: Physician, Writer, Educator, Historian (1864-1934)". American Journal of Public Health. 100 (Suppl 1): S69. doi:10.2105/AJPH.2009.175562. ISSN 0090-0036. PMC 2837430. PMID 20147672.
- "Meharry board chair to retire after 30 years". Nashville Post. January 10, 2017. Retrieved May 22, 2018.
- "Biography". C.O. Simpkins, Sr. - Civil Rights Pioneer. Retrieved 2020-07-14.
- Simmonds, Yussuf J. (2010-06-17). "Fathers and Sons Together II". Los Angeles Sentinel. Retrieved 2020-07-14.
- Smith, A. R. (2003). "Managed health care: The Taborian Hospital experience, 1942-1983". Journal of the National Medical Association. 95 (1): 84–89. PMC 2594372. PMID 12656454.
- Watson 1999, p. 54.
- Elizabeth H. Oakes, "Wheeler, Emma Rochelle (1882-1957), American Physician," in Oakes, Encyclopedia of World Scientists, rev. ed. (New York: Infobase Publications, 2007), 763-764.
- "Dr. Charles H. Wright | Biographies". Elmwood Historic Cemetery. Retrieved 2020-07-16.
- "Joyce Yerwood". CT Women’s Hall of Fame. Retrieved 2020-07-29.
Sources
- Brawley, James P. (1974). Two Centuries of Methodist Concern: Bondage, Freedom, and Education of Black People. New York: Vantage Press. ISBN 9780533006496 – via Internet Archive.
- Martin, Thad (March 1986). "Turnaround at Meharry". Ebony. 41 (5): 44–50.
- Poinsett, Alex (October 1976). "Meharry Medical College Celebrates Its 100th Anniversary". Ebony. 31 (12): 31–40.
- Watson, Wilbur H. (1999). Against the Odds : Blacks in the Profession of Medicine in the United States. New Brunswick, N.J.: Transaction Publishers. ISBN 0-585-32416-6. OCLC 45843812 – via Internet Archive.
Additional references
- Johnson, Charles (2000). The Spirit of a Place Called Meharry. Franklin, Tennessee: Hillsboro Press.
- Smith, John Abernathy. Cross and Flame: Two Centuries of United Methodism in Middle Tennessee. Commission on Archives and History of the Tennessee Conference, United Methodist Church, Parthenon Press, Nashville, Tennessee (1984)..
- Summerville, James. Educating Black Doctors; A History of Meharry Medical College. Tuscaloosa: The University of Alabama Press, 1983.