Louisville Medicine Volume 65, Issue 1 | Page 9

HISTORY The Old Medical School of Louisville II: A “ROSETTA STONE” FOR 19 TH CENTURY MEDICAL HISTORY Gordon R. Tobin, MD L ouisville’s Old Medical School Build- ing at First and Chestnut Streets was built from 1891-4 as the Louisville Medical College (LMC), and was immediately acclaimed as an ideal facility and architectural masterpiece (Fig. 1). In 1909, it became home to the University of Louisville School of Medicine, and is a beloved alma mater to scores of se nior Kentucky phy- sicians. If one follows clues of structure and architecture, it is also a “Rosetta Stone” that reveals much of 19 th century medical education, practices and breakthroughs, just as the original Rosetta Stone deci- phered ancient writings. For example, building layout reveals educa- tional priorities of the time, such as incorporation of direct patient care in the curriculum and emergence of new sciences. Also, archi- tectural style elements reveal pro- fessional s e l f - c on f i - dence from newly dis- covered ad- vances that fi- nally allowed addressing many horrif- ic illnesses, especially in- fectious dis- eases. Clues Fig. 1 Louisville’s Old Medical School was built to house the Louisville to these his- Medical College. toric events abound in the Old Medical School. Thus, a landmark Louisville structure memorializes a landmark medical era. BACKGROUND: EVOLUTION OF 19 TH CENTURY MEDICAL EDUCATION The late 19 th century marked the transition of medical education from ancient to modern form. The centuries-old practice of learn- ing medicine by individual apprenticeships carried into the early 19 th century, when a 1-3 year apprenticeship was required before admission to medical school, which then were lectures without direct patient care experience. Thus, much of patient care lessons were lost on unschooled apprentices. This was the pattern in the first American medical schools, including the first “Western” school, Lexington’s Transylvania University (opened in 1799), and the University of Louisville (opened in 1837 as Louisville Medical Institute). Hospitals then were simply warehouses for the ill poor, and the educational value of their care overlooked. Then in 1840, a pivoted insight of the U of L faculty led to building a teaching amphitheater attached to the old City Hospital (opened in 1823). In the years around the Civil War, leading Louisville surgeon, David W. Yandell, MD, campaigned for construction of teaching dispen- saries, where students could learn from direct patient contact and dispensation of prescriptions to the poor. By the late 19 th century, however, hospital ward rounds and dispensary duty were integrated into the curriculum, and clinical experience was greatly enhanced. These historic advances were clearly reflected in the site and design of the LMC building. BACKGROUND: LOUISVILLE IN THE LATE 19 TH CENTURY In addition to Louisville’s endemic diseases, ill passengers of Ohio River steamboats provided longstanding, abundant medical learning opportunities. At the Civil War's end, Louisville became the “gateway to the south” for post-war reconstruction, as a major intersection of steamboat traffic and railroad lines. With virtually all Southern cities destroyed, Louisville attracted business, political and medical talent from across the South. Similarly, Southern students seeking medical education found Louisville to be the best destination, with its urban, (continued on page 9) JUNE 2017 7