Louisville Medicine Volume 61, Issue 12 | Page 40

(continued from page 37) practitioner, became KSM Professor of Theory and Practice of Medicine. He would contribute greatly during the Civil War by leading the United States Sanitary Commission in Kentucky and would later join the U o fL faculty. Several initial KSM faculty came from Transylvania University School of Medicine, which was then suffering falling enrollment and income. In 1856, Tobias G. Richardson, MD, former U of L Anatomy Demonstrator, became KSM Chair of Principles and Practice of Surgery (Fig. 8). Richardson would have a distinguished career at KSM, write a respected textbook, become an AMA President, and continue academic service at Tulane University. Emergence of Future Leaders: James Morrison Bodine and David W. Yandell Fig. 8 Tobias G. Richardson, M.D., Louisville surgeon, anatomist, and AMA President. Fig. 9 James Morrison Bodine, M.D., respected anatomist and acclaimed UofL Dean. In the years between Appomattox and the century’s end, two U of L educators would emerge as powerful medical leaders locally and nationally. James Morrison Bodine, MD, and David W. Yandell, MD, first appeared on the Louisville scene in the late antebellum period. Bodine took a preceptorship with Henry Bullitt, MD, and graduated from the Kentucky School of Medicine in 1854. He served briefly as Demonstrator of Anatomy at his alma mater, where his exceptional teaching skills became apparent. After the war, Bodine would transition to U of L, become its longest-serving Dean, and lead in developing national medical education standards (Fig. 9). David Yandell graduated from U of L in 1846, took two years of postgraduate studies in Europe, and returned to develop a thriving Louisville medical-surgical practice. He served as a preceptor and Saturday Anatomy Demonstrator at U of L, where his father taught. However, his greatest contribution to antebellum Louisville medicine was to establish a precedent-setting dispensary (precursor of outpatient clinics), for indigent care and student teaching on 4th, near Chestnut. Subsequently, his Confederate sympathies would call him away and interrupt his service to Louisville, but his return would launch one of the great medical careers of the late 19th century (Fig. 10). U of L Burns Symbolic of both the coming national conflagration and the devastation it caused U of L, the 9th and Chestnut building burned to the ground in 1856. Only some books from the library were saved, when students threw them from windows of the burning building onto an adjacent cow pasture. The building was replaced by an improved structure on the same site (Fig. 11), although its characteristic feature, the towering spire, was forever gone. The Civil War’s Gathering Storm Fig. 10 David W. Yandell, M.D., U of L surgeon, 19th century medical leader, and AMA President. As U of L approached its quarter-century mark, the Nation’s fragile balance between northern and southern states over slavery progressively disintegrated. The westward migration that fueled Louisville’s rise populated the Mississippi Valley, creating new states and new votes in Congress. Despite Henry Clay’s carefully fashioned compromises, the uneasy balance in Congress eroded. Regional passions flared, and the Nation careened toward Civil War. An ominous sense that everything would be forever changed crept over the Nation and over Louisville’s vibrant medical landscape. Amidst rumbles of gathering war clouds, one could almost hear the haunting voice of Jenny Lind from Louisville’s past again singing “The Last Rose of Summer.” Louisville’s bright antebellum “summer” was ending, and war’s dark chill would soon wither UofL. LM Note: Dr. Tobin is a professor at the University of Louisville School of Medicine, Department of Surgery, Division of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery. He practices with UofL