Ohio History Journal

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DEVELOPMENT OF THE TEACHING OF PHYSIOLOGY

DEVELOPMENT OF THE TEACHING OF PHYSIOLOGY

IN OHIO*

by C. I. REED

Professor of Physiology, University of Illinois, Chicago Professional Colleges

In order to bring the subject into perspective it is necessary to

go back to the year 1726, when the first curricular representation of

physiology was accorded by the University of Edinburgh in appoint-

ing Andrew Sinclair professor of the institutes of medicine. As

applied later, this title very often covered much more than the con-

ventional scope of physiology as a study of function in the healthy

organism. Not infrequently a professor of the institutes and a pro-

fessor of physiology served simultaneously in the same institution.

The first recognition came in America, not in the first medical

school, but in the second one, that founded in King's College, now

Columbia University, in 1769 when Peter Middleton was appointed

professor of physiology and pathology. Of course, the physiology

of that day was something quite different from what is so desig-

nated today. Nevertheless, this gentleman was a highly trained,

capable physician. The title lapsed with his death in 1780, but was

restored in 1806 when a radical reorganization took place which

gave Benjamin De Witt the chair of the institutes.

Caspar Wistar was made professor of the institutes in the Uni-

versity of Pennsylvania in 1789, and in 1792 a reorganization placed

Benjamin Rush in that chair. In point of chronology this is the

oldest continuously functioning department of physiology in North

America, as there is direct continuity through several generations to

the present department in that university. There was a brief flurry

of original research in the first few years of the nineteenth century,

but this was not sustained. In the medical school founded in Harvard

College in 1782 no provision was made for teaching physiology

for nearly sixty years when Oliver Wendell Holmes became pro-

fessor of anatomy and physiology.

* This article was read before the Committee on Medical History and Archives of

the Ohio State Archaeological and Historical Society at its annual meeting, held at

the Ohio State Museum on April 28, 1951.

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