The
Early Years
In 1912, a group of idealistic physicians and community leaders formed
the non-profit school, then known as The Chicago Hospital-College
of Medicine, to serve medical students who were able to attend only
at night. From the beginning, the institution, long known as The Chicago
Medical School, rejected the use of quotas to limit minority enrollment.
The leaders of the school believed that only a student's merit
should play a role in the admissions process.
Students
were welcomed without regard to race or gender. As the school's
1912-13 bulletin states, "[I]t is the firm belief of the Faculty
of this school that there are deserving men and women, who, if given
a second opportunity, will soon 'catch up' with and even
surpass those students who have had earlier opportunities and advantages."
After
several moves, the school relocated to a vacant hospital at 710 S.
Wolcott. The additional space was desperately needed, as enrollment
more than doubled during the Great Depression. The school became a
haven for Jewish researchers and faculty, recruited in great numbers
as they fled Nazi Europe beginning in the late 1930s. The school also
welcomed Jewish students who faced quotas at other medical schools.
The Price of Independence
Although The Chicago Medical School was recognized by the State of
Illinois in its early years, its lack of affiliation with a major
hospital or university contributed to financial problems and stood
in the way of accreditation by the American Medical Association. At
times, the school struggled to survive.
In
1935, Dr. John J. Sheinin became Dean and decided that the school
must be saved. To help keep the school open in the 1940s, a wealthy
retired Chicago businessman named Lester North Selig issued a challenge
to his contemporaries in Chicago's business world: Did they
or did they not support a medical school where admission was based
on merit alone? Most were self-made men; they should understand in
their souls the need to nurture talent, wherever it might arise. They
did understand the need and supported the school in its efforts.
By 1948, Dr. Sheinin had won accreditation for the school by consistently
strengthening its curriculum along with its financial and community
support. In fact, the school had a long history of public philanthropy
and was one of the first to encourage students to perform community
service as a natural outgrowth of a medical education. Students were
required to serve in the Medical Clinic Free Dispensary and the Chicago
Maternity Center in order to graduate. |