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Page 12 text:
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27. Health Sciences Center MCV 11. McGuire Hall 13. Sanger Hall 25. Tompkins-McCaw Library 27. Warner Hall (Men ' s Dorms) 28. Wood Memorial Building 30. Larrick Student Center 31. Cabaniss Hall (Women ' s Res.)
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Page 11 text:
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rchives reveal no reihar .- until 1853, when the catdl „ ouneed a decision of the faculty to lommend to the trustees of Hampden- ney the creation of a new chair of siology and medical jurisprudence. J faculty nominated Dr. Martin P, )tt for the appointment. Simul- eously, twenty-two Richmond phy- lans not connected with the medical lartment submitted their own nomi- tionof Dr. Goodridge A. Wilson. This done through Dr. Moses D, Hoge, i ustee o f Hampden-Sydney, and Dr. Ison was tendered the appointment, bmptly there erupted a newspaper I pamphlet war. Chere can be no doubt that the Ham- In-Sydney trustees were well with- heir rights in appointing interim nature, in spelling out in | the regiilations governing the Medxi Department. Howeyier, they had never before ignored the recdmmendatidns of the medical faculty, to which the same regulations accorded the prj lege of nomination. The resultant r tvu-e was, in the perspective of the cM; tury and a quarter, unfortunate and must have left scars which could om impede for some time the growth i development of a young institut| Thus the Medical Department Hampden-Sydney College became Medical College of Virginia, an dependent institution, chartered E ■ruary.25, 1854. . . College bols of the South, had atteinpli dcw years to stem the overwhelmin iber of students going to the Nor- irn schools for their medical edu- lon. Philadelphia seems to have been I mecca for these students. For ex- le, at the University of Pennsyl- iia, 360 medical students were en- led; of these students almost half |re Southern. Ir. Levin S. Joynes, dean, wrote in I catalogue for the session 1857-58: iThe faculty would urge upon the lithern student the peculiar ad- iLtage of receiving his lessons in nical instruction in a Southern in- itution. The principles of medicine Ly be taught equally well, by quali- id teachers, in any locality. But {plication of these principles to prac- must differ, as the types of disease u er; it cannot therefore be the same at the North and at the South. Much of the success which has so generally at- tended the graduates of this institution, is undoubtedly due to the peculiar practical advantages which it affords. It was not until John Brown ' s raid oii Harper ' s Ferry in October, 1859, and his subsequent hanging on December 1, 1859, that medical students in the North faced the ever-widening gap between North and South. With this in view, overtures were made to the faculty of the Medical Col- lege of Virginia, by the students them- selves, and by others acting for them. The faculty were asked whether the se cedi ng students would be received into stitution, and on what terms, se enquiries, the faculty re- )ihi([)ii, would be justified by pu pinion in Virginia and the South large. They declared their willingn to admit to their lectures, with charge for the remainder of the s sion, all such students as had reguls matriculated and paid their fees I tuition in Philadelphia, and to pl them on the same footing in regard graduation, and in all other respe ; as their own students. | Excerpts from the Daily Dispd December 22, 1859, picture the reci tion of the seceding students: 300 of the sons of the South arrive at 2:30 p.m. (Frederieksbi train) to enter the Medical College Virginia, whose faculty in a spirit coming Virginia gentlemen have | tended to them a cordial and generjl welcome to their noble institution I to the soil of the Old Mother State. ] We congratulate the Medical Col| of Virginia upon this grand accen to its numbers, and upon its brilll prospect which, after long year i meritorious struggle, is about to cr«| its toils and perseverance. | We understand that a grand eni tainment will be given by the fae| and students of the College to J Southern friends this afternoon. It | undoubtedly be a brilliant affair. Vi the descendants of the yankee Podv Fathers are singing dolefully through their: noses — Blow Ye the TrumpetSi, Blow — to the tune of Lennox, we will give them a responsive blast this after-, noon from Southern bugles to the a of Carry Me Back to Old Virginia. -W ' ' ' ' ' '
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Page 13 text:
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oi«r%Q 32. Lyons Dental Building 33. Gymnasium 39. Monumental Church 40. MCV-West Hospital 42. MCV-North Hospital 44. A. D. Williams Memorial Clinic 45. Clinical Center Building 32. fc . 44. «B»i ' y.. J 28.
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