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Page 15 text:
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1922 - 1929 ered a very commodious home. However, as classes began to increase, the need was felt for more and better facilities, and in 1886, a new building was erected on the old site. This building was fitted with the then-most-mod- ern in scientific appliances, and was well stocked with the necessary apparatus, mater- ials and specimens. The College continued to occupy these quarters until it became the Department of Pharmacy of the University of Maryland, in 1904. At the present time the School of Pharmacy is located in the new Pharmacy and Dental Building at Lombard and Greene Streets, which building was made possible by an appropriation from the State of Maryland during the legislative session of 1929. The new building is a realization of a great need for adequate quarters in which to teach the honored profession of Pharmacy in Maryland. Everyone interested in Phar- macy may well be proud of this splendid building, as well as of the modern equipment and apparatus which has been provided for demonstration and teaching purposes. From the foregoing it will be seen that the School of Pharmacy of the University of Maryland, which began its existence as the Maryland College of Pharmacy, has exercised its functions as a teaching institution since 1841 except for the ten-year period 1846 to 1856. In spite of its vicissitudes it has steadily borne itself onward and upward. It has steadily increased and improved its facilities to enable it to impart instruction in keeping with the pharmaceutical knowledge of the times. It was the first institution of its kind to establish a professorship of Phar- macy, and thereby allocate to that branch of learning an individuality of its own. It was also one of the first schools to make analytical chemistry obligatory for gradua- tion. In still other lines its leadership has been manifest, particularly in the textbooks published by members of its teaching staff. The result has been a steady growth in size and influence so that the school now holds a position in the front ranks of the teaching institutions of its kind in this country. 1926 - 1929 1 1
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Page 14 text:
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1904 - 1922 was appointed to head the departmeni. re- signing i ' ' • ' ' Associate Professor Donald E. Shay. B.S., M.S.. Ph.D.. is the present head ol the department. In 19.S(), a department of pharmacology was organized in the school to give instruc- tions in bio-assaying. The equipment of this department and its maintenance were made possiJ)le through the generosity of the late Oaptain Isaac h. F.merson, who endowed it lil eraily. In 19 8 Marvin R. Thompson, Ph.D.. Emerson Professor of Pharinatology since 19.S(), resigned to accept the Director- ship of the Warner Institute of Therapeutic Research. Clillord V. Chapman, Ph.D., who liad l)cen with the l ii)oratory ol Hygiene. Department ol Pensions and National Health in Cianada, which department is in charge of drug (onliol work in the Dominion, and in wiiidi Ik- hehl the position ol pharmacol- ogist . is now the present head ol ilic depart ment. Following the leorgani alion ol the Mary- l.ind College ol Pharmacy in IS-Vi. control was vested in the offices ol the College Presi- dent, lust and sfcdiul Vue Piesidents, Treas- urer, and Secretary, who, together with the Board of Examiners (three members) con- stituted the Board of Trustees. The first president was Mr. Thomas G. Mackenzie, 1840-1842, followed by Mr. Benjamin Rush Roberts from 1814 to 1871, and was followed in succession by such illustrious |)hannacists as Dr. J. Brown Baxley, Dr. J. Faris Moore, Dr. John F. Hancock, Dr. joseph Roberts, Dr. Edwin Eareckson, Mr. William S. Thomp- son, Mr. Louis Dohine, and Mr. C harles Dohme (1894-1904). In 1904, it became a department of the State I ' niversity, when the old University of Maryland was merged with the Maryland State College. With this last merger, control was transferred to the officers of the University. The control of the I ' ni- versity of Maryland is now vested in the Board of Regents, of which W. P. Cole, Jr., is chairman. -V Faculty Council, comjjosed of the Dean and certain members of the Faculty, control the internal affairs of each separate school comprising the I ' niversity. Dr. Charles C. Caspari, Jr., became Dean of the Maryland College of Pharmacy in 1896, and continued as Dean after the mer- ger of the College with the old University of Maryland, until his death on October 13, 1917. Dr. Daniel Base succeeded him, but because of conilitions incident to the World War, Dr. Base obtained leave of absence to teach in another department, and Dr. Evander Kelly was elected Dean on .September -SO, 1918. This office was heUl bv Dr. Kelly until Detember ' .U . 1925. when he became Secretary of the American Pharmaceutical Association. Dr. Andrew (i. DuMe . form- erly Associate Pharmacolgist, Hygienic Lab- oratory, U. S. Public Health Service, is the jjresent Dean. When the institution was first chartered in 184 I, the lectures were given in the amphi- theater of the University of .Maryland. Fol- lowing the reoig.iiii aiion in 185(), and until 187t , the College occupied halls rented for the purpose. In the early part of the latter year, the city giaminar school located on Aisciuith Street near Fayette Street was pur- chased and after ' aclical. but needed changes, the Ciollege tncupied what was then consid- 10
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Page 16 text:
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Baltimore Schools— University of Maryland 1. Original Medical Building 7. 2. Laboratory Building, Medicine 8. 3. Brcssler Building, Medicine 9. 4. Gray Laboralory. Student ' s Lounge, Medicine 10. 5. AdmiaislratioD Building, College of Education. U. Baltimore Division 12. 6. Medical Library 13. University Hospital Nurses ' Home, Medicine School of Pharmacy School of Dentistry DenUl Clinic Out-Pattent Clinics, Medicine School of Law 12
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