Philadelphia Campus (1958) Philadelphia College of Osteopathy

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Philadelphia Campus (1958) Philadelphia College of Osteopathy Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine DigitalCommons@PCOM All Yearbooks PCOM Yearbooks 1958 Synapsis: Philadelphia Campus (1958) Philadelphia College of Osteopathy Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalcommons.pcom.edu/yearbooks Part of the Medicine and Health Sciences Commons Recommended Citation Philadelphia College of Osteopathy, "Synapsis: Philadelphia Campus (1958)" (1958). All Yearbooks. Book 53. http://digitalcommons.pcom.edu/yearbooks/53 This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the PCOM Yearbooks at DigitalCommons@PCOM. It has been accepted for inclusion in All Yearbooks by an authorized administrator of DigitalCommons@PCOM. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Df.H W;(fardsterreftJr. 1537 Pine Street PhiLdelpiiia 2, Pa. OSTEOPATHIC OATH do hereby affirm my loyalty to the profession I am about to enter. I will be mindful always of my great responsibility to preserve the he<dth and life of my patients, to retain their confidence and respect, both as a physician and a friend who will guard their secrets with scrupulous honor and fidelity, to perform faithfully my professional duties, to employ only those recognized methods of treatment consistent with good judgment and with my skill and ability, keeping in mind always nature's laws and the body's inherent capacity for recovery. I will be ever vigilant in aiding the general welfare of the community, sustaining its laws and institutions, not engaging in those practices which will in any way bring shame and discredit upon myself or my profession. I will give no deadly drugs to any, though it be asked of me. I will endeavor to work in accord with my colleagues in a spirit of progressive cooperation and never by word or by act cast imputations upon them or their rightful practices. I will look with respect and esteem upon all those who have taught me my art. To my college, I will be loyal and strive always for its best and for the interests of the students who will come after me. I will be ever alert to and adhere to and develop the principles of Osteopathy as taught by Andrew Taylor Still. L-V fyuvi c-'Zoii Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2010 with funding from Lyrasis Members and Sloan Foundation http://www.archive.org/details/synapsisphiladel1958phil 1H9S PHILADELPHIA COLLEGE OF OSTEOPATHY, -*- founded in 1898, dates its current corporate functioning from a merger of two Pennsylvania non-profit corporations: Osteopathic Hospital of Philadelphia and Osteopathic Foun- dation of Philadelphia, and the securing of the right to the name and the authority to operate a college of the healing arts. Philadelphia College of Osteopathy, Inc., the New Jersey corporation which had conducted the College under a cer- tificate from the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, gave consent through its Board of Trustees to these legal steps as passed upon by the Pennsylvania Department of Education and the Court. The academic year 1953-54 marked the start of a new chapter in the institution's history without impairment of schedules of classes, clinics, hospital services or any other function. The annual "Founder's Day" observance commemorates the establishment of the College in 1898 by Dr. O. J. Snyder and Dr. Mason Pressley, chartered as a professional school dedicated to "improved methods of the healing art in accordance with osteopathic theories of etiology, diag- nosis, the prevention and treatment of diseases in general, and the practice of surgery, obstetrics and the specialties" and to "osteopathic research and the dissemination of scientific knowledge." It was incorporated as "The Philadelphia College and Infirmary of Osteopathy," January 24, 1899, under the laws of the State of New Jersey. The first class was graduated in 1900. In 1921 the name of "Philadelphia College of Osteopathy, Inc." was authorized. The first college was opened in the Stephen Girard Building and shortly afterward was transferred to larger • 1903 • 190S • 1917 quarters in the Witherspoon Building. In 1903 it was moved to the northeast corner of 33 rd and Arch Streets. From 1908 to 1911 it was situated at 1715 North Broad Street, and from 1912 to 1916 at 832 Pine Street. In 1916 the Reyburn Mansion at the southeast corner of 19th and Spring Garden Streets was purchased for the College. A fifty-bed hospital building was erected adjoining the College on 19th Street. Subsequently two properties adjacent to the College on Spring Garden Street were purchased to serve as annexes to the College and Hospital. The Board of Directors of the Osteopathic Hospital secured the pres- ent site at 48th and Spruce Streets in 1928, where space in a completely new building was oponed for classes on November 16, 1929. The Osteopathic Hospital of Philadelphia was chartered under the laws of Pennsylvania, May 10, 1911, "to estab- lish, support and conduct a general hospital for the treatment of sick and injured persons." The Hospital was the out- growth of a dispensary located at 1617 Fairmount Avenue. In 1911 the Osteopathic Hospital of Philadelphia was estab- lished at 410 South 9th Street. When the College moved to 19th and Spring Garden Streets, the Hospital was tempo- rarily quartered at 1725 Spring Garden Street, where it re- mained until completion of the hospital building on the 19th Street site in 1918. The site at the northeast corner of 48th and Spruce Streets was purchased in 1928 at a cost of ^165,000. Upon this tract, with a frontage of 281 feet on Spruce Street and 250 feet on 48th Street, units for college, hospital and administration were erected in 1929 at a cost of a million dollars. ADMINISTCATICN pijilabrlpfiia (Col/cf^^ Of O.cr '•^A '^^yy. V,'^-'^. ^. C£. '^.-^o ^„- do hereby affirm my loyalty to the profession I am about to enter. / will be mindful always of my great responsibility to preserve the health and life of my patients, to retain their confidence and respect, both as a physician and a friend who will guard their secrets with scrupulous honor and fidelity, to perform faithfully my professional duties, to employ only those recognized methods of treatment consistent with good judgment and with my skill and ability, keeping in mind always nature's laws and the body's inherent capacity for recovery. I will be ever vigilant in aiding the general welfare of the community, sustaining its laws and institutions, not engaging in those practices which will in any way bring shame and discredit upon myself or my profession. I will give no deadly drugs to any, though it be asked of me. I will endeavor to work in accord with my colleagues in a spirit of progressive cooperation and never by word or by act cast imputations upon them or their rightful practices. I will look with respect and esteem upon all those who have taught me my art. ^a^^ To my college, I will be loyal and strive always for its best and for the interests of the students who will come after me. I will be ever alert to and adhere to and develop the principles of Osteopathy as taught by Andrew Taylor Still. ADMINISTRATION OFFICERS FREDERIC H. BARTH Chairman, Board of Directors GUY W. ROGERS, JR. Vice-Chairman, Board of Directors H. WALTER EVANS Secretary JAMES M. EATON Treasurer BOARD OF DIRECTORS Robert Anderson Paul H. Hatch Leon Meltzer Frederrc H. Barth Ernest J. Hesketh Guy W. Rogers, Jr. Samuel A. Blank Glenn J. Hoffman Charles C. Smith R. G. Dorrance, Jr. J. Sydney Hoffman C. Paul Snyder Ira W. Drew J. Harrison Jones C. W. Snyder, Jr. James M. Eaton John G. Keck Reed Speer H. Walter Evans Herman Kohn Carlton Street Carl Fischer J. Ernest Leuzinger Foster C. True Walter H. Gebhart William J. McCarter J. Craig Walsh /--^ President FREDERIC H. BARTH D.Sc, LL.D. President, Philadelphia College of Osteopathy The year 1957-58 has been a momentous woven together. We cannot separate our interest year in the development of the Philadelphia Col- in each other from our concern for one another. lege of Osteopathy. Sixteen acres of ground on The plans for the progress of our College are City Line Avenue was purchased! The area is evolutionary and they require constructive effort sufficient to permit the erection of new College from us all. It is obvious that the better our Col- buildings, Hospital buildings, Library, Auditorium lege becomes the better the opportunity for suc- and Lecture Hall, Student Dormitory, Nurses' cess and service for all its graduates. We must Home and Service buildings. work together conscientiously and cooperatively, The spacious old Mansion still on the prop- so that in the buildings we now have and in those spirit erty is in the process of conversion into an Ad- to be constructed, there will be the finest ministration Building and it will be dedicated this and the best educational program of any healing year. arts College in America. Our goal cannot be less. As President, I would remind you that the My congratulations to the Class of 1958. Philadelphia College of Osteopathy is YOLJR May God be with you and help you achieve all College. Whatever success you have will be partly worthy desires. because of our service to you. Our futures are Frederic H. Barth, President Philadelphia College of Osteopathy 10 Dean SHERWOOD R. MERCER A.B., M.A., LL.D. Dean, Philadelphia College of Osteopathy TO THE CLASS OF 1958: one physician the service to the patient and the In many ways the physician as an individual doctor "thinking in the light of time and etern- finds himself in a position not unlike that of a ity?" This is the task of each physician.
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