Charles Russell Bardeen

Charles Russell Bardeen
Charles Russell Bardeen, M.D.

Bardeen in 1914
Born 8 February 1871(1871-02-08)
Kalamazoo, Michigan
Died 12 June 1935(1935-06-12) (aged 64)
Madison, Wisconsin
Nationality American
Fields Medicine & Anatomy
Institutions Johns Hopkins University
University of Wisconsin–Madison
Alma mater Harvard University
Johns Hopkins University

Charles Russell Bardeen, M.D. (8 February 1871 – 12 June 1935)[1] was an American physician and anatomist and the first dean of the University of Wisconsin Medical School.

Contents

Early years

Charles Bardeen was born in Kalamazoo, Michigan in 1871, but grew up in Syracuse, NY, where his father, Charles William Bardeen, was an educator and publisher. He attended the Teichmann School in Leipzig, Germany, and then completed his B.A. at Harvard University in 1893. By virtue of being in the first medical school class at Johns Hopkins University, and having a last name at the beginning of the alphabet, Bardeen was the first person ever to receive an M.D. from that institution, in 1897. Another member of his class, Eugene Lindsay Opie, also went on to a medical school deanship, at Washington University in St. Louis.

First graduating class of Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, 1897. Bardeen is in the back row, third from left. Dr. William H. Welch, the first dean of the medical school, is in the middle of the group.

Career

Charles Bardeen taught at Johns Hopkins University from 1897 to 1904. He then left Johns Hopkins and accepted the post of professor of anatomy at the University of Wisconsin–Madison.

Bardeen came to Wisconsin at a time when the university was expanding under President Charles R. Van Hise. Van Hise and Bardeen shared the view that the one element the university was missing was a medical school. Bardeen was asked to create a two-year program fully integrated into the university.

In 1907, he became the first dean of the University of Wisconsin Medical School.

Bardeen wanted the new medical school to evolve into a four-year program. However, he had to battle local physicians, who believed that such an institution would rob them of their livelihood. Later, the First World War and the 1918 influenza epidemic convinced them, and the public, that more physicians were needed in Wisconsin. Finally, in 1924, Wisconsin General Hospital opened its doors, and a year later the Medical School invited students to participate in a four-year curriculum.

However, the medical school had difficulty meeting the clinical needs of the extended curriculum. Bardeen had a solution. He wanted a co-opting of state physicians into the medical school's educational activities. Beginning in 1926, fourth-year medical students would spend eight weeks working in one of the many private practices scattered across the state of Wisconsin. The preceptorship rapidly grew into one of the most popular aspects of medical education at the university. Later, the preceptor concept introduced by Bardeen became an important national innovation.

Bardeen contributed articles on embryology, morphology, anatomy, and other subjects to scientific journals.

Personal life

Charles R. Bardeen was married to Althea Bardeen. She had taught at the Dewey Laboratory School and managed an interior decorating business before marrying, and was an active figure in the art world. After her death from cancer in 1921, Charles married Ruth Hames.

His son, Dr. John Bardeen, became the only person to win the Nobel Prize in Physics twice, in 1956 and 1972.

Bardeen died in Madison, WI in 1935, from pancreatic cancer. He was succeeded as Dean of the University of Wisconsin Medical School by Dr. William Shainline Middleton.

References

  1. ^ Harvard Alumni Association; Associated Harvard Clubs (1 January 1935). Harvard alumni bulletin. p. 1171. http://books.google.com/books?id=zXbPAAAAMAAJ. Retrieved 31 August 2011. 
  • Clark PF: The University of Wisconsin Medical School—A Chronicle, 1848–1948. University of Wisconsin Press, Madison, WI, 1967; pp. 41–50.
  • Charles R. Bardeen
  • Oliver R: Making the Modern Medical School: the Wisconsin Stories. Science History Publications, Canton, MA, 2002; pp. 1–25.

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