Meharry Medical College

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Meharry Medical College is a private, historically Black academic health sciences center in the North Nashville neighborhood of Nashville, Tennessee. It's one of the nation's oldest and largest institutions of its kind, dedicated to training physicians, dentists, researchers, and health policy experts. Founded in 1876 as the Medical Department of Central Tennessee College, it became the first medical school for African Americans anywhere in the South. Affiliated with the United Methodist Church, Meharry has spent nearly 150 years educating healthcare professionals who commit themselves to serving underserved communities across America and worldwide. The numbers tell the story: nearly 15 percent of all Black physicians and dentists working in the U.S. graduated from here. The college's guiding motto reflects its core purpose: "Worship of God Through Service to Mankind," a principle that's defined the institution from day one.[1]

Founding and Early History

The original motivation was clear. Train aspiring caregivers to serve newly freed African Americans and everyone else in need of medical attention. Central Tennessee College students approached their college president in 1875 with an idea for a medical school. The president, John Braden, knew exactly who to talk to: Samuel Meharry. That same year, Meharry and four of his brothers gave $15,000 to help start the medical department at CTC, a historically Black college in Nashville. This gift wasn't random. It was part of the Freedman's Aid Society's broader mission to educate formerly enslaved people and provide healthcare to the poor and underserved.

The first president was George Whipple Hubbard (1841–1921), a New Hampshire native and former Union soldier who'd earned his medical degree from the University of Nashville. In 1876, with backing from the Freedman's Aid Society of the Methodist Episcopal Church North, Hubbard and Braden opened the medical college at CTC. Nine students enrolled. The basement of Clark Memorial Methodist Episcopal Church served as the classroom. When October 1876 came around and the first formal classes began, enrollment had grown to eleven. Originally the program ran just two years, but they added a third year in 1879 and a fourth in 1893.

By 1896, something remarkable had happened: half of all regularly educated physicians practicing in the South had graduated from Meharry. That's extraordinary growth. The college expanded steadily. Dental and pharmaceutical departments opened in 1886 and 1889 respectively. A nurse-training school started during the 1900–1901 school year with eight students in that first class. Mercy Hospital was built during the 1901–1902 school year, then replaced in 1916 and renamed the George W. Hubbard Hospital.

In 1900, CTC changed its name to Walden University. Fifteen years later, in 1915, the medical department faculty received a separate charter to operate independently as Meharry Medical College. It remained privately funded.

Accreditation, Setbacks, and the Move to North Nashville

The early decades weren't smooth. A 1914 drop to Class B status damaged Meharry's reputation significantly. Abraham Flexner of the General Education Board, a Rockefeller program, stepped in with advice and funding to help rebuild credibility. By 1923, the American Medical Association restored Meharry to "grade-A institution" status.

Leadership changes mattered too. John J. Mullowney became the second president on February 1, 1921. He was a 1908 University of Pennsylvania graduate and former faculty member at Girard College in Philadelphia. Under his watch, admission standards tightened. Faculty numbers grew. Research and hospital facilities expanded, pushing bed capacity to one hundred. Outpatient clinics got reorganized by specialty. A hospital superintendent was hired. These weren't flashy moves, but they worked.

Major foundations saw the potential. The General Education Board, Rockefeller, Rosenwald, Eastman, and Carnegie foundations all contributed. Nashville's city government helped. Alumni pitched in. By the late 1920s, Meharry had moved from South Nashville to its current location in North Nashville, just one street west of Fisk University. The Neo-Gothic and College-Gothic architecture of both institutions' buildings reflected something deeper: a real partnership between the two schools. By the 1930s, many future physicians did their undergraduate and premedical work at Fisk, then earned their medical degrees at Meharry.

Edward L. Turner took over as president in 1938. He wasn't interested in maintaining the status quo. Turner revamped the medical curriculum, pushing for a more scientific approach and emphasizing proper clinical procedures. But financial troubles emerged during the 1940s and plagued the institution. Turner left in 1944.

An interim committee ran things until 1952, when Dr. Harold D. West took charge as the first Black president. West launched a $20 million fundraising campaign, bought adjacent land, and added a hospital wing. He meant business.

By the late 1960s and early 1970s, something extraordinary had occurred: 83 percent of all African American physicians had trained at either Meharry or Howard University School of Medicine. In 1970 alone, more than 60 percent of Black medical residents worked at these two institutions. An interim committee managed Meharry from 1966 to 1968 until Lloyd Elam, the former medical school dean, became president. Under Elam's leadership, the college established a graduate school offering Ph.D.s in basic sciences and created a School of Allied Health Professions working jointly with Tennessee State University and Fisk. The 1970s brought new buildings for medicine, dentistry, and a new hospital.

Later 20th Century and Financial Challenges

The final decades of the twentieth century proved turbulent. The Hubbard Hospital closed in 1994. It was renovated and reopened in November 1997 as the Metropolitan Nashville General Hospital. That same year, 1994, President John E. Maupin Jr. launched a major campus renovation effort. But the institution was drowning: a $49 million deficit had drained morale. The lease money from Nashville General Hospital, though, provided crucial cash flow. By June 1995, finances had stabilized.

In 1999, Meharry formed an alliance with Vanderbilt University. That relationship expanded clinical training options for students, though complications later arose around inpatient care provisions.

Entering the new century, Meharry had added nursing, dentistry, and pharmacy programs. Hulda Margaret Lyttle deserves special mention. She was in the first graduating class of the professional nurse-training program in 1910. By 1915, she'd earned a reputation for clinical excellence and was appointed Director of Nurse Training. She kept rising: Superintendent of the hospital in 1923, and in 1938, dean of the nursing school. That made her the first Black dean of a nursing school in America. Funding shortfalls forced the college to shut down the nursing school in 1964.

Academic Programs and Mission

Today Meharry operates five schools: School of Medicine, School of Dentistry, School of Graduate Studies, School of Applied Computational Sciences, and School of Global Health. Graduate and professional programs come in online, hybrid, and in-person formats covering medicine, dentistry, health sciences, global health, and data science. The degrees include Doctor of Medicine (M.D.), Doctor of Dental Surgery (D.D.S.), Master of Science in Public Health (M.S.P.H.), Master of Science (M.S.), and Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.).

A 2010 study in the Annals of Internal Medicine ranked Meharry as one of the nation's top five producers of primary care physicians. Here's what stands out: three out of every four Meharrians return to urban or rural communities to provide medical or dental services.

Since 1915, Meharry's remained independent and accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools. It's a private institution affiliated with the United Methodist Church. Current enrollment sits at approximately 962 students. The college is one of just 11 United Methodist Black College Fund schools.

The community health mission extends beyond campus walls. On-campus clinics provide patient-centered family care, including dental services. Through the Meharry Medical Group, an expanding network of clinics serves the Middle Tennessee area. Beyond education and patient care, Meharry publishes the Journal of Health Care for the Poor and Underserved, a public health journal addressing real gaps in the literature.[2]

Recent Developments

Philanthropy stepped in significantly. In September 2020, Michael Bloomberg donated $34 million to reduce student debt. It was the largest gift in Meharry's history. That money made a real difference.

In 2021, Meharry launched Meharry Medical College Ventures to drive healthcare innovations and develop solutions for improving health outcomes and reducing health disparities through partnerships with medical facilities nationwide.

The relationship with neighboring Fisk University has deepened considerably. A partnership agreement now gives Fisk undergraduates pursuing medicine or dentistry a clear pathway forward. Students meeting strict criteria gain direct admission to Meharry's medical or dental school.

A Tri-Institutional Seminar series has kicked off, run by the School of Medicine Basic Sciences, Meharry, and Fisk. It focuses on developing trainees and strengthening collaboration and existing ties among scientists at all three institutions.[3]

Looking forward, Meharry's planning something special. Alumni Homecoming Reunion 2026 is scheduled for May 13–17, 2026. It'll mark a historic 150-year celebration of the institution's founding.

Notable Alumni and Faculty

Meharry's graduates have shaped medicine and public life far beyond Nashville. Physicians, surgeons, civil rights figures, international leaders. The list goes on.

Dorothy Lavinia Brown stands out. She was the first Black woman surgeon in the South. A legislator and educator too. Brown entered Meharry in 1944. When the Harlem hospital where she interned refused her a surgical residency, she made her case to Meharry's surgical chief Matthew Walker. He granted her a residency in Nashville. That's the kind of opportunity that changed careers.

Dr. Matthew Walker trained more Black surgeons than anyone else in the world. Maybe as many as half of those practicing when he died. The son of a Pullman porter, he worked his way through New Orleans University and graduated from Meharry with honors in 1934. His impact on the profession was extraordinary.

Josie Wells made history too. When she graduated from Meharry in 1904, she was the first female graduate and the first practicing female physician in Nashville, regardless of race. Not many people can claim that distinction.

Hastings Kamuzu Banda was a Meharry alumnus who led Malawi from 1964 to 1994. He served as Prime Minister from 1964 to 1966 when Malawi was a Commonwealth realm, then became the country's first president.

The numbers reflect Meharry's broader reach. Since 1970, the college has awarded more than 10 percent of all Ph.D.s in biomedical sciences earned by African Americans. By 1986, roughly 46 percent of all Black faculty in medical schools across the country were Meharry graduates.[4]

References

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