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Middlesex University (Massachusetts): Encyclopedia BETA


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Middlesex University (Massachusetts)

Middlesex University, known primarily for its medical and veterinary schools, operated from 1914 until 1947, first in Cambridge, Massachusetts, later in Waltham, Massachusetts.

The "Middlesex College of Medicine and Surgery" was founded in 1914 by John Hall Smith, and originally located in Cambridge, Massachusetts and affiliated with the Middlesex Hospital. In 1917, Massachusetts chartered an institution named the "University of Massachusetts" with the same board of trustees.(The present-day University of Massachusetts is a completely unrelated institution; it was known at that time as "Massachusetts Agricultural College," later "Massachusetts State College," and did not become the "University of Massachusetts until 1947").Institutional names, changes, merges. AMA issues; antisemitism suggested; difficulty securing AMA accreditation; 1944 legislation; AMA claim that Middlesex lacked sufficient funds, facilities, and faculty"

In 1928, it moved to the Waltham campus, the present-day campus of Brandeis University. The building which Brandeis calls "Usen Castle" or "the Castle" was originally the main building of Middlesex University.

In 1935 Middlesex College of Medicine and Surgery received authorization to grant B.A. and B.S. degrees and became "Middlesex College." In 1937 it merged with the University of Massachusetts to become "Middlesex University," with schools of medicine, liberal arts, pharmacy, podiatry, and veterinary medicine.

Middlesex University was important as a veterinary school; it was the only veterinary school in New England,Reis, Arthur H., Jr. , pp. 42-3: Only veterinary school in New England; C. Ruggles Smith quote about AMA opposition and when it closed in 1947, there was none in New England until Tufts University opened theirs in 1978[1]. As of 2006, about nineteen Middlesex graduates are currently practicing in Massachusetts.Massachusetts Veterinary Medical Association, [2], search on Veterinary School=Middlesex. 19 hits on a database of "about 1000" practitioners.

Middlesex University is described by a Brandeis University web page as "a university founded on the principles of equality, freedom, and scholarship, as the school maintained a student population diverse in race, color, and religion, during a time when many universities in the United States had quotas and were not as open."op. cit. In particular, it freely admitted Jews during a time when most elite universities had Jewish quotas, and it had many Jews among its students and faculty. Its medical school experienced difficulty securing AMA accreditation. The AMA said this was due to insufficient funds, faculty, and facilities, but some at the university believed that antisemitism played a role. In the words of C. Ruggles Smith, son of the founder::From its inception, Middlesex was ruthlessly attacked by the American Medical Association, which at that time was dedicated to restricting the production of physicians, and to maintaining an inflexible policy of discrimination in the admission of medical students. Middlesex, alone among medical schools, selected its students on the basis of merit, and refused to establish any racial quotas.op. cit

In 1944, a law making doctor's licensing dependent on holding an MD from an AMA-accredited medical school, and financial problems caused by World War II, made the situation of Middlesex University untenable. In 1946, the Middlesex trustees transferred the charter and campus of the university to the foundation which was to establish Brandeis, with the hope, not to be realized, that Brandeis would be able to continue the medical and veterinary schools. In 1947, Brandeis, feeling that the medical school would never be more than third-rate and that the financial burden of operating it was too heavy, closed its doors.

Trivia

On March 31, 1939, Middlesex University pre-veterinary student Gordon Southworth temporarily set a record for Goldfish swallowing, a campus fad of the time, by consuming 67 fish in 14 minutes, beating the record of 42 set the previous night by an MIT student. The New York Times reported that "he took an occasional sip of milk while eating them and topped off the unusual meal with a peanut-butter sandwich." "Goldfish Gulpers Warned of Anemia," The New York Times, April 1, 1939, p. 21

References



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