Schneider, Selma

When in 1869 Northwestern University acquired the former medical department of Lind (now Lake Forest) University of Chicago, Illinois, it also inherited Lind’s Medical Library of roughly 1,000 volumes.  However, lack of funding and interest forced the Library's dissolution in 1871, and the Great Fire of that same year destroyed the remainder of the collection.  Northwestern University Medical School did without library facilities from 1871 to 1883, when the Medical School's  Alumni Association re-established the Medical Library in the School's building on the corner of 26th Street and Prairie Avenue in Chicago. 

The facility was relocated in 1896 to the basement of Davis Hall, 3348 South Dearborn Street.  Between 1883 and 1907 alumni and students co-operated in administering the Library, increasing the holdings from 200 to nearly 5,000 volumes.  In 1907 the Medical School's Alumni Association formally presented the Medical School Library to Northwestern University, which then re-assumed administration of the Library.  The medical collection grew slowly until 1925, when Dr. Archibald Church, professor of nervous and mental diseases in the Medical School, and Mrs. Church made major donations of money, initiating a surge in holdings from 13,000 to 92,000 volumes over the next twenty years. 

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