The World of Chinese

MEDICINE, MISSIONARI­ES, AND MANCHU PRINCES

The founding of the Peking Union Medical College

- – J.J.

In central Beijing, a small cluster of European-style villas is set apart both in style and by a stout wall from the crowded courtyards of the surroundin­g hutongs. A century ago, these were the residences of faculty and researcher­s attached to the Peking Union Medical College.

Opened on a winter day in 1906, the Union Medical College was supported by an alliance of American and British missionary societies, who entrusted the school to British physician Dr. Thomas Cochrane.

Dr. Cochrane also brought with him a small grant from the imperial court, with which he had a special relationsh­ip after successful­ly treating Li Lianying, loyal eunuch of the Empress Dowager Cixi.

In the decades that followed, many internatio­nal organizati­ons expressed interest in building medical schools, universiti­es, and hospitals in the Republic of China. The Rockefelle­r Foundation, started in New York in 1913 by oil baron John D. Rockefelle­r, organized a commission to explore opportunit­ies for developing the study of medicine in China. After evaluating the country's 17 existing medical schools, they decided that “The Union Medical College at Peking, while its organizati­on is not wholly satisfacto­ry, appears to be more firmly establishe­d and better supported than any other missionary institutio­n in the country.”

In 1915, the foundation's China Medical Board purchased the old Union Medical College for 200,000 USD. With an eye toward expansion, the foundation also purchased a large tract of land close to the college. The property had been a palace belonging to the descendant­s of Dodo, the Prince of Yu, one of the Manchu founders of the Qing dynasty whose family had since fallen on hard times.

On September 15, 1921, a grand ceremony attended by over 300 guests officially opened the new Peking Union Medical College. Between 1921 and 1949, the college graduated over 300 doctors, half of whom continued their training overseas. The school became a leading research center in Asia for biochemist­ry, pharmacolo­gy, and epidemiolo­gy. Nationaliz­ed in 1951, the school was closed during the political upheavals of the 1960s. It reopened in 1979, and today is one of the most prestigiou­s medical schools in China.

 ??  ?? Pavilions in the prince's mansion were replaced by new structures built in a traditiona­l style before the college opened in 1921
Pavilions in the prince's mansion were replaced by new structures built in a traditiona­l style before the college opened in 1921

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