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MD ANDERSON? 1873-1939 Who was ...

Who Was MD Anderson?

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People often wonder how The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center got its name. Presented here is the story of the "father" of this institution.

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Page 1: Who Was MD Anderson?

MD ANDERSON?1873-1939

W ho was . . .

Page 2: Who Was MD Anderson?

Temporary clinic at Baker estate.

MD Anderson’s first permanent hospital and research facilities were opened in the new Texas Medical Center in 1954.

The Albert B. and Margaret M. Alkek Hospital, which opened in 1999, honors the Houston philanthropists for their gift.

The Proton Therapy Center, which opened in 2006, is part of the Red and Charline McCombs Institute for the Early Detection and Treatment of Cancer.

The Lowry and Peggy Mays Clinic opened in 2005 to help MD Anderson meet increasing demands for outpatient care and services.

The 21-floor T. Boone Pickens Academic Tower, named for the longtime philanthropist, opened in 2008.

Creating a new cancer hospital and research center during the height of World War II was no easy task.

Building materials were scarce, and the government banned construction that did not qualify as defense or as essential to the health and safety of people.

Doctors, likewise, were in short supply, as many were away in the armed services.

The new state cancer hospital might never have been more than a piece of legislation but for the vision of Colonel William B. Bates, John H. Freeman and Horace M. Wilkins, trustees of the MD Anderson

Foundation, who conceived a great medical center for Houston. They soon shared their dream with Ernst W. Bertner, M.D., a prominent physician interested in cancer control.

Before long, many farsighted Houstonians were talking about building a great cancer research facility and planning for a medical center that, in time, would extend hope and help to people throughout the world.

People often wonder how The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center got its name. Presented here is the story of the “father” of this institution.

Page 3: Who Was MD Anderson?

MonroeDunawayAnderson

Frugality and thrift, industry and integrity — these were the most prominent characteristics of Monroe Dunaway Anderson. To these may be added shrewdness and acquisitiveness, which made him wealthy beyond most men of his time. He was also friendly, humble, kind, humorous and a little bashful.

Monroe Anderson was born June 29, 1873, in Jackson, Tenn., a small city 70 miles northeast of Memphis. His father was the first president of Jackson’s First National Bank, which he helped organize. His mother was the daughter of the Rev. William Monroe Dunaway, a Cumberland Presbyterian minister. His Scottish Presbyterian ancestors pretty well endowed him and his siblings with frugality and thrift; indeed, these qualities prevailed widely in a South devastated economically as well as physically by the recently ended Civil War.

Monroe attended Jackson’s public schools and Southwestern Baptist University at Memphis before going to work in Jackson’s other bank, the Peoples’ National, where he learned the banking business thoroughly. In 1904, his older brother Frank and Frank’s brother-in-law, Will Clayton, decided to establish a partnership to engage in buying and selling cotton. They needed more capital and invited Monroe to become a partner. Thus was established Anderson, Clayton and Co., with its principal office in Oklahoma City, a new city in Oklahoma Territory where cotton grew bountifully. In 1905, Ben Clayton, Will’s younger brother, was made a partner, raising the partnership to four members — two Andersons and two Claytons.

Page 4: Who Was MD Anderson?

The James A. Baker estate

In Jackson, Monroe continued his banking career until 1907, when he moved to Houston to give his company access to larger banks and, eventually, to deep water shipping on completion of the Houston Ship Channel in 1914. With full-time devotion to partnership affairs, he became the chief financial officer and later, following incorporation, he was named treasurer. For a time, he also served as president of Anderson, Clayton and Co. The company continued to prosper, and Monroe became wealthy through a combination of good management, good fortune, and the capable efforts of himself and his energetic associates. Anderson, Clayton and Co. came to be the world’s largest merchant of the world’s most popular commodity; for nearly a century it was known as “King Cotton.”

Foundation establishedIn the mid-1930s, MD Anderson and Will Clayton owned more than half the corporation’s stock. The death of either, if resulting in a large estate tax, might have made it necessary to liquidate the company. Partly for this reason, in 1936, MD Anderson created the charitable foundation that bears his name and funded it with about $300,000. This foundation was destined to receive $19 million more after Monroe’s death in 1939.

The charter of the MD Anderson Foundation did not specify precisely how its money should be used, but the trustees leaned strongly in the direction of health care. Soon after taking possession of the estate from its executors, the trustees noted that the 1941 Texas Legislature had authorized The University of Texas to establish a hospital for cancer research and treatment

Page 5: Who Was MD Anderson?

Patient waiting area

The late author, Thomas D. Anderson, was Monroe Anderson’s nephew and a devoted friend of the institution that bears his uncle’s name.

somewhere in the state. No location was specified, but $500,000 was appropriated for the purpose. The Anderson Foundation agreed to match this sum if the hospital would be built in Houston and named for its benefactor. A site was offered in the new Texas Medical Center, another creation of the Anderson Foundation.

The Baker estateThe hospital began its operations in temporary quarters on the James A. Baker estate at 2310 Baldwin Street in downtown Houston during World War II, under the acting director, Ernst W. Bertner, M.D. MD Anderson rightly regards the Baker home and extensive grounds as its place of birth. Several war surplus buildings were added in the late 1940s and 46 patients were being treated in those primitive quarters when the hospital moved to its current site in March 1954. The first permanent building, clothed in pink marble, is now the core of a complex of more modern buildings that surround it. Those buildings are sheathed in concrete and glass; the Georgia quarry was depleted of pink marble before the demands of MD Anderson ran out.

MD Anderson is deeply indebted to the people who worked there. Bertner deserves special thanks for developing a great medical center for Houston and serving as first president of the Texas Medical Center, as well as acting director of the cancer center during the organizational years, 1942-1945.

Page 6: Who Was MD Anderson?

Research laboratory

He was a member of the MD Anderson Board of Visitors from 1962 until his death in 2007, and chaired the board from 1965 to 1974.

Presidential leadershipIn 1946, the first full-time president, Randolph Lee Clark, M.D., took firm charge of the fledgling institution and lifted it to great heights in successful operation and worldwide recognition. He served 32 years until retirement in 1978 and was replaced by Charles A. LeMaistre, M.D., who continued the great work begun by Clark. LeMaistre’s retirement in 1996 after 18 years brought in the third full-time president, John Mendelsohn, M.D., who in every way is living up to the standards of excellence exhibited by his predecessors. It may truthfully be said that MD Anderson is as much a monument to Lee Clark and his successors, and to the thousands of physicians, scientists, nurses and others who dedicated themselves to this splendid institution, as it is to the memory of the man whose name it bears.

While he died unmarried and childless, Monroe was the “father” not only to the Texas Medical Center and the institution that bears his name, but also to libraries, auditoriums, college buildings and even a planetarium in his native Jackson. If he were to return to Earth and look about, he would be amazed and probably a little amused at the prominence his name has attained throughout the civilized world.

— Thomas D. Anderson

Page 7: Who Was MD Anderson?

askMDAndersonFor questions about treatment options, resources and programs at MD Anderson.877-MDA-6789www.mdanderson.org/ask

Anderson NetworkFor support from someone who has experienced the same diagnosis and treatments. 800-345-6324or 713-792-2553

1515 Holcombe Blvd., Houston, Texas 77030-4095www.mdanderson.orgProduced by MD Anderson’s Communications Office 5/10