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Medical Society
of Johnson and Wyandotte Counties
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6405 Metcalf Avenue, Suite 507
Shawnee Mission, Kansas 66202
Phone: 913.432.9444
Fax:913.432.9004
medicine@msjwc.org
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The History of the Wyandotte County Medical Society
By James G. Lee, M.D.
John E. Ingram, M.D.
It is hard to imagine what Kansas was like in the days of the Border
Ruffians, the Underground Railway, Quantril's Raiders, and the Civil
War. It is equally difficult to imagine what it was like practicing
medicine in those turbulent times. In the midst of the turmoil, Dr.
Joseph Root, one of Wyandotte County's first physicians, was able,
through his legislative skill, to create the Kansas Medical Society
in 1859, two years before Kansas was made a state.
The Kansas Medical Society was chartered by the Kansas Territorial
Legislature on February 10, 1859. The Wyandotte County Medical
Society was organized in March of 1893. The early activities,
membership, and records of these organizations were minimal.
Dr. J.M. Rowns was elected the first president of the Wyandotte
County Medical Society in 1896.
In 1901, the Wyandotte County Medical Society was reorganized, and
the state and county societies became components of the American
Medical Association.
In 1912, Dr. George Gray was elected president and Dr. J. F. Hassig
was elected secretary. At that time, there were 42 members and
attendance at meetings was poor. Drs. Gray and Hassig managed to
increase membership to 105 and attract more members to meetings. The
Wyandotte County Medical Society became the largest one of its kind
in the state.
Dr. Gray, with the help of Anthony Kuhls, was responsible for the
organization and building of St. Margaret's hospital in 1887. This
and the opening of Bethany Hospital in 1892 immeasurably improved
the quality and quantity of health care in the area.
Nearly all of the details of the Society were non-existent until
1933. In that year, the members' wives were invited to the meetings.
The auxiliary was organized the following year, and a recorded
history was established.
The Society was active through the years in disseminating
information throughout the community, participating in community
activities, and ensuring that local health care needs were met.
Thirteen members of the Wyandotte County Medical Society served as
presidents of the Kansas Medical Society.
In 1969, the Society conceived the idea of combining the four
private hospitals in Kansas City, Kansas into one institution. The
idea progressed far past the original expectations due to the nearly
unanimous approval of the hospital administrations. Nevertheless,
the effort did not succeed.
In the late 1960s, emergency ambulances offered little but
transportation. With the development of cardiac resuscitation and
other advances, the Wyandotte County Medical Society and the Kansas
University Medical Center led efforts to modernize area emergency
services.
The possibility of merging the Johnson and Wyandotte County medical
societies first surfaced in 1943. The idea resurfaced several times
before finally being accepted in 1998. The new Medical Society of
Johnson and Wyandotte Counties looks forward to a new age.
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