Why did a Christian college in Eugene build a hospital in the 1920’s?
Bushnell University (Eugene, Oregon) was first founded as a “divinity school” in 1895 and strategically adjacent to the University of Oregon. The founder and first president of the Eugene Divinity School, Eugene Sanderson, conceived of the concept that Christians and churches should utilize the best aspects of a state school to supplement and support Christian education. The Eugene Divinity School, founded in part by Sanderson, would undergo its own history with name changes, mergers, and financial survival in the early 1930s to become Northwest Christian College, Northwest Christian University, and now Bushnell University. The establishment of the Divinity School is linked to a larger Christian movement often called the “Restoration Movement” that developed its own denominational heritages, namely, the Disciples of Christ and Church of Christ. This research project was funded by the Council of Independent College (CIC) in a program called: Humanities for the Public Good. The purpose of this research is to see the coordination of benevolence and healing in this specific community from various Christian organizations and histories. From this purpose, various questions surfaced that helped to drive the research. This project is based upon the following questions: Why did the Christian college in Eugene Oregon, build a hospital in the 1920s? What was the context, its motivation, and goals? What was the result? Why and how was the hospital sold in 1936? To answer these questions, the researchers:
1) Searched archives at both Bushnell University and at Sacred Heart Hospital in Eugene, Oregon
2) Surveyed existing secondary literature about Bushnell University and Sacred Heart Hospital
3) Gathered of primary materials from these archives including catalogs, Board of Trustees Notes/minutes, interviews, letters, notes, and photographs.
CIC Research Grant
Brian Mills
Bucher Room (view livestream here)
10:30 – 11 AM
Return to schedule