Last modified: Friday, August 24, 2012
IUPUI community mourns passing of former dean, chancellor Glenn W. Irwin Jr.
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Aug. 24, 2012
INDIANAPOLIS -- The Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis community is mourning the passing of Glenn W. Irwin Jr., M.D., chancellor emeritus of IUPUI and dean emeritus of the IU School of Medicine. Dr. Irwin, who died Aug. 23, 2012, was 92.
Frequently described as "High Class, Low Key," Dr. Irwin in 1973 became the second chancellor of the IUPUI campus. He became dean of the School of Medicine in 1965.
While chancellor in the 1970s and 80s, he drove the growth of programs and facilities at IUPUI, leading it to the ranks of the leading public urban campuses, offering undergraduate and graduate degrees in sciences and liberals arts as well as business and technology. As dean, Dr. Irwin led the creation of a statewide medical education program and began the drive to build Indiana University Hospital in June 1965.
"Dr. Irwin was a true pioneer," said Craig Brater, M.D., dean of the IU School of Medicine. "He was at the ground floor of the development of the current IUSM and IUPUI campus. He was one of only nine deans of a medical school that is over 100 years old and the most senior of those still living. His tenure as dean of IUSM and then as chancellor of IUPUI came at a time of great growth in both. Glenn continued to come to the office until shortly before his death and gave wise counsel to three of his successors, including me. He was a giant in the history of the IUSM; we truly stand on his shoulders."
Current IUPUI Chancellor Charles R. Bantz said, "Glenn Irwin deepened IUPUI's connections with the community in its critical early years, and remained dedicated to the success of the campus nearly a quarter century after having retired as chancellor. He faithfully attended key IUPUI events, including the annual Employee Recognition Ceremony, when the Excellence Awards named for him are given."
Gerald Bepko, IUPUI's third chancellor, cherishes his memories of Irwin.
"Glenn was an extraordinary person who led the School of Medicine and IUPUI with exceptional grace and effectiveness," Bepko said. "His leadership created a culture of achievement which was built on integrity, commitment, the pursuit of excellence, and focus on the most important long-term goals. There was a substantial measure of greatness in that calm, often soft-spoken, compassionate person. We should cherish his memory as a consummate leader, as a person devoted to his family and community, and as a wonderful human being."
Irwin graduated from the School of Medicine in spring 1944, one of the school's two wartime classes that year, which was the result of the school's effort to produce more doctors to serve the troops injured in the war. After serving at the Schofield Barracks Hospital in Hawaii, he joined the faculty at the School of Medicine in 1950 and became dean in March 1965.
Medical education was a key focus for Dr. Irwin and the school during his tenure as dean. In the 1960s, the IU School of Medicine developed the "Indiana Plan," which called for a coordinated statewide system of undergraduate, graduate and continuing medical education.
Conceptualized to create "a medical school without walls, both in space and in time," the system developed under Irwin's direction established seven additional campuses (in addition to Indianapolis and the Bloomington program that started in 1959) where the first two years of medical education were taught in collaboration with basic science faculty at IU Bloomington, Notre Dame, Ball State, Indiana State, the University of Evansville and Purdue University. This was the first comprehensive program to use all of the resources for medical education within an entire state, and to develop an integrated system of medical education that served physicians as well as medical students anywhere within that state's borders.
In 2012, the IU School of Medicine continues to build that statewide system by adding the third and fourth years to all its campuses as it expands its student body to address the continued physician shortages in underserved areas and to serve an aging population.
During Dr. Irwin's chancellorship, in partnership with the city of Indianapolis, IUPUI added a sports complex that included a natatorium, an attached physical education building and a track and field stadium to be ready for the National Sports Festival in 1982. To improve access to Wishard Hospital and the campus, Lockefield Gardens was partially razed, and new apartments were added for university students and residents.
During this time, the campus underwent a transformation that brought continued dramatic growth. Work progressed to enhance and expand Riley Hospital for Children (Phase III, 1986) and IU Hospital (Phase II, 1975), and both Regenstrief Institute and the Ronald McDonald House opened, adding research space and a home away from home for families with children being cared for at Riley.
Under Dr. Irwin's leadership, IUPUI's visibility and prestige as an academic institution increased dramatically. Enrollment grew from fewer than 17,000 students to more than 23,000; full-time faculty increased from about 800 to more than 1,300; and the operating budget of the campus increased from $97 million to $409 million.
After Dr. Irwin retired from the chancellor's post in 1986, he continued to serve the community as a member of the boards of the Eiteljorg Museum of Western Art and the American Indian, the YMCA of Greater Indianapolis and the Riley Children's Foundation Board of Governors.
His funeral will be at the Second Presbyterian Church, 7700 N. Meridian St., Indianapolis. Calling will be from 5 to 7 p.m. Wednesday, Aug. 29. The funeral will be at 1 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 30, with calling preceding from noon to 12:45 p.m. Donations should be made to the Indiana University School of Medicine.