Tag Archives: 2025-2026

For your reading pleasure: CAHSLA Chronicle, September 2025 No. 169

Please enjoy the latest issue of the CAHSLA Chronicle. Please don’t hesitate to send news, updates, or articles on projects, presentations, etc. for inclusion in the Chronicle to Emily Kean at any time throughout the year.

In this issue:

President’s Page, Secretary and Treasurer Reports
In Memoriam: Cecil Rahe
Resurrecting the Eclectics’ Past

President’s Page

“Fall: The Global Menace”

It creeps in slowly, earlier sunsets inching across the horizon. The leaves turn strange colors and fall to their demise, as if warning us of what’s to come. And then—without mercy—Fall Attacks!

Across the globe, pumpkin spice overruns coffee shops and the candy aisles stretch into chaotic battlegrounds. The horror is real. The squirrels? Definitely conspiring. It’s a scary movie—and we’re living in it.

But fear not! Enter the heroes of this autumnal apocalypse: us, the librarians! Armed with the latest databases and rare manuscripts containing every spell and potion, we navigate the chaos. We teach the masses how to survive every mysterious cough or sniffle, and execute the ultimate strategy for evading those schemin’ squirrels. Without us, the leaf piles would swallow the city, pumpkin spice would mutate the population, and the squirrels would reign supreme!

So if you hear the crunch of leaves behind you… don’t panic. It’s probably just nature setting the mood. Or a squirrel plotting your doom.

Stay brave, stay resourceful, and remember: fall’s terror may rage outside, but inside the library—with us leading the way—we will survive and thrive—together.

Yours in courage and caffeinated concoctions,

Matthew Cooper
CAHSLA President

Secretary’s Report

CAHSLA Membership Meeting

September 25, 2025

• Held at Cincinnati Public Radio, 2117 Dana Avenue, Cincinnati, Ohio 45207,

5:30—7:30 p.m.

• In attendance:

Devhra BennettJones

Matthew Cooper

Jim Damico

Alex Herrlein

Emily Kean

Amy Koshoffer

Chris Oaks

Akram Pari

Jennifer Pettigrew

Sharon Purtee

Crissy Ross

Virginia Wilson

• Chipotle catered supper and chocolate brownies for dessert.

• Meeting agenda:

Introductions;

Call for volunteers to edit the CAHSLA By-laws;

February meeting will be held at The Rubinstein Library, Cincinnati Children’s

Hospital. Lightening talks about current events at member’s libraries. Date to be

determined.

Discussed meeting at Proctor & Gamble. Matt will send out a Doodle poll to

determine a date.

Dan Smith, Chief Operating Officer and Chief Financial Officer, gave an outstanding

tour of the Cincinnati Public Radio facility.

Respectfully submitted by Devhra BennettJones

Treasurer’s Report

2025-09-30 CAHSLA Treasurer Report

CHECKING BALANCEas of 6/10/2025: $1,756.29
CHECKING DEPOSITSMembership Dues (Checks)$75.00
Membership Dues (PayPal)$209.26
CHECKING DEPOSIT TOTALS $284.26
CHECKING WITHDRAWALSMembership Meeting Rental$125.00
CHECKING WITHDRAWAL TOTALS $125.00
CHECKING BALANCEas of 09/30/2025:$1,915.55
CASH BALANCEas of 6/10/2025$125.00
CASH DEPOSITS $75.00
CASH WITHDRAWALSMembership Meeting Food$125.00
CASH BALANCEas of 06/10/2025:$75.00
TOTAL ASSETSas of 09/30/2025:$1,990.55

MEMBERS

14 Regular (Paid)

0 Student (Paid)

13 Life Members

27 TOTAL

Respectfully submitted by Emily Kean, Treasurer

In Memoriam: Cecil Rahe

We were saddened to learn of the passing of Cecil Rahe, age 98, on August 24, 2025.

Cecil was married to long time CAHSLA member  Emily Rahe for 66 years.  Emily was a 30-year librarian at Merrill Dow, a pharmaceutical company with research labs in Reading, Ohio.  Emily passed away in 2018 at the age of 90.

Cecil was a veteran of World War II who used the GI Bill to pursue an MBA at Xavier University.  For most of his career, Cecil was an industrial engineer.  Among the jobs he held, Cecil worked for 17 years at the U.S. Department of Energy facility, Fernald, in Ross, Ohio.

At first, Cecil attended the CAHSLA social events with Emily, but then began to regularly attend all of our meetings. He was made a lifetime member of CAHSLA alongside Emily in 1997/1998.

You could not have met a nicer person. He always had a greeting and a smile for everyone. If you have ever heard someone described as “having a twinkle in their eye”, Cecil fit that description.  

Cecil Rahe at CAHSLA Summer Picnic, June 2002

From his obituary we learned that Cecil stayed active in his church and many other organizations, including being a poll worker on election days,  after his retirement.  I would occasionally see Cecil at Playhouse in the Park in recent years. 

Submitted by Lisa McCormick

Resurrecting the Eclectics’ Past

Submitted By: Christine Jankowski, MA (Lloyd Library)

It’s a cold winter’s night on December 23, 1839. In Worthington, Ohio, a mob of townspeople carrying rifles and torches hurries towards Worthington Medical College, located near the center of the town. Students and faculty had an hour’s notice before the townsfolk burst into the Medical Department, looting the space before setting the building ablaze. Even the college president, Dr. Thomas Vaughan Morrow, received threats ahead of a raid at his home, where an even more horrifying discovery was made. The college had only been there for nine years. What could have caused this unrest? And how did this incident launch the Eclectics in Cincinnati?

Dr. Wooster Beach started the medical movement known as Reformed Medicine in New York during the 1820s, with a focus on treating patients with non-invasive methods. Instead of practicing bleeding, leeching, or purging, its medical students learned about herbal remedies to treat patients. With a desire to spread this education westward, Beach’s colleague Dr. John J. Steele founded the Medical Department at Worthington Medical College in 1830, the precursor to the Eclectic Medical Institute, later known as the Eclectic Medical College, in Cincinnati, Ohio. Shortly after, Dr. Thomas Vaughan Morrow would become the college president.

At Worthington, students learned subjects like anatomy, botany, chemistry, obstetrics, surgery, and physiology and were taught by doctors Steele, Ichabod G. Jones, J.R. Paddock, J.E. Riddle, T.E. Mason, J.D. Day, and Morrow. However, there was a macabre side to their schooling. Medical education at this time relied on the commonplace use of cadavers, and Worthington Medical College was no exception. Further understanding the functions of the human body and its contents required autopsies on the recently deceased, but sourcing these “specimens” could be difficult. Utilizing paupers’ graves in local cemeteries, medical students, instructors, and occasionally shady characters known as “resurrection men,” exhumed freshly buried bodies for use in medical education. The questionable ethics of that practice did not go unnoticed by the Worthington community, causing rumors to spread around town about the college and students. And it was one rumor about one body that would cause such an uproar.

Her name was Sally Dodge Cram. Originally from Marietta, Ohio, she was a patient at the State Insane Asylum in Columbus when she died on November 18, 1839, aged 56. Her family did not arrive in time to collect her remains for burial back home, so she was buried outside Columbus’s city limits in a pauper’s field. When her family arrived at the cemetery, they noticed her gravesite was disturbed, as were others nearby. Word quickly went around town, alleging that Worthington Medical students retrieved her body for a future autopsy. A meeting was held, and townsfolk resolved to raid the Medical College and the college president’s home. Dr. Morrow, standing outside his house with his family, witnessed the rioters enter their home. The townspeople discovered in the backyard and partially concealed in a corn stock the body of an African American man. This atrocious discovery was the final nail in the coffin for the college’s operations. 

Before the horrors of December 1839, the college was still reeling from the Panic of 1837. The national depression brought job uncertainty, failed businesses and banks, and affected the attendance and finances of the school. Another damning circumstance was their battle of words with the Thomsonians in nearby Columbus, each faction accusing the other of plagiarism and poor science. The combination of the above situations caused the school’s charter to be revoked in March 1840. 

Dr. Morrow continued to hold classes at his home. He rebranded the school as the Reformed Medical School, chartered in 1842 and operated until 1845. Relocating to Cincinnati, his new school and charter were established on March 10, 1845: the Eclectic Medical College. The topics taught were the same, and Dr. Morrow brought previous instructors to the new college. Despite the macabre past practices, the Eclectic Medical College evolved with time and had thousands of graduates while it was open. Later known as the Eclectic Medical Institute, they would hold classes until 1939 and close in 1942.

Today, the Lloyd Library still holds most of the Eclectic Medical College’s records for the curious to learn more.