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McMurrich was succeeded
as chairman in 1930 by Dr. John Charles
Boileau Grant, who became a well-known
anatomist. Dr. Grant wrote three text
books, of which "An Atlas of
Anatomy" (published in 1943)
rapidly gained international prominence
and is still, more than 50 years later,
one of the most widely used anatomical
atlases in the world. It is now known
as "Grants Atlas of Anatomy"
and is in its tenth edition. The atlas
was based on a series of elegant dissections
done either by Grant or by others
under his supervision. Many of these
dissections are currently housed in
Grants Museum at the University
of Toronto.
Grant believed that
the museum should be more than a place
for displaying specimens; it should
also function as a useful working
environment. Accordingly it was designed
to have chairs and workbenches placed
at desk height with lots of surface
area for textbooks and notes. The
dissected specimens were mounted in
glass containers and placed on rotating
tables so that they could be viewed
from any angle. They were well-illuminated
and accompanied by a labelled illustration.
In Grants own words, "Thus,
the student, seated and with text-book
or notes beside him, could study in
comfort"1. Grants museum
continues to be used in accordance
with his wishes. It is an active learning
environment used by more than one
thousand students a year from a variety
of academic backgrounds.

A
student at the University of Toronto
studying in Grant's museum, 2000.
The museum specimens
were illustrated for publication in
Grants
Atlas by artists associated with
the Department of Art as Applied to
Medicine, University of Toronto, now
known as the Division
of Biomedical Communications.
The original plates for the artwork
were donated to the Department of
Anatomy in 1998 by Williams and Wilkins,
the publishers of the atlas, and are
currently housed in the archives in
the Division of Biomedical Communications.
The atlas, currently in its eleventh
edition, is edited by Professors Anne
Agur and Arthur F. Daley.

JCB
Grant, Chair of the Department of
Anatomy from 1930 to 1965, University
of Toronto, shown wearing a lab coat
with a blue collar. Dr Grant insisted
that demonstrators wear blue-collared
lab coats so that they could be easily
identified among a sea of white coats
in the dissecting laboratory. This
tradition continues.
One of Grants
many accomplishments was establishing
a division of histology within the
department and appointing Arthur W.
Ham as head of the division. In addition
to writing a widely-used textbook
of histology, Hams major
contribution to the department was
to recruit faculty members actively
engaged in the burgeoning science
of cell biology. Basic research rapidly
became a major activity in the department.
Since there were no research laboratories
available in the Anatomy building,
researchers were housed in the Ontario
Cancer Institute, until laboratories
in the new Medical Sciences Building
became available.

Architectural
drawing of the Medical Sciences Building,
University of Toronto, opened in 1969.

A
dissecting lab in the Medical Sciences
Building.
The department continued
to grow under the chairmanship of
Drs James Thompson (chair from 1966
to 1974) and Keith L. Moore (chair
from 1974 to 1984). In addition to
overseeing the rapid growth of the
department, Drs. Thompson and Moore
did not neglect its text-book writing
tradition. Dr. Thompson is co-author
of "Genetics in Medicine"
(1966) with Dr. Margaret W. Thompson,
and Dr. Moore is author of several
textbooks of anatomy and embryology
including the widely-used "Clinical
Anatomy" and "The
Developing Human".
In recognition of
its steadily increasing involvement
in research, the department was re-named
"the Department of Anatomy and
Cell Biology" in 1990. However,
changing research and teaching priorities
in the 1990s led to a fundamental
re-organization of the department.
On July 1, 1999 the formal separation
of Anatomy from Cell Biology was effected
and six members of the department
formed the Division
of Anatomy within the Department
of Surgery, re-establishing traditionally
close ties with surgery. The first
Division Head of Anatomy is Dr.
M.J. Wiley.
The teaching of anatomy
has undergone dramatic change since
the early days of medical education.
As other disciplines grew in importance,
the time available for anatomy was
steadily reduced. This required a
new educational philosophy and teaching
methods. The "Core Curriculum"
approach, used in the 1970's and 1980's,
required that the clinically relevant
aspects of major systems should be
taught in undergraduate courses, but
that the wealth of detail formerly
included, should be offered only in
the context of postgraduate courses.
In 1992 the faculty of medicine adopted
problem-based learning as its educational
paradigm. Anatomy is now taught in
an integrated fashion in the context
of clinical scenarios. Students no
longer dissect the entire body, but
dissections are directed to specific,
common surgical approaches, and formal
lectures emphasize the clinical relevance
of anatomy.
Today the faculty
of the Division of Anatomy consists
of a core group of individuals dedicated
to meeting the educational needs of
a wide variety of professional and
undergraduate students. The faculty
continues to maintain its traditional
excellence in textbook writing and
is engaged in developing and researching
the utility of computer-based educational
tools. At the same time, mindful of
McMurrichs philosophy that anatomy
is best learned by practical experience,
the division continues to provide
students the opportunity to dissect
the human body.
Patricia
Stewart, Ph.D.
Professor
1. Details of the history of the
department up to 1969 were excerpted
from "A History of the Department
of Anatomy", likely written during
1973-74 by Dr. Ross MacKenzie, a retired
member of the department.
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