Crocker Institute of Cancer Research

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The Crocker Institute of Cancer Research was established at Columbia in 1912 with a 1 million dollar gift from the estate of wealthy Californian George Crocker, who had died of cancer in December of 1909.[1] The gift was made in the form of property, 1 East 64th Street, which was subsequently tied up in litigation brought by Crocker's step-children who alleged that they'd been defrauded of their interest in the property by Crocker.[2][3][4]

Crocker's gift stipulated that funds be used only for research, and that none of it be be used to erect a building. As a result the Institute originally took up residence in Schermerhorn Hall with the Zoology Department. By December 1913 the Institute had its own space in the $40,000 3 story Crocker Research Laboratory on the empty parcel on the northeast corner of 116th Street and Amsterdam Avenue.

The Institute's first director was Francis Carter Wood.[5] Wood fought to use the funding for experimental research as opposed to the then-prevalent method of clinical studies. One of the major innovations to come out of the Crocker Institute was the use of laboratory rats for testing.

The research fund was badly damaged as a result of the stock market crash of 1929, and when Wood entered semi-retirement in 1936, cancer research was moved to the College of Physicians and Surgeons new Department of Cancer Research. Today, Columbia's cancer research is carried out at the Herbert Irving Comprehensive Cancer Center, which makes a passing reference to the Crocker Institute on its website.

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