Ceremony Remembers Those Who Donated
Bodies to Science;
Annual Sykesville Service Held by Anatomy Board
By Mary Gail Hare
Baltimore Sun Staff
June 22, 2004—With familiar hymns, consoling words
and peaceful prayers, the State Anatomy Board thanked
the families of its many donors during the annual memorial
service yesterday at Springfield Hospital Center in
Sykesville.
As the warm summer sun streamed through towering oak
trees, a crowd of more than 100 gathered before a stark
gray monument, dedicated to "those who gave unselfishly
of themselves to advance medical education and research."
Many placed simple bouquets of daisies or a single red
rose on the stone that marks the grave of the thousands
who have willed their bodies to science in the past
three decades.
"I don't know of a prettier spot than here,"
said Walter E. Rhodes, who has frequently traveled from
his home on the Eastern Shore for the service since
his wife donated her body to science 10 years ago. "I
will be staying here one day, too."
Long before Jane Rhodes died of cancer, she had made
her decision, her husband said. "She survived cancer
for 22 years and that is one reason we both decided
to be donors," Rhodes said. "She hoped students
would find something they could use to help someone
else."
The couple's rationale is typical of the nearly 1,200
people who donated their bodies to the Anatomy Board
this past year, said board Director Ronald S. Wade.
"Overall, people donate their bodies with the idea
of helping other people," he said. "The number
of donors is increasing and we are meeting the anatomical
resource needs of the entire state. We can have a greater
impact on medical study, from paramedics to trauma training
to surgical students. With medicine advancing at such
a pace, we have the means to have an impact on so many
lives."
The Anatomy Board established the hospital burial site
in 1973 and organizes the memorial service there annually
on the third Monday of June. The board returns cremated
remains to families who request them and inters the
others - about 700 donors yesterday - in a shady grove
at Springfield. The average age of the donors is 70.
Dr. Larry Anderson, course director of anatomy and
neurobiology at the University of Maryland School of
Medicine, spoke of a teacher who became a donor 32 years
ago when he began studying medicine. "She continued
to teach after her death and I think of her every year
when I speak to the new students," Anderson said
to the assembly. "I introduce the students to your
loved ones and tell them that they will have the privilege
of learning from these donors."
After placing a proclamation from Gov. Robert L. Ehrlich
Jr. praising the "large number of caring Maryland
residents" beside the monument, Wade pointed out
the numerous medical students in the crowd. "It
is important that students have the means to develop
expertise so that ultimately the lives of their patients
improve," he said. "By donating their bodies,
these people leave behind a legacy that is a gift of
education and health for others. This is the ultimate
gift, one that is in addition to the
life they have lived."
Tiffany Bohan, a University of Maryland medical student
from Hagerstown, said she quickly learned the value
of the donations. "Without these donations, medicine
would not be as advanced as it is today," Bohan
said. "We will be working our whole lives with
real people. We need to see real lungs, for example,
instead of a picture of lungs."
Three generations of Dorothy Kerns' family remembered
the 84-year-old great-grandmother who donated her body
last year. "I liked that the medical students came
to show their respect," said Kerns' daughter Patricia
Swartz of Bel Air. "My mother was so determined
to make this donation that she sold her grave next to
my father. I am so glad that she has come to this peaceful
place."
Stephanie Taylor of Baltimore came to the service to
honor her mother, Emily Taylor, who died in April at
age 84. "She had always been a proponent of schooling
and she liked the educational aspect of the donation,"
said Taylor. "I see the value of it at this service
today and it is nice to know her gift is appreciated."
Pat Brown and her two children planned their trip to
Maryland from Oceanside, Calif., to coincide with the
date of the service, which would honor her mother, Betty
S. Brown, who died nearly four years ago.
"The service really helped," Pat Brown said.
"I could not have asked for a more peaceful place.
I loved the music, the nondenominational prayers and
the wonderful surroundings."
"And nobody wore black," said Brown's 9-year-old
daughter, Molly Weber.
Pat Brown's father, who died in 1984 and would have
been 85 yesterday, and her grandmother are also among
the donors buried at Springfield. "I guess I can
call this spot my family plot," she said.
The memorial service recognizes lives well lived, Wade
said. It also can be part of the healing process for
surviving family members. "Our services give families
a chance to look back at the healing that has gone on
and to remember," he said.
The service gave Janine Green the opportunity to honor
her grandmother, Elma Adams, who died in 2002. "Her
decision to donate her body was not easy for us, but
we accepted it because it was what she wanted,"
said Green. "This service is the finality of her
moving on."
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