The Pioneers Who Built This

Falls City Medical Society was not born in a vacuum. It was built by physicians, nurses, and educators who defied a system designed to exclude them — and created institutions of excellence where none existed. These are their stories.

1842 to Present

Primary Sources & Archives

Much of what we know about the history of Black medicine in Louisville comes from the tireless work of archivists, historians, and the physicians themselves who recorded their experiences. Dr. Morris Weiss, a Louisville cardiologist and member of the Innominate Society, spent decades researching and preserving these stories — driven by a lifelong friendship with Dr. Jesse Bell and a conviction that this history deserved to be remembered.

The oral histories recorded at the University of Louisville in 1977 — in which Drs. Walls, Bell, Rabb, and others speak in their own voices about segregation, Red Cross Hospital, Falls City Medical Society, and the fight for integration — are among the most valuable primary sources on Black medical history in America.

They Built the Foundation. You Carry It Forward.

Falls City Medical Society exists because these pioneers refused to accept the world as it was. Join the society they made possible.

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