Isaac D. Burrell
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Isaac David Burell (March 10, 1865 – March 21, 1914) was an physician and pharmacist in
Roanoke, Virginia Roanoke ( ) is an independent city in the U.S. state of Virginia. At the 2020 census, the population was 100,011, making it the 8th most populous city in the Commonwealth of Virginia and the largest city in Virginia west of Richmond. It is lo ...
. He was African-American.


Personal life

Isaac David Burell was born on March 10, 1865, at his father's farm in
Chula, Virginia Chula is a mostly rural unincorporated community in the northeastern part of Amelia County just west of the Appomattox River in the U.S. state of Virginia. The town is centered around the T-intersection of SR 636 (Lodore Road) and SR  ...
, in Amelia County, Virginia. Probably he was the son of a former slave, Isaac David Burrell first attended Lincoln University (Pennsylvania) and later received an M.D. in 1893 from the Leonard Medical College of Shaw University in Raleigh, North Carolina. He moved to Roanoke and there established in 1893 a prospering medical practice as one of the few doctors for Black patients. Burrell opened a drugstore, for many years the only Black-owned drugstore in southwestern Virginia. He started a pharmacy on Gainsborough Road between Patton and Harrison Avenues that eventually became the largest Black-owned pharmacy in southwest Virginia. His wife, Margaret Barnette Burrell (1873–1970) from
Lynchburg, Virginia Lynchburg is an independent city (United States), independent city in the Commonwealth (U.S. state), Commonwealth of Virginia in the United States. First settled in 1757 by ferry owner John Lynch (1740–1820), John Lynch, the city's populati ...
, was also recognized as a society leader in Roanoke. She was a graduate of Hampton Normal & Industrial Institute, and became a teacher in Roanoke's Third Ward School. They lived on Gainsborough Road before building a mansion around the corner on in the first block of Patton Avenue NW. "His wife was accomplished and sociable. She is a lady of rare traits and accomplishments." A still photograph of Burrell and his wife is held by the New York Public Library.


Death

Because Black patients were denied admission to the city's white hospitals, he made the 220-mile journey by train to Freedman's Hospital in Washington, D.C., where he died shortly after undergoing surgery for gallstones. He died on March 21, 1914, in Washington, D.C.


Legacy

His death was the impetus for several Black physicians of Roanoke to open a hospital for their patients. "The hospital’s namesake, Dr. Isaac Burrell, had perished on account of having to travel to Washington, D.C. — by boxcar, no less — to receive routine gall bladder surgery denied to him at segregated Roanoke Hospital, the predecessor to Roanoke Memorial." Named
Burrell Memorial Hospital Burrell Memorial Hospital, currently operating as Blue Ridge Behavioral Health (BRBH) Burrell Center, was an historic African-American hospital originally located in the Gainsboro, Roanoke, Virginia, Gainsboro neighborhood of Roanoke, Virginia. Th ...
, the ten-bed facility was on Henry Street. The flu epidemic of 1919 created the need for expanded facilities, so the hospital moved into the abandoned Allegheny Institute building on the corner of McDowell Avenue and Park Street (now 7th Street) in 1921. This building was used until 1955 when the present hospital was opened. In 1919 the city leased the abandoned buildings of the Allegheny Institute to the doctors who ran the Black hospital there from 1921 until 1955, when a modern brick hospital was constructed with the help of a woman's auxiliary. The civil rights movement in the 1960s opened white hospitals to Black patients, and Burrell Memorial Hospital closed in 1978. The hospital also was established without support from the whites, and had the first African-American School of Nursing to be accredited in Virginia.The building, now called The Burrell Center, houses Blue Ridge Behavioral Healthcare offices and clinic. The location of his pharmacy was examined by archaeologists who found more than 30,000 artifacts, including some bottles still containing pills and Elixirs.Chittum, Matt. 2017. Roanoke Times. "Death of Doctor Led to Hospital
Discover History & Heritage
August 2017. Pages 78-81.


Bibliography

* Barber, Michael B. 2011. "The Dr. Isaac D. Burrell Pharmacy (44RN256) Excavations: The Recovered Fauna"
Quarterly Bulletin
66, no. 2: 45–55. Archaeological Society of Virginia. Notes: Includes maps and photos. Burrell's pharmacy was located in the building of the former Davis Hotel at the corner of Gainsboro Road and Harrison Avenue. * Chittum, Matt. 2017. Roanoke Times. "Death of Doctor Led to Hospital
Discover History & Heritage
August 2017. Pages 78–81. * John T. Kneebone et al., eds., Dictionary of Virginia Biography (Richmond, 1998– ), 2:419–420. * Richmond Planet, 15 July 1905 * Richmond Planet, 28 Mar. 1914.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Burrell, Isaac D. 1865 births 1914 deaths African-American history of Virginia People from Roanoke, Virginia People from Amelia County, Virginia Physicians from Virginia Pharmacists from Virginia Shaw University alumni Lincoln University (Pennsylvania) alumni 19th-century American physicians 19th-century African-American physicians 20th-century American physicians African-American pharmacists 19th-century American pharmacists