Please include individual's name

in email subject line.

Thank you.

Geoffrey Kent
Of Arlington Heights

Geoffrey Kent, Professor of Pathology Emeritus at Northwestern University, has led a distinguished career in research, administration and teaching in four countries across two continents. Graduating with an M.D. from the University of Amsterdam in 1939, he displayed a remarkable affinity for training with exceptional leaders in medical research and education. His mentors included international clinical leaders, speakers, authors and famous scholars, including the internationally recognized Drs. Snapper (pathology, arteriosclerosis, diabetes, 1938), Wilkinson (hematology, pernicious anemia, 1943) and Popper (liver function and structure, 1953). He studied under the best that European medicine could offer and throughout his life insisted on passing on this legacy to his own students in kind.

Kent himself dramatically escaped Amsterdam by sea in May, 1940, only hours before the Nazi invasion stormed this city. His survival, along with the 60 young Jewish children left in his charge was only one of several instances during his life of understated yet heroic leadership abilities. During the period of war that followed in Britain, Kent served the wounded alongside other medical colleagues during the Manchester Blitz of December, 1940.

He was awarded a medical license from the Royal College of Physicians of London in 1943 and a Masters of Science degree at the University of Manchester in 1944. After serving England again in Holland and Belgium as an officer with the Desert Rats Division of the Royal Army Medical Corp from 1943 to 1947, he emigrated with his family to Canada to become Director of Pathological Services for Southwest Saskatchewan, living in Moose Jaw. In 1953, he emigrated to the United States to become Associate Director in the Department of Pathology at Cook County Hospital in Chicago where he continued an association with world-class liver disease research and its clinical applications. It was here also that he became associated with Northwestern University and was granted his Ph.D. in Pathology in 1958. In subsequent years, Kent would undertake a prominent career in teaching at Northwestern while collaborating with the most noted names in medicine, and would write over 160 published articles on various aspects of liver function.

Through a series of senior-level appointments, Kent then emerged from being Senior Pathologist at Cook County in 1953 to Chairman of the Department of Pathology at West Suburban Hospital in Oak Park in 1958 and later to Chairman at Chicago Wesley Memorial Hospital in 1969, and then finally Pathologist-in-Chief and Director of Laboratories at Northwestern Memorial Hospital in 1973

Throughout these appointments, Kent developed strong, cutting-edge technical organizations specializing in research, federal grant procurements, integration with clinical administration, and of course, teaching. He is distinguished by an exceptional history of organizational development, and a charisma that he brought to his teaching leadership. His legacy will continue to influence the best in research, teaching and mentorship at Northwestern through the “Tripartite Legacy Award” that has been sponsored by his family in honoring him and recognizing annually the best of faculty at the Feinberg School of Medicine. Dr. Kent’s contributions, and those of his mentors and successors, have contributed significantly to making Northwestern a leader in the field of medicine today.

Professor Geoffrey Kent retired in 1976 and passed away quietly at his final residence in Arlington Heights, Illinois. He was preceded in death by his devoted wife Katharine Mary Ruscoe, a loyal and especially beloved partner through over 60 years of marriage. He is survived by his family members Jonathan (and wife Elaine Culley), Simon, (and wife Ginny Linsley), Paul (and wife Frances Ballou Higgins), and Helen (with her husband Joe Sobolak); also, his eight successful grandchildren, Geoff, Meaghan, Greer, Andrew, Christine, Larah, Katharine and Coleen.

In lieu of flowers, the family has established The Tripartite Legacy Award Fund at Northwestern University to accept donations for the medical school faculty enrichment. Please address donations to Northwestern University, Feinberg School of Medicine, Office of Development, Rubloff Building, 9th Floor, 750 North Lake Shore Drive, Chicago, Illinois, c/o Jeff Nearhoof, Associate Dean.
 

        printer friendly

        background will not print