August 2005
Beatrice B. Hagen, DC (1919‑2005)
Beatrice B.
Hagen, DC, FICC, past president of Logan College of Chiropractic in
Chesterfield, Mo. and the first woman to serve as president of a
chiropractic college on a long‑term basis, passed away on April 8. Dr.
Hagen, who was 86, had fought a long battle with Alzheimer's disease. She
had been living at a nursing home in central New York near her family.
Dr. Hagen served as
president of Logan College of Chiropractic from 1980 to 1992. Under her
leadership, Logan broadened and modernized its school curriculum and
expanded its research program.
"r. Hagen touched the
lives of countless members of the Logan community over the years," said
Logan President George A. Goodman, DC, FICC. "Her fine work in advancing the
college curriculum and adding campus facilities helped bring Logan
College much recognition during her
years as president. Her loss is very saddening to all of us, as well as to
the profession." Hagen appointed Dr. Goodman, then a Logan faculty member,
vice president of chiropractic affairs at the college in 1981. He succeeded
her as president upon her retirement at the end of 1992.
Beginning in 1972,
Hagen served eight years on the Logan College Board of Trustees, including
her final three years as board chairwoman. During her tenure as Logan's
president. Hagen oversaw construction of two new facilities on the Logan
campus, the Dale
C. Montgomery Health Center (completed in
1982) and the Science, Research and Ergonomics Center (constructed in 1988).
She also established an outreach program through
Logan
that provided chiropractic care to the homeless at the Salvation Army's
Harbor
Light Center and the Shamrock Club in St.
Louis.
Hagen was a nationally
renowned chiropractor and was named a fellow of the International College of
Chiropractors. In 1982, she was selected as "Chiropractor of the Year" by
the American Chiropractic Association, and again, in 1987 by "The American
Chiropractor." She was the first woman to head the Council on Chiropractic
Education, a national accrediting agency for chiropractic, where she served
a two‑year term as president in 1986‑1988.
Hagen originally
enrolled at Logan
College after experiencing successful
chiropractic treatment for severe debilitation that had resulted from a
fall. A native of Rome, N.Y., she studied under the college's founder, H. B.
Logan, DC, graduating in 1940 and joining the college faculty several months
later as World War II began. She met her husband, the late Otto Hagen, DC,
when he enrolled at Logan after returning from the service. He passed away
in 1972.
Practicing chiropractic
with her husband on Long Island during the 1950s and in Frankfort in upstate
New York during the 1960s and 70s, Hagen became active with the New York
State Chiropractic Association. She led committees, helped develop the
association house of delegates and served as president of the auxiliary.
During the 1980s,
chiropractic colleges began substantive upgrading of academic standards and
pursuit of professional and general accreditations. Determined to make Logan
College a leader in that effort. Dr.
Hagen worked closely with Vice President of Academic Affairs William Ramsey,
PhD, a nationally recognized educational leader whom she recruited to work
at Logan. After securing its first accreditations from both the North
Central Association of Colleges and Schools and the Council on Chiropractic
Education during the 1980s, Logan became the first college to receive the
maximum seven‑year re‑accreditation from the CCE (1991) and the maximum
10‑year re‑accreditation from the North Central Association (1992).
After her retirement
from Logan, Dr. Hagen pursued research and teaching in the chiropractic
field. At that time, she returned to New York to be closer to her four
children.
Dr. Hagen's survivors
include daughter Karen Bromley, sons Kurt Hagen and Kris Hagen, 10
grandchildren and two great‑grandchildren. Kim Hagen, her youngest daughter,
passed away last year.
Contributions in memory
of Dr. Hagen may be made to Logan College of Chiropractic, 1851 Schoettler
Rd., PO Box 1065, Chesterfield, MO 63006‑1065.