September 2005
A tribute to Dr. Clair O'Dell
by Franciska Anderson Barr
Dr. Clair O'Dell has
fulfilled many roles in his lifetime: son, brother, husband, uncle,
father, grandfather, and friend. Yet, his choice of livelihood -- doctor
of chiropractic -- brings all of these roles together in a caring and
compassionate individual.
Dr. O'Dell has
clearly inspired and influenced many about the benefits of chiropractic.
“At an early age I studied and worried about the purpose of my life… I had
a strong innate feeling I was born to be something special… At the age of
16 while searching for my purpose, Providence sent the answer my way,” he
writes in an autobiographical sketch.
Born in 1916 and
raised on a farm in Cass City, Michigan, Clair O'Dell was surrounded by a
loving and caring family. This close-knit family nearly experienced a loss
of incredible magnitude. Clair's father, a powerful influence on his early
life, was stricken at the age of 50 with an illness that kept medical
doctors mystified for more than two years. All known medical treatments
failed and his health continued to decline. The situation seemed dire.
Worried about his
father's worsening condition, O'Dell confided in a family friend, Judson Biglow, that his father was not doing well and the outcome of the illness
looked very grim. He was not expected to live much longer, so the family
was preparing for the worst. Biglow then spoke the words that would
forever change the young man's life and, by extension, the chiropractic
profession. “Clair,” he asked, “why don't you try a chiropractor?”
Those six words lit
the path for young O'Dell to follow. It was the first time he'd ever heard
the term but as he watched his father's health improve rapidly under the
care of the town chiropractor, he quickly realized that his life's purpose
was right in front of him. Providence had indeed given him an answer. He
knew he was to become a chiropractor and help sick people get well.
Journey of a
lifetime
His father, after his
miraculous recovery, lived another 22 productive years -- thanks to the
Cass City chiropractor, Dr. Lavely. As Dr.
O'Dell writes in his booklet, My Miracle of 1934: How and Why I Became
a Chiropractor, “After being a first-hand witness to this so-called
miracle, how could I have done or been anything else [but a chiropractor]?
In just three seconds, my friend changes my life… I continue to be ever so
grateful for this friend who cared enough to think to say, ‘Why don't you
try a chiropractor?' Only three seconds out of his life to change the life
of me, my dad, and so many, many people.”
Those three seconds
lasted a lifetime as young O'Dell headed to Davenport, Iowa, to meet Dr. BJ Palmer at the
PSC -- Palmer School of
Chiropractic. He registered in September 1934 and graduated in August
1936. While at school, O'Dell established a relationship with Dr. Palmer
that ended only with Palmer's death in 1961. As Dr. O'Dell recalls, “I had
the great opportunity to introduce Dr. Palmer on many occasions, such as
conventions, clinic openings, radio interviews, TV interviews, too many to
mention.”

The two had a kinship
in chiropractic's common principle of “above down-inside out.” BJ Palmer
taught and mentored Dr. O'Dell, and the two maintained great respect for
each other throughout the years. Shortly before he died, Palmer asked to
see him, and with the parting words, “Clair, I trust you,” passed him the
torch to fight some yet unforeseen battles -- none more important than the
National Chiropractic Anti-Trust Committee lawsuit against the American
Medical Association. Twenty-six years in court and many dollars later, the
AMA was found guilty of violating the Sherman Anti-Trust laws, a victory
for chiropractic that saved the profession.
Fulfilling his
purpose
For the past 70
years, Dr. O'Dell has been an inspiration to countless individuals. He has
cared for thousands upon thousands of patients, received scores of awards,
and served the chiropractic community by living and honoring the
chiropractic mission of healing. His many accomplishments are too numerous
to list, but to highlight some, Dr. O'Dell:
Dr. O'Dell has been
honored with many awards including: a Lifetime Achievement award from the
Michigan Sherman Club (1991), a Distinguished Service award from
Pennsylvania College of Straight Chiropractic (1991), a Doctor of
Chiropractic Humanities award by Sherman College (1977 & 2002), and a
Lifetime Service award from Parker College (2002). Additionally, he was
elected governor of the World Chiropractic Alliance in 2000 and the
following year named “Humanitarian of the World” by the WCA.
Even with all the
demands on his time, Dr. O'Dell has found time to write, travel, speak at
special events, and lecture on the principles of chiropractic.
One last
unachieved goal
Each of the stages
that Dr. O'Dell has experienced -- watching his father regain his health,
going to chiropractic college, opening a chiropractic office, caring for
those miracle cases, receiving the accolades and appreciation of his peers
-- add up to an extraordinary life of purpose.
Only one thing
remains for this remarkable man. He has dreamed of a single powerful,
straight-principled national organization under which to unite all
chiropractors. However, as long as the identity of chiropractic is
preserved and the word gets out to the world about the benefits of
chiropractic, Dr. O'Dell is happy. “I've always considered myself the
luckiest chiropractor on the face of the earth,” he says. “I love to
continue to informing people of the natural wonders of chiropractic. How
safe it is. How natural it is… Getting sick people well is the most
rewarding thing I know of.”
As Dr. O'Dell writes
so eloquently, “May the present and future generations be so inspired to
save chiropractic for all people in this world.”
(Franciska
Anderson Barr is a freelance writer and editor who resides in Oregon,
Wisconsin. Her interest in chiropractic and natural health care began when
she was hired to work for Dr. Howard F. Loomis as his editor. Nearly eight
years later, she is fulfilling the dream of having an article published in
The Chiropractic Journal. Comments on this article are welcome via e-mail
at franciska@runbox.com)