Knight graduated from Wesleyan University in Middletown, CT, in 1935 and from Northwestern University School of Medicine in Chicago in 1940. After interning at Chicago’s Cook County Hospital, he was a resident in psychiatry at Ellis Island and later a commissioned officer in the U.S. Public Health Service. After World War II, he was a faculty member of the medical schools at the universities of Wisconsin and Minnesota, and in 1955 he became chairman of the newly formed Department of Psychiatry at the University of Chicago School of Medicine.
Knight’s interest in short-term solutions to mental health problems began when he worked with college students, continued as he investigated and taught ways in which general physicians can deal with the mental health problems they encounter in their practices, and culminated in a commitment to community psychiatry, which took him first to an effort to improve the care of psychiatric patients living in Newark, NJ, and later to the Region X Community Mental Health Center in Charlottesville, VA, where he also served as professor of psychiatry and of family medicine at the School of Medicine at the University of Virginia. He was the author of many articles and several books, most about aspects of psychiatry and one based on his great-grandfather’s Civil War letters. In an unexpectedly long retirement, he traveled widely and pursued an interest in history—of psychiatry, of his family, and of the Civil War. His unwavering commitment to understanding mental illness and improving mental health care was a model for colleagues and students; his intelligence, his enthusiasm for life, and his delight in pursuing his boundless curiosity will be missed by all who knew him. He is remembered with much love by his family and friends.
Knight graduated from Wesleyan University in Middletown, CT, in 1935 and from Northwestern University School of Medicine in Chicago in 1940. After interning at Chicago’s Cook County Hospital, he was a resident in psychiatry at Ellis Island and later a commissioned officer in the U.S. Public Health Service. After World War II, he was a faculty member of the medical schools at the universities of Wisconsin and Minnesota, and in 1955 he became chairman of the newly formed Department of Psychiatry at the University of Chicago School of Medicine.
Knight’s interest in short-term solutions to mental health problems began when he worked with college students, continued as he investigated and taught ways in which general physicians can deal with the mental health problems they encounter in their practices, and culminated in a commitment to community psychiatry, which took him first to an effort to improve the care of psychiatric patients living in Newark, NJ, and later to the Region X Community Mental Health Center in Charlottesville, VA, where he also served as professor of psychiatry and of family medicine at the School of Medicine at the University of Virginia. He was the author of many articles and several books, most about aspects of psychiatry and one based on his great-grandfather’s Civil War letters. In an unexpectedly long retirement, he traveled widely and pursued an interest in history—of psychiatry, of his family, and of the Civil War. His unwavering commitment to understanding mental illness and improving mental health care was a model for colleagues and students; his intelligence, his enthusiasm for life, and his delight in pursuing his boundless curiosity will be missed by all who knew him. He is remembered with much love by his family and friends.
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