University of Western States

By Janet Tapper

The University of Western States has been a fixture of the Oregon healthcare community since 1904. The college began at the turn of the twentieth century when several chiropractic schools merged, including a Portland school opened by D. D. Palmer, the creator of the chiropractic method of healing.

In the 1930s, under the auspices of college director and president W.A. Budden, the campus took on the name Western States School of Chiropractic and Naturopathy. In 1954, the college separated the chiropractic and the naturopathic curricula and became Western States Chiropractic College.

Western States faculty and alumni have been influential in legitimizing and promoting the practice of chiropractic, including the 1915 passage of legislation licensing chiropractor physicians in Oregon, the establishment of a four-year educational requirement for licensure, the 1927 expansion of the chiropractic scope of practice that defines what chiropractic physicians can do and what they can treat (the broadest in the nation), and the formation of the Oregon Chiropractic Association. 

In 1984, Western States faculty became the first researchers from a chiropractic college to present a paper at the International Society for the Study of Lumbar Spine. The Low Back Study, conducted in 1992 by the school's research department, broke ground by defining norms for practice-based research. In 2004, Western States was the first college to receive a grant from the National Institutes of Health for the advancement of evidence-based complementary and alternative curriculum. 

In the fall of 2009, the campus achieved university status and changed its name to the University of Western States (UWS). Still the only chiropractic college in the Northwest, the university has expanded its academic program to include a Masters in Sports and Exercise Science and an accredited school of massage. UWS is a nonprofit institution that is accredited through the Northwest Commission on Colleges and Universities and the Council on Chiropractic Education. UWS is located at 2900 NE 132nd Ave., Portland.

  • D. D. Palmer, founder of Chiropractic, formed a school in association with John H. LaValley in Portland in 1910.

    Palmer, D. D.

    D. D. Palmer, founder of Chiropractic, formed a school in association with John H. LaValley in Portland in 1910. Copyright Western States Chiropractic College

  • Dr. W. A. Budden president and provost from 1929 to 1954.

    Budden, W. A.

    Dr. W. A. Budden president and provost from 1929 to 1954. Copyright Western States Chiropractic College

  • Dr. John LaValley leading a dissection in 1921; LaValley was co-founder and first president of the Oregon Chiropractic Assoc.

    LaValley, John, dissecting.

    Dr. John LaValley leading a dissection in 1921; LaValley was co-founder and first president of the Oregon Chiropractic Assoc. Copyright Western States Chiropractic College

  • 1948 WSC course catalog.

    WSC course catalog, 1948.

    1948 WSC course catalog. Copyright Western States Chiropractic College

  • WSC faculty and staff at 11th and Clay Streets, Portland, in 1939.

    WSC faculty .

    WSC faculty and staff at 11th and Clay Streets, Portland, in 1939. Copyright Western States Chiropractic College

Slide carouosel left Slide carousel right

Map This on the Oregon History WayFinder

The Oregon History Wayfinder is an interactive map that identifies significant places, people, and events in Oregon history.

Further Reading

Homewood, A.E. 75 Years of Tenacity, Challenge and Progress: A History of Western States Chiropractic College. Toronto, Ont.: A. E. Homewood, 1982.

Keating, J. "Early chiropractic education in Oregon." Journal of the Canadian Chiropractic Association  46:1 (2002), 39-60.

Ritter, J. C. "The Roots of Western States Chiropractic College, 1904-1932." Chiropractic History 11: 2 (Dec. 1991), 19-23.