Following a brief illness, Perry Gardner Rigby, MD, who led LSU Medical Centers New Orleans and Shreveport campuses as Chancellor from 1985-94, passed away peacefully at his home on Thursday, May 10, 2018, at the age of 85.
During his tenure as Chancellor, the Shreveport campus was under the administration of LSU Medical Center, now LSU Health Sciences Center New Orleans.
He was also Chairman of the State of Louisiana’s Medical Education Commission and was considered to be a national expert in medical education, graduate medical education, physician demand and supply, and academic health centers, during the turbulence of health care reform and beyond.
During his tenure at LSU Health, Dr. Rigby filled a number of other leadership roles. In New Orleans, he was an associate director, as well as a director of the Hematology/Oncology Fellowship Program. In Shreveport, he was an associate dean, acting dean and then Dean of the School of Medicine, as well as Chairman of the Clinical Board. During his time in Shreveport, he also chaired the Dean's Committee for the VA Hospital.
But perhaps the legacy closest to his heart will be the students, residents and fellows whom he taught and mentored as they carry on in his footsteps and some, in turn, will help shape future generations of highly qualified and caring physicians.
“He loved to teach,” said Dr. Donna Ryan, professor emerita of medicine at LSU's Pennington Biomedical Research Center in Baton Rouge, and former Acting Chancellor and Vice Chancellor at LSU Health New Orleans. “Nothing made him happier than going around with medical students and residents to see the patients and talk to them and teach the residents how to work up the patients who had blood disorders.”
A native of East Liverpool, Ohio, Dr. Rigby served as Dean of University of Nebraska’s School of Medicine before being recruited to LSU School of Medicine in Shreveport.
He received his undergraduate degree, Summa Cum Laude, at Mount Union College in 1953 and MD at Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine in 1957. He completed his Internal Medicine Residency at the University of Virginia and Fellowship in Hematology at Boston University. He was selected as a Markle Foundation Scholar in Academic Medicine (1966) leading to, among other things, consulting for the World Health Organization in Kabul, Afghanistan.
Dr. Rigby was also a veteran of the armed forces, first serving in the US Army Reserve and then on active duty as a US Army Captain and Chief of the Department of Hematology at the William Beaumont General Hospital in El Paso, Texas.
An avid tennis player, Perry Rigby was also civically active.
“Dr. Rigby was a highly respected teacher, scientist and clinician who served LSU in a variety of important leadership positions over the years,” said Joseph Moerschbaecher, PhD, Vice Chancellor for Academic Affairs and Dean of the School of Graduate Studies at LSU Health New Orleans. He leaves a proud legacy as a dedicated academician.”
He is survived by his wife, Barbara Commander Rigby; three sons, Peter and Matthew Rigby, both of Richmond, Va., and Thomas Rigby of Alexandria, Va.; a daughter, Martha Rigby Nelson of Middletown, Iowa; and 10 grandchildren.
A funeral will be held at 3 p.m. Monday, May 14, 2018, at St. Charles Avenue Presbyterian Church, at St. Charles Avenue and State Street. Visitation will begin at 1:30 p.m. A celebration of his life will be held after the service at the Andrew Jackson Condominiums, 1550 Second Street.