Leonard Wood Memorial
American Leprosy Foundation
Who We Are

The Leonard Wood memorial (LWM) grew
out of the visionary humanitarian concern
of Major General Leonard Wood. On
becoming the United States governor-
general of the Philippines in 1921, Wood
visited the leprosarium on Culion Island,
which had seven thousand segregated
leprosy patients. Overwhelmed by heir
plight, he vowed to work for their
improvement.

Wood, a physician, sought the counsel of H.
W. Wade, professor of pathology at the
University of the Philippines in Manila,
because Wade was conducting research
on leprosy. Persuaded that the path to a
better understanding and treatment of
leprosy was through scientific research,
Wade made relevant proposals. Wood was
sympathetic with Wade’s convictions but
unable to obtain government funds to
support research.

While Wade and his wife were
disappointed, they were not discouraged. In
1925, the indomitable Mrs. Wade went to
the United States and ‘knocked the doors of
many important people.” Her persistence
was eventually instrumental in forming the
American Committee for the Eradication of
leprosy with the support of such prominent
statesmen, financiers, and industrialists as
Charles Evans Hughes, William Howard
Taft, W. Cameron Forbes, and Eversley
Childs. By 1928, endowment goals were
achieved and The Leonard Wood Memorial
for the Eradication of Leprosy was
incorporated. A modern leprosy research
laboratory was set up on Cebu Island and
this became the focal point of LWM, while
work continued at Culion.
LWM President Christopher
Doyle holds a young leprosy
patient at the Eversley Childs
Sanitarium in Cebu. Since 1928
LWM has been serving the
people of the Philippines and
around the world with good
clinical care and cutting edge
research on leprosy and TB.
About Us >
The LWM has coordinated
significant leprosy research and
training on a worldwide basis. The
International Leprosy Association
(ILA) was established at an
LWM-sponsored scientific meeting
in 1931. LWM assumed
responsibility for the ILA-sponsored
International Journal of Leprosy until
the 1970s, when this job was
assumed by American Leprosy
Missions. In 1950, the LWM
established the Leprosy Registry at
the Armed Forces Institute of
Pathology ( Washington D.C.) which
now contains the largest extant
documented collection of clinical
specimens on leprosy.
LWM-supported activities in the
broad field of leprosy research
include epidemiology,
chemotherapy, diagnosis,
microbiology, and immunology.
Our Mission

The purpose and mission of
the LWM is to work towards
the eradication of leprosy in
the Philippine Islands and
throughout the world through
supporting, maintaining and
conducting relevant
research and clinical work
and cooperating with
like-minded organizations in
the pursuit of the final cure
for leprosy, TB and related
diseases, To The Glory of
God.
Click here to view the 2006 LWM 990


LWM Short Year 2006 Audited Financial
Statements

A World Without Leprosy and TB
In 1929, President
Herbert Hoover
endorsed the work of
the LWM. Click on this
link to read what he said:
Herbert Hoover
Endorses LWM