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Dr. Laurence R. Schweitzer

SHARON — Dr. Laurence R. Schweitzer died unexpectedly on Sept. 1, 2016, at St. Francis Hospital in Hartford. 

Larry was born on May 15, 1937, in Brooklyn, N.Y., to Lillian (Reback) and Martin Schweitzer. He spent most of his childhood in Passaic, N.J., and graduated from Rutgers University. 

He attended the University of Chicago Medical School, graduating in 1963, and performed his medical internship with the United States Public Health Service in Seattle, Wash. He returned to the East Coast in 1964 and served a residency in psychiatry at Kings County Hospital in New York.

Larry was an assistant professor of psychiatry at Downstate Medical Center in New York before taking a position as associate professor of psychiatry at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, Texas, in 1977. 

In 1988 he returned to the East Coast, a place he dearly loved, and served as director of the Department of Psychiatry at St. Francis Hospital in Hartford and professor of psychiatry at the University of Connecticut. He also served as clinical professor of psychiatry at UTMB in Galveston, Texas, before becoming director of the Department of Psychiatry at the Newington, Conn., Veterans Administration Hospital. While working at the VA, Dr. Schweitzer took a keen interest in our country’s veterans and is credited with helping many veterans of World War II, the Korean Conflict and the Viet Nam War obtain disability benefits. He worked tirelessly to help them lead more productive lives. 

In 1999 he became director of the Senior Behavioral Health Unit at Sharon Hospital, serving in that capacity until 2008. He had an active private practice in Sharon until his untimely death.

Larry is survived by his former wife, Ginger, and their son, Ben, as well as by Meg Davis, Ben’s partner; four daughters, Sarah and her husband, Jeremy, Keren and her husband, Jason, Abby and her husband, Ezra, and Dina; eight grandchildren, Will, Lilah, Jonah, Asher, Leigh, Greta, Caleb and Mimi; two sisters; and several nephews and nieces.

At Larry’s request, no formal memorial service was held. The family asks that any memorial contributions be made to the library of the University of Chicago Medical School, a place dear to his heart. 

Arrangements are under the care of the Kenny Funeral Home in Sharon. 

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