In Memory: Dr. Lewis J. Runnels, Professor Emeritus

Dr. Lewis Runnels pictured

The Purdue Veterinary Medicine family received sad news this week regarding Dr. Lewis J. Runnels, professor emeritus of comparative pathobiology, who passed away Sunday, November 8 at Westminster Village Health Care in West Lafayette, Ind.  He was 95. 

Dr. Runnels was a highly respected and influential swine specialist who served many years on the faculty of the College of Veterinary Medicine.  After earning his DVM degree at Kansas State University in 1946 at the age of 20, Dr. Runnels joined a private practice in Garrett, Ind.  He worked there for six years, and then opened a general veterinary practice with a fellow classmate as a partner in Danville, Ind., but soon after, in 1953, Dr. Runnels was called up to serve in the U.S. Army Veterinary Corps as a captain and the partnership was dissolved.  Following two years of military service, Dr. Runnels relocated to Darlington, Ind., where he joined a predominantly farm animal practice, and he and his wife, Nancy, raised their two sons, Bruce and Paul. 

In 1969, they moved again, this time arriving in West Lafayette where Dr. Runnels joined the faculty of the College of Veterinary Medicine as a visiting professor in what was then the Department of Large Animal Clinics.  He was promoted to associate professor of large animal medicine and surgery in 1970 and professor in 1975. In those roles, he influenced a cadre of veterinarians who have been leaders among swine veterinarians. His expertise in swine herd health was widely recognized as he was a frequent speaker at professional and producer meetings in the United States and Asia. 

A life member of the American Association of Swine Veterinarians (AASV), Dr. Runnels received the organization’s Howard Dunne Memorial Award in 1984. The annual award is for an AASV member who has made a significant contribution and rendered outstanding service to the AASV and the swine industry.  In accepting the award, Dr. Runnels said, “I must give great credit to this organization, of which I’m a charter member, and for the fact that it has grown and developed and provides so much information and help to this profession, and keeps the veterinary profession as a part of the swine industry.”

Dr. Runnels passionately advocated for the essential role of veterinary medicine in the health and success of the swine industry as he shared his vast expertise in swine herd health.  He was awarded the Producer Service Award by the Indiana Swine Specific Pathogen Free Association in 1975 and 1987.  In 1984, he joined the faculty of Purdue’s Animal Disease Diagnostic Laboratory as professor of diagnostic medicine and consulted statewide on diagnostic problems in farm animals.  Dr. Runnels remained on the College of Veterinary Medicine faculty until his retirement in 1990.

Actively involved in organized veterinary medicine, Dr. Runnels’ memberships included the American Veterinary Medical Association, the American Association of Veterinary Laboratory Diagnosticians, the Indiana Veterinary Medical Association, the Indiana Academy of Veterinary Medicine, and the Indiana State Board of Veterinary Medical Examiners, for which he served a term as chairman in the 1960’s.  In 1992, he was recognized for his career of service to the veterinary profession and the swine industry with the establishment of the Lew Runnels Lecture, given annually as part of the Purdue Veterinary Conference each September.

Dr. Runnels also gave generously to support the college.  Together with his son, Paul, a 1978 Purdue DVM graduate, Dr. Runnels established the Runnels Family Scholarship Endowment in 2016 to support annual scholarships for Purdue DVM students who are third- and/or fourth-year students studying food animals.  He is also honored with an Endowment for Swine Production Medicine that bears his name, the income from which is used to provide funding for preliminary investigation of applied research projects in swine production medicine to enable faculty and graduate students to explore ideas or initiate investigations of current research issues before preparing formal research proposals.

In the local community, Dr. Runnels was a member of the Rotary Club of Lafayette and the Federated Church of West Lafayette where he served on the Board of Trustees and the Endowment Board. Outside of work and professional activities, Dr. Runnels was an avid canoeist whose favorite places to practice that art with friends and family were Sugar Creek in Indiana and the Boundary Waters in Minnesota.

In 2012, Dr. Runnels received a letter of appreciation from one of Paul’s childhood friends, who they knew during their years in Darlington.  Not surprisingly, Dr. Runnels took time to write a personal reply in which he acknowledged that he and Nancy loved their time in Darlington and had intended to spend the rest of their lives there.  He went on to explain that when he received the College of Veterinary Medicine’s offer to join the faculty, it was a difficult decision to leave, but he and Nancy agreed to do so and start a new chapter in their lives.  Looking back, Dr. Runnels wrote, “Eventually things began to come together and we found satisfaction in the move. One of the most satisfying [aspects] now is [when] former students, who have succeeded, see me and they thank me for teaching them and guiding them.”

Dr. Runnels is interred with his beloved wife, Nancy, at the Tippecanoe Memory Gardens.  In lieu of flowers, memorials may be made to the Runnels Family Scholarship Endowment, or to the Federated Church of West Lafayette Foundation, 2400 Sycamore Lane, West Lafayette, IN, 47906. 

Click here to view a formal obituary and to leave a message or share a memory.

Writer(s): Kevin Doerr | pvmnews@purdue.edu

Recent Stories

“Paws Up” – brought to you by the PVM Wellness Committee

This week, we are proud to recognize Lorraine Fox, who is a business assistant with the Veterinary Medicine Procurement Center.

PVM Interview Days Move College Closer to Admitting the DVM Class of 2030

After a total of three afternoons dedicated to conducting in-person interviews with 226 prospective veterinary students, the Purdue University College of Veterinary Medicine is close to completing the process of admitting 84 members of the incoming first-year DVM class – the Class of 2030.  The students invited for the interview days were selected from a total pool of 1,930 applicants from across the country as well as countries abroad.

Experts to Gather at Purdue for Conference Addressing the Public Health Threat of Antimicrobial Resistance

The ongoing challenges posed by multi-drug resistant infections will be the focus of a multidisciplinary conference taking place in three weeks at Purdue University.  The Fourth Annual Conference on Antimicrobial Resistance is set for February 25–26, 2026 at Purdue’s Stewart Center in West Lafayette. Registration is still open for the event, which will bring together scientists and scholars from human and veterinary medicine, public health, research, and industry to address the determinants, dynamics and deterrence of drug resistance.

PVM’s Upcoming Coppoc One Health Lecture to Focus on Dogs as Sentinels of Environmental Exposure

The Purdue University College of Veterinary Medicine brings a leading One Health scholar to campus each year to address vital health issues from a One Health perspective as part of the Coppoc One Health Lecture series.  This year’s presentation, scheduled for February 26 in Lynn Hall Room 2026, is on the engaging topic, “One Health at Home: Dogs as Sentinels of Environmental Exposure.” The speaker will be Audrey Ruple, DVM, MS, PhD, DACVPM, MRCVS, the Dorothy A. and Richard G. Metcalf Professor of Veterinary Medical Informatics at the Virginia-Maryland College of Veterinary Medicine at Virginia Tech.

“Paws Up” – brought to you by the PVM Wellness Committee

Today we are happy to acknowledge our Student Success Center Team.

One Health: A ‘digital twin’ model for predicting cancer outcomes

The striking similarities between invasive bladder cancer in dogs and humans have fueled research advances for more than three decades. Most of that work has looked at separate aspects of the disease — risk factors, early detection, symptoms, treatment and gene expression. But a new project at Purdue University that combines many types of available data in a “digital twin” model of bladder cancer may prove powerful enough to predict patient outcomes, starting with the probability of metastasis.

Purdue Professor Emeritus Bill Blevins Wins Lifetime Achievement Award at ACVR Annual Meeting

The American College of Veterinary Radiology (ACVR) gave its esteemed Lifetime Achievement Award for 2024 to Purdue Professor Emeritus Bill Blevins, who is well known to countless Purdue Veterinary Medicine alumni for the expertise he taught them about all things Diagnostic Imaging during his long Purdue career.