The Neuro was founded in 1934 by neurosurgeon
Wilder Penfield, who developed the Montreal treatment of epilepsy there. The Neuro originated from the sub-department of Neurosurgery at the
Royal Victoria Hospital (RVH) and was originally located at what is now called the RVH Legacy Site. In 1933, construction began on a new building on University Street that would house The Neuro. On September 27, 1934 Sir Edward Beatty, chancellor of
McGill University, declared the institute formally opened.
The Rockefeller Foundation provided funds to build and equip the laboratories of the institute and created an endowment fund of $1.2M in support of the scientific work of the Department of Neurology and Neurosurgery. The clinical, or hospital, part of the institute was built through donations from private individuals. The Province of Quebec and the City of Montreal agreed to be responsible for the hospital’s yearly operation. At the end of Penfield’s foundation address, he expressed the hope that the institute would act as a catalyst for Canadian neurology: “We dare to hope that this is the inauguration of an institute of medicine that is characteristically Canadian, the birth of a Canadian School of Neurology.” == Phased Plan to Move The Neuro ==