Investiture

History of Thomas Jefferson University

University Mace

Past Presidents

In 1824, Dr. George McClellan promoted an audacious idea never tried before - teaching medical students by having them observe experienced doctors treating patients. McClellan’s revolutionary idea, and his willingness to act on it, created Jefferson Medical College, launched Thomas Jefferson University Hospital and eventually helped create Thomas Jefferson University, reshaping the way medicine is taught throughout the world.

A private, nonsectarian university located in Center City Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Thomas Jefferson University grew out of Dr. McClellan’s (1796-1847) conviction that the time was right, and the need sufficiently urgent, to establish a second medical school in Philadelphia that would supplement the only medical school in the city at the time, the University of Pennsylvania.

Enlisting the aid of his undergraduate alma mater, Jefferson College in Canonsburg, Pennsylvania, to sponsor his idea, the 27-year-old surgeon became founder and a member of the first faculty of the newly established Jefferson Medical College.

In 1825, its initial year of operation, Jefferson Medical College opened a small inpatient infirmary in its first home, the converted Tivoli Theater. At a time when few hospitals existed and surgeons performed operations in their patients’ homes, this humble beginning was the first time American medical students had the opportunity to follow patients from surgery and observe their postoperative recovery. The vision of Jefferson’s founder set in motion a flow of innovation that continues today.

In 1838, the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania granted Jefferson Medical College its own charter and its association with Jefferson College in Canonsburg was terminated. In 1877, a teaching hospital in a separate building was established, the second of its kind in the U.S.

By the mid-nineteenth century, Jefferson’s Dr. Samuel Gross was widely acclaimed as the greatest American surgeon of his time. The Gross Clinic by Thomas Eakins, which depicts Dr. Gross performing surgery before an audience of medical students is regarded as one of the foremost paintings by an American artist and is permanently displayed in the Eakins Gallery in Jefferson Alumni Hall.

A School of Nursing (diploma program) was established in 1891. The Jefferson College of Health Professions, established in 1967, provides graduate and undergraduate degree programs in nursing, occupational therapy, physical therapy, bioscience technologies, radiologic sciences, and general studies. In 1949, Jefferson organized a graduate program in basic medical sciences. This grew into the Jefferson College of Graduate Studies, accredited in 1969, the same year that the institution achieved university status and was renamed Thomas Jefferson University. Along with Jefferson Medical College, these Colleges form the three academic divisions of Thomas Jefferson University with a total annual enrollmentof more than 2,600 students. Since 1970, Jefferson Medical College has also been the medical school for the state of Delaware. Beginning with its first commencement in 1826, Jefferson has awarded more than 30,000 degrees.

Although Jefferson’s structure was altered dramatically, its principal mission to provide the finest healthcare education never changed. Excellence is still being pursued with its prime objective to produce competent practitioners and healthcare professionals. The personal contact between students and faculty, an integral part of all teaching in the University, is especially important during clinical rotations. Jefferson students and residents as measured by national licensure examinations, residency and employment positions secured, and subsequent academic appointments, are consistently high achievers.

As a major academic health center, Thomas Jefferson University and Thomas Jefferson University Hospital occupy a 13-acre Center City campus and treat more than 39,000 inpatients and 445,000 outpatients every year.

Alumni and faculty of Jefferson have made significant contributions to medicine. The university’s accomplishments include the development of the first modern military field ambulance system during the Civil War, the earliest production of pure ether and the establishment of drug purity standards, the discovery of the cause of yellow fever, development of the heart-lung machine, development of the first preventive medicine health risk appraisal system, development of the artificial tendon, development of the first nurse-anesthetist training program, development of innovative approaches to assist the frail elderly and caregivers of patients with Alzheimers disease and dementia, and the discovery of the gene for childhood leukemia.

In the 1960s, Jefferson made a significant commitment to research with the construction of Jefferson Alumni Hall. That commitment was reinforced in 1991, with the opening of the Bluemle Life Sciences Building, which doubled the institution’s research space. Public and private funding of Jefferson research exceeds $133 million annually.

Widely recognized for their innovative research, University scientists are members in the scientific community’s most prestigious organizations including the National Academy of Sciences and the Institute of Medicine. Many of them chair organizations that set standards for medical care. Jefferson researchers’ work appears regularly in such journals as Nature, Cell, Science, and New England Journal of Medicine.

Past Presidents