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Bowdoin Medical School, Medical Department of Bowdoin College Brunswick & Portland: 1820 1821 1921 1820 Medical School of Maine, 1915 Bowdoin Medical School [2] [5] Maine Druidic University of Maine Lewiston: 1880 1887 1887 charter revoked by State Legislature [2] Maine Eclectic Medical College of Maine Lewiston 1880 1887
The Catholic University of Ireland's School of Medicine was set up in Dublin under British rule in 1855. The university's qualifications were not recognised by the state, but the medical students were able to take the licentiate examinations of the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland, which still runs the last surviving non-university medical school in the British Isles.
Ludmerer, Kenneth M. Time to Heal: American Medical Education from the Turn of the Century to the Era of Managed Care. (1999) online edition; Maulitz, Russell C., and Diana E. Long, eds. Grand Rounds: One Hundred Years of Internal Medicine (1988) Rothstein, William G. American Medical Schools and the Practice of Medicine (1987) Starr, Paul.
The First Viennese School of Medicine, 1750–1800, was led by the Dutchman Gerard van Swieten (1700–1772), who aimed to put medicine on new scientific foundations—promoting unprejudiced clinical observation, botanical and chemical research, and introducing simple but powerful remedies.
University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine in Philadelphia, founded in 1765 as the College of Philadelphia Department of Medicine, was the first medical school in the United States. There were no schools of law in the early British colonies, thus no schools of law were in America during the colonial times.
The medical school was founded in 1834 by Edward Cutbush, a physician and naval surgeon who also served as the first dean for the college and professor of chemistry. [2] He was an officer in the U.S. Navy for thirty years (from 1799 to 1829) and has been called the father of American naval medicine.
The school was founded in 1834 as the Medical College of Louisiana and is the fifteenth oldest medical school in the United States and the second oldest in the deep south. The first classes were held in 1835 at a variety of locations, including Charity Hospital and the Strangers Unitarian Church .
Washington Medical College was a medical school in Baltimore, Maryland.It was founded in 1827, incorporated in March 1833 as The Washington Medical College of Baltimore, [1] renamed to Washington University of Baltimore in 1839, [2] closed in 1851, [3] revived in 1867 as Washington University of Baltimore, [4] and disbanded in 1878. [5]