Establishing a School
In 1824,
McClellan and others petitioned Jefferson College at Canonsburg
to add a medical school. While technically part of Jefferson College,
Jefferson Medical College was located in Philadelphia with administrative
and financial responsibility in the hands of the faculty.
Although
challenged by the University of Pennsylvania, in 1826 the Pennsylvania
Legislature passed a bill that ratified the actions of Jefferson
College. This allowed the College to grant medical degrees to its
students.
For Jefferson’s
first graduating class, twenty individuals received the MD degree
in a ceremony held on 14 April 1826 at the Tivoli Building on Prune
Street.
Nathan L.
Hatfield, the recipient of the diploma pictured here, became a prominent
physician in Philadelphia. He served on the staff of the Philadelphia
Hospital, as president of the Board of health in 1845 and also as
president of the County Medical Society in 1865. Dr. Hatfield died
on 29 August 1887.
By 1838, Jefferson
Medical College gained its own independent charter and severed its
ties with Jefferson College.