1960s
- August 1965: Civil disturbance erupts in the Watts community of Los Angeles, California, an event later known as the “Watts Rebellion” or “Watts Revolt.” Before the 1960s were over, a total of 265 American cities would experience similar racial upheaval. In the wake of the violence in Los Angeles, the McCone Commission cited poor health status and diminished access to healthcare as major factors contributing to the upheaval.
- August 1966: The Charles R. Drew Postgraduate Medical School is incorporated in the State of California as a private, non-profit, educational institution.
- April 1968: Groundbreaking ceremonies are held at the old Palm Lane housing site (120th and Wilmington Avenue, L.A.) for the Los Angeles County Southeast General Hospital. It would be renamed Martin Luther King Jr. General Hospital.
- October 1968: Mitchell Spellman, MD, PhD, begins his tenure as the founding Executive Dean of the Charles R. Drew Postgraduate Medical School.
- November 1969: First department chairman is appointed. M. Alfred Haynes, MD, MPH, becomes Charles R. Drew Postgraduate Medical School’s Chief of Community & Preventive Medicine.
1970’s
- January 1970: Formal opening of the offices of the Charles R. Drew Postgraduate Medical School and the Watts-Willowbrook Regional Medical Program (RMP) at 120th St. and Compton Avenue. Mrs. Lenore Drew, widow of the late physician, participates in the ribbon-cutting ceremonies.
- July 1971:The first contract between Los Angeles County and the Charles R. Drew Postgraduate Medical School was agreed to for the provision of health care and education services at King Hospital.
- February 1972: Dedication ceremonies are held for King Hospital.
- June 1972: Charles R. Drew Postgraduate Medical School hosts its first Open House.
- June 1973: The MEDEX Physician Assistant Program of the Charles R. Drew Postgraduate Medical School, the first such training program in California, graduates its first class of 21 students. The Honorable Willie Brown, Assemblyman from San Francisco and co-author of the Song-Brown Act, is keynote speaker.
- October 1973: Passage of California State Senate Bill 1026, the “Dymally Bill,” releases $1.2 million for Charles R. Drew Postgraduate Medical School programs through an affiliation with the University of California. The bill is signed into law by then-Governor Ronald Reagan.
- June 1974: Dedication of the Dr. Julius W. Hill Intern and Resident Physician Building, named after the founder of the Golden State Medical Association and former member of the Charles R. Drew Postgraduate Medical School Board of Directors
- June 1974: The Johnnie Tillmon Child Care Center opens as a family day care center.
- May 1977: Publication of the Heller Committee Report by the UC Board of Regents, which described a proposed preclinical/clinical undergraduate medical education program between UCLA Medical School and Charles R. Drew Postgraduate Medical School.
- December 1977
- Dr. Mitchell Spellman ends his tenure as founding Dean; leaves to become Dean, Medical Services, at Harvard University Medical School.
- David Satcher, MD, PhD, MPH, Chairman of Drew’s Department of Family Medicine, is appointed Acting Dean by the Drew Board of Directors.
- Over 100 community leaders and residents attend the initial Drew Community Leadership Luncheon. From this gathering is formed the Community Advisory Council to the Dean.
- At a special referendum, Drew Faculty votes in favor of Proposal “C” to establish Undergraduate Medical Education Program in conjunction with the University of California (UC).
- May 1978: The UC Board of Regents votes to approve a Memorandum of Understanding that establishes the Drew/UCLA Undergraduate Medical Education Program for the MD degree.
- August 1979: M. Alfred Haynes, MD, MPH, is formally inaugurated as the Dean of Charles R. Drew Postgraduate Medical School in traditional cap and gown faculty exercises. NAACP National President W. Montague Cobb, MD, PhD, Professor Emeritus of Anatomy at Howard University, is the keynote speaker.
1980’s
- September 1980: Dedication ceremonies are held for the Dr. Leroy R. Weekes, Jr. Medical Support Building. The building was named in honor of Charles R. Drew Postgraduate Medical School’s second Chairman of the Board.
- May 1980: The Charles R. Drew Postgraduate Medical School Foundation is incorporated. Dr. Henry Williams, Drew’s first Chairman of the Board of Directors, is named President of the Foundation’s Board of Trustees.
- May 1981: The $20-million Augustus F. Hawkins Mental Health Building, named after political leader of Watts who became California’s first African-American elected to the United States Congress, is dedicated.
- September 1981: The charter class for the Drew/UCLA Undergraduate Medical Education Program. Twenty-one students, chosen from 550 applicants, enroll for preclinical studies at UCLA School of Medicine.
- October 1982: Groundbreaking ceremonies are held for the first permanent building on the school’s projected 49 acres:the Medical Education Center
- September 1983: Harry E. Douglas III, DPA, is named permanent Dean for Allied Health Sciences.
- February 1984: The Clinical Sciences Research Facility is established in the Augustus F. Hawkins Building.
- November 1984: The first permanent building on the Charles R. Drew Postgraduate Medical School campus, the W. Montague Cobb Medical Education Building, is dedicated.
- June 1985: King/Drew Medical Magnet High School graduates its first class of 37 students.
- June 1985: Fifteen members of the charter class of the Drew/UCLA Medical Education Program receive MD degrees in the first graduation ceremony.
- April 1987: Under the leadership of Walter F. Leavell, MD, President, the school’s name is changed to Charles Drew University of Medicine and Science to reflect its expanded academic role and identity, and the accreditation process is initiated.
- October 1987: W. Benton Boone, MD, MS, is elected Chairman of the Board of Directors. He assumes office in January 1988.
- September 1988: Allied Health Sciences faculty, staff and students moved into the newly completed W. M. Keck Building.
1990’s
- September 1991: Reed V. Tuckson, MD, is appointed President.
- June 1994: Harry E. Douglas III, DPA, is appointed Vice President for Academic Affairs.
- January 1995: “Agenda 2000 – Building A Healthy African American Community For Future Generations Through Self-Empowerment,” the first annual conference sponsored by the Community Advisory Council To The President, is held at the Airport Doubletree Hotel.
- January 1995: The University receives an accreditation site visit from the Western Association of Schools and Colleges (WASC).
- June 1995
- Harry E. Douglas III, DPA, is appointed Executive Vice President.
- M. Roy Wilson, MD, MS, is appointed Dean, College of Medicine.
- Charles Drew University of Medicine and Science is accredited by the Accrediting Commission for Senior College and Universities of the Western Association of Schools and Colleges.
- July 1998: Charles K. Francis, MD, is appointed President.
2000’s
- May 2002: Marcelle Willock, MD, MBA, is appointed Dean, College of Medicine. She is the first female Dean for the college.
- October 2003: Carole Jordan-Harris, MD, MS, is the first woman elected chair of the Board of Trustees.
- January 2004: Harry E. Douglas, III, DPA, is appointed Interim President.
- July 2005: Thomas T. Yoshikawa, MD, is appointed Provost, Chief Operating Officer and Acting President.
- May 2006: Susan Kelly, PhD, FAPS, is appointed President.
- July 2005: Thomas T. Yoshikawa, MD, is appointed Provost, Chief Operating Officer and Acting President.
- May 2006: Susan Kelly, PhD, FAPS, is appointed President.
- July 2007: Richard S. Baker is named Dean, College of Medicine. Gail Orum is named Dean, College of Science and Health.
- June 2009: Keith C. Norris, MD, FACP, is appointed Interim President.
- June 2009: Initial approval for the Master of Science in Nursing (MSN) program is granted by the California Board of Registered Nursing (BRN).
2010’s
- January 2010: Gloria J. McNeal, PhD, MSN, ACNS-BC, FAAN, is appointed Founding Dean of the Mervyn M. Dymally School of Nursing
- August 2010: The first cohort of students matriculates into the Mervyn M. Dymally School of Nursing.
- August 2010: The $43-million Life Sciences Research and Nursing Education (LSRNE) Building is officially opened to house the Mervyn M. Dymally School of Nursing.
- September 2010: M. Roy Wilson, MD, MS, is named Acting President, CEO and Chairman, Board of Trustees. In addition, Los Angeles County Supervisor Mark Ridley-Thomas, PhD, is named chairman of the Board of Councilors, an entity that advises the Trustees.
- November 2010: Richard S. Baker, MD, is named Provost.
- July 2011: David M. Carlisle, MD, PhD, is named President and CEO. In addition, the Western Association of Schools and Colleges fully accredits the University through 2018.
- December 2011: James Lott is named Chairman, Board of Trustees.
- January 2012: Degree-granting ceremony is held for the inaugural Family Nurse Practitioner Program from the new Mervyn M. Dymally School of Nursing.
- November 2012: The Mervyn M. Dymally School of Nursing is granted accreditation for the Master’s program from the Commission of Collegiate Nursing Education (CCNE), extending to December 31, 2017.
- December 2012: Marvin O’Quinn, MPH, is named Chairman, Board of Trustees.
- June 2012: First official graduation ceremony of the Mervyn M. Dymally School of Nursing with 91 candidates (69 Family Nurse Practitioner and 22 Entry Level Masters students.
- February 2014: Official bust unveiling is held for Mervyn M. Dymally, PhD.
- January 2015: Sheldon D. Fields, PhD, RN, FNP-BC, AACRN, FNAP, FAANP, is appointed Dean of the Mervyn M. Dymally School of Nursing. Additional executive and academic appointments through 2016 round out CDU leadership.
- Steve O. Michael, PhD, is appointed Executive Vice President of Academic Affairs and Provost
- Margaret Avila, PhD, PHN, APRN, is named Dean of the Mervyn M. Dymally School of Nursing
- Hector Balcazar, PhD, MS, is appointed Dean of the College of Science and Health
- Deborah Prothrow-Stith, MD, is named Dean and Professor of Medicine for the College of Medicine
- Ms. Sylvia Drew Ivie, JD, and daughter of Dr. Charles R. Drew, is appointed Special Assistant to the President
- Jinny Oh, EdD, is appointed Dean of Student Affairs
- 2016: A Brookings Institute college evaluation system ranks CDU third nationally for providing the greatest value-added boost to alumni in occupational earnings power.
- 2016: CDU celebrates its 50th anniversary with a series of on- and off-campus events.
- 2016: After an eight-year hiatus, Jazz at Drew, a longtime favorite LA music festival and fundraiser, returns as part of CDU’s 50th anniversary.
- 2017: Graduate medical education returns to CDU, as the LA County Board of Supervisors approves funding for residencies in Psychiatry and Family Medicine.
- 2017: A Chronicle of Higher Education study judges CDU to be the second most diverse four-year private nonprofit college in the nation.
- 2017: All CDU programs are fully accredited without any restrictions—for the first time in the University’s history— and our accrediting body has invited CDU leadership to join and lead other accreditation teams.
- 2017: Senator Steven Bradford authored SR-43, recognizing CDU as an HBCU in the state of California.
- 2018: CDU signed a Memorandum of Understanding with Southwest College, Compton College, the East San Gabriel Valley Regional Occupational Program and Technical Center and the YouthBuild Charter School as part of continued efforts to establish direct pipelines for highachieving students in the L.A. area to receive instant, early, or preferred admission to the University.
- 2018: Two new undergraduate programs were launched in the College of Science and Health: the Bachelor of Science in Radiologic Science and the Bachelor of Science in Urban Community
Health Sciences. - 2018: The RN to BSN program graduates its first class of students.
- 2018: The new Bachelor of Science in Nutrition Science and Food Systems Program matriculated its inaugural class.
2019
- CDU signs a Memorandum of Understanding with West Angeles Church of God in Christ (C.O.G.I.C.), Ross University School of Medicine (RUSM), AltaMed, and Green Dot Public Schools California, as part of continued growth efforts. The signings with West Angeles C.O.G.I.C. and RUSM mark CDU’s first official agreements with a religious organization and international higher education institution, respectively.
- CDU’s Department of Research receives full accreditation from the Association for Assessment and Accreditation of Laboratory Animal Care (AAALAC).
- CDU formalizes an agreement with AIDS Project Los Angeles (APLA) Health to jointly open and operate a Federally Qualified Health Center (FQHC) clinic on the CDU campus.
- For the first time in the University’s history, the Mervyn M. Dymally School of Nursing charts on the US News & World Report’s “Best Nursing Schools: Master’s” list, ranking at #189.
- CDU receivs an $800,000 grant from the California Endowment in December 2019, that will help the University continue to plan for a new medical degree program and a new medical education building.
- CDU and APLA Health APLA announce plans for a new building to house a CDU Wellness Center and an APLA clinic during a symbolic “indoor groundbreaking” ceremony on Wednesday, December 4, 2019.
2020
- CDU takes a leadership role as the community is shaken by the COVID-19 pandemic.
- Along with the County of Los Angeles, CDU hosts and operates one of the highest volume COVID-19 testing sites in Los Angeles County.
- CDU publishes an oft-cited report on the University’s testing site experience, which becomes a blueprint for running an effective testing site in an under-resourced community.
- The California State Legislature includes a one-time $7.5 million allocation in the 2019 state budget for Charles R. Drew University of Medicine and Science.
- The new Student Center at CDU opens at 1656 E. 118th Street in January 2020
- Charles R. Drew University of Medicine and Science is a recipient of a Josiah Macy Jr. Foundation Award in the category of “Institutional Excellence.”
- The Saturday Science Academy-II at Charles R. Drew University of Medicine and Science (SSA-II) “graduated” the most students in its history when 124 K-12 students receive their white coats at the 20th annual “Junior White Coat Ceremony” at King-Drew Medical Magnet High School.
- The Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME), the organization responsible for accrediting all U.S. graduate medical training programs, grants initial accreditation to the College of Medicine’s (COM) upcoming residency program in Internal Medicine.
- CDU enrolls its first students into the new BS in Psychology with Emphasis in Community Counseling program for the Fall 2020 semester.
- Enrollment at CDU reaches an all-time high of 1,028.
- The University receives a $7.7-million award from Bloomberg Philanthropies on September 3, 2020, the largest private gift ever presented to CDU.
2021
- Internal Medicine Residency Program launches first cohort of eight residents following accreditation.
- The Mervyn M. Dymally School of Nursing’s (MMDSON) Family Nurse Practitioner (FNP) and Psychiatric Mental Health Nurse Practitioner (PMHNP) programs receives approval from the California Board of Registered Nursing (BRN).
- CDU, in partnership with Thomas Safran & Associates and Century Housing Corporation, is selected to develop the 12.8-acre former Lincoln Elementary School site across from the CDU campus on 118th street.
- CDU receives a $1.6 million gift from Bloomberg Philanthropies’ Greenwood Initiative to enhance the University’s efforts to provide COVID-19 vaccinations to under-resourced communities in and around Los Angeles.
- California state legislators approve $50 million in the state’s annual budget to be allocated to the construction of CDU’s health professions education building, which will house the forthcoming four-year medical degree program.
- The Mervyn M. Dymally School of Nursing (MMDSON) launches the new Doctor of Nursing Practice (DNP) degree program in Fall 2021.
- CDU launches the Black Maternal Health Center of Excellence (BMHCE), which aims to address the persistent birthing disparities that disproportionately impact Black birthing women in Los Angeles County.
2022
- Philanthropist MacKenzie Scott makes a $20 million donation to CDU, a one-time gift that represents the largest private donation in the history of the University.
- CDU President and CEO Dr. David Carlisle is recognized as one of the Ten Most Dominant HBCU Leaders of 2022 by the HBCU Campaign Fund (HCF).
- CDU’s Master of Science in Biomedical Sciences program is named the best in the country by Best Value Schools.
- Dr. Gail Washington is named Dean of the Mervyn M. Dymally School of Nursing
- Dr. Monica Ferrini is named Dean of the College of Science and Health
- CDU is ranked a top California institution offering a high return on investment for low-income students.
- The APLA Health Center opens on the west end of campus, bringing a range of free and lowcost health services to CDU students, faculty, staff, and the surrounding community.
- CDU, Compton College, and Compton Unified School District (CUSD) sign a Memorandum of Understanding between the entities to formalize a partnership that creates a special three-year bachelor degree program that allows for CUSD students who are interested in a career in health sciences to begin working toward their degree beginning their junior year in high school.
- CDU receives preliminary accreditation to open an independent MD medical degree program, making it the first such Historically Black program to launch in the US in more than four decades and the only such program west of the Mississippi River.