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He excitedly approved the project, and at the annual meeting of the Board of Trustees held on June 21, 1881, Albany College of Pharmacy was created to constitute the Department of Pharmacy of Union University.
On June 12, 1881, Albany College of Pharmacy was founded as the nation's 14th pharmacy program.
A Board of Trustees was appointed and the school was incorporated as the Albany College of Pharmacy, conforming to the laws of the state, August 27, 1881. - from Union University: Its History, Influence, Characteristics and Equipment.
On October 3, 1881, the College held its inaugural class in the Eagle Street building that also housed Albany Medical College (see photo). The class was attended by 21 students, including one woman, Sarah Simonet.
Take this decade-by-decade tour of the history of Albany College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences beginning with the College's origins in 1881 and continuing through to the present day.
When it was chartered in 1881, ACP (as it would be known for the next 127 years) was one of only 14 colleges of pharmacy in the United States.
By the 1882-83 session, the class size had grown to 32 students and there were 10 graduates, an upward trend that continued in the ensuing years.
By the time the Class of ’46 graduated, with only six members, it was deemed to be “the smallest in the history of the College,” save the first graduating class in 1882.
In 1883, Doctor Mosher passed away and Doctor Tucker replaced him as President.
The Association of the Alumni of Albany College of Pharmacy was formed early on, in 1883, and included any faculty who were not alumni of the College.
By 1885-86, entrance requirements also had grown stricter, with knowledge of the "English branches" required and a preliminary exam, or grammar school certificate admitting the student to high school, was necessary.
By 1885, an alumni pin fashioned of 14-carat gold and enamel could be purchased by graduates for a mere $5.
Henry Baringer, Class of 1886, remembered that "half a dozen of us marched down to Zeller's for lager beer one hot spring evening and ran into Professor Michaelis sitting behind a tall one at one of the tables, which may have embarrassed us but seemingly did not fuss the professor."
ACP grew steadily throughout the 1890's.
ACP entered its second decade with an 1891 address given for the 11th Lecture Course by the President of the Faculty, Willis G. Tucker, M.D., Ph.D., who spoke about "Some Educational Problems" affecting the College.
In his 1891 presentation, Doctor Tucker went on to talk about the steady growth in both enrollment and curriculum.
The United States declared war on Spain in April 1898 following the sinking of the battleship United StatesS Maine in Havana, Cuba . Albany responded to the war with jingoistic fervor due to the fact that Albany Academy graduate Charles Dwight Sigsbee was in command of the ship at the time.
By 1899, the lab had outgrown its space and a new Pharmaceutical Lab was outfitted downtown at Maiden Lane and North Pearl Street.
The population of Albany in 1900 was a whopping 94,000 and growing larger each year, as was the number of enrollees at the College.
Theodore Bradley '95 was named Secretary of the school and, in 1902, Edwin Cunningham Hutman '91, became Director of the Pharmacy Lab.
Some alumni returned to the College to teach, including Garret V. Dillenback '84, Ph.G., who came on board when Gustavus Michaelis, Ph.G., stepped down as an active Professor of Pharmacy in 1903.
Two years after leaving ACP, Burt Orrin Kinney founded his first pharmacy in 1903.
In 1905, the first ACP Alumni Directory was published and pointed up the wide diversity in jobs held by graduates during the first 20 years of the College's existence.
In 1907, ACP experienced a temporary lag in enrollment due to the more stringent entry requirements under the new law, but no one seemed unduly worried.
The Beta Delta Chapter of Kappa Psi was installed November 11, 1910, with 38 active members, including faculty, juniors and seniors.
By 1910, ACP was firmly ensconced in its new home on Eagle Street, right across the street from its former quarters at Albany Medical College.
An alumni appeal added to the $4,000 the College had put aside for the project, which was completed in time for the 1916-17 academic year.
In the fall of 1916, the fraternity acquired new and spacious quarters located at 53 South Hawk Street.
Women began to make their mark at the College during the decade; with only seven girls in the Class of 1916, junior class officers included Betty Noonan as Vice President and Marguerite Rebecca Griffin as Secretary.
A basketball team was formed, with 16 men practicing on the courts at the YMCA. The team only lost one game - to Albany Law School - in the 1916-17 season.
The chapter grew out of the Alpha Chapter of Epsilon Phi, which had been established at ACP in 1917 but wished to nationalize.
Katherine Glavin, who worked at the College for decades, joined the staff as Registrar in 1918.
Two of the original founders of ACP were still alive to mark the big event; Willis Gaylord Tucker, who had stepped down as dean in 1918 when Dean William Mansfield arrived, and Gustavus Michaelis, who still served on the Board of Trustees.
The Beta Chapter of ACP's first sorority, Lambda Kappa Sigma, was chartered in 1919.
In 1919, when the war ended, soldiers returned to a country that had just passed the 18th Amendment, a nationwide ban of manufacture, sale or transportation of alcohol.
The decade got off to an auspicious start with the graduation of future dean Francis J. O'Brien in 1920.
Women students, who had gained the right to vote in 1920 with the passage of the Nineteenth Amendment, were busy showing off their new-found freedom and increasingly involved in the life and governance of the College.
The College celebrated its 40th anniversary in 1921 and ceremonies were held at Chancellor's Hall in the State Education Building.
The Beta chapter of Rho Pi Phi Fraternity (known as "Ropes") was founded at ACP in 1921 by a "progressive group of Jewish students." Brothers enjoyed "smokers," theater parties, sleigh rides and a pledge dance held at Temple Beth Emeth, as well as an Annual Dinner Dance at the new Hotel Hampton.
By 1922, ACP boasted three fraternities and a sorority, Lambda Kappa Sigma.
Bowling and basketball already were established at the school, but by 1922 they had been organized into "real teams" with scheduled games and players specially selected to represent the College.
The Orchestra and Glee Club was founded in 1923 and featured violins and a cello, saxophone, piano, drum and three banjos.
After a hiatus of a few years, the yearbook, formerly known as The Alembic, was revived in 1923 as The Pharmakon.
Kappa Psi moved into its own chapter house at 50 Jay St in 1924 and hosted social functions both at the house and the Albany Yacht Club, where brothers and their guests danced to the tunes of Eddie's Melody Boys in one of the oldest yacht clubs in the nation.
In spite of the controversy, or perhaps because of it, students continued to flock to the College and in September 1925, ACP once again had to limit its class size due to cramped quarters.
Members of the Class of 1926 resolved that each graduate would pay the sum of $100 to the Permanent Equipment fund to be used for the facility.
After the move to the New Scotland Avenue building in 1927, tuition had been raised from $100 for the Ph.G. and $125 for the Ph.C. to $250 and $300, respectively, a substantial jump.
With new facilities for meetings and practices, extracurricular activities continued to be added each year and by 1928 included a debating society, a drama club, a girls' chorus and a college newspaper, the Mortar and Pestle, published biweekly under the supervision of Professor Edwin Hutman.
Sports blossomed at the College as well, with "an athletic council, coaches and adequate facilities as much a part of the new institution as microscopes and test tubes." The baseball team had snappy new uniforms and a cross-country team was organized in 1928.
But just when things seemed to be taking off for the College and its graduates, fate intervened in the form of the Stock Market Crash in October 1929.
The first Beta Chapter House opened in 1929 at 185 Warren St with 13 "fraters" in residence.
By 1929, students were able to take a course in Operative Pharmacy Theory and had opportunities to learn about soda fountain maintenance, salesmanship, window displays and arrangement of stock under the guidance of the Professor of Economics.
A 1930 letter written by the ACP Alumni Association Board to Warren Bradt, President of the ACP Board of Trustees, discussed the financial affairs of the College and asked that the Board devise a way to raise funds to pay off College debt and augment the endowment.
"Despite the unemployment problem now facing the country, our 1930 grads are actively engaged in pharmaceutical pursuits," said an article in the Mortar and Pestle.
The Alpha Theta chapter of Phi Delta Chi formed at ACP on April 13, 1931, with 21 charter members.
The first Press Club Whirl, a fundraising dance held in 1931, benefited a new library at the College as well the school's other literary endeavors, Mortar and Pestle and Alembic Pharmakon .
Between 1936 and 1939, 25 public parks, skating rinks, a golf course, Bleeker Stadium, Lincoln Park Pool and several public baths were constructed, many of which were utilized by ACP students for school sports and in their leisure time. It was the golden era of movies; the Palace Theater, one of 20 movie theaters in the city, opened in 1931 with seating for 2,800.
A 1934 Mortar and Pestle survey showed 49.9 percent of students rooming and boarding in Albany and stated that 2-6 students living together could get by on $5 a week.
Works Progress Administration, created in 1935 by President Roosevelt, was responsible for a tremendous upsurge in recreational facilities in Albany.
With their own JV cheerleading squad, the team rode to and from games in style in a 1935 Ford under coach Win Dobbins.
By 1936, the group was known as Phi Delta Chi Pharmaceutical and Chemical Fraternity.
1937 also brought some sad changes for ACP, most notably the death of longtime faculty member Edwin Cunningham Hutman '91. "Prof" Hutman taught at the College for 35 years and, according to the yearbook, died "in the saddle" while proctoring an exam.
When Russell Denegar '43 began classes at ACP in 1938, he commuted from Germantown, N.Y., by train.
In May 1941, the “Playboys of ’41,” an all-male class of 24 students, graduated as the first class to complete the new four-year Bachelor of Science in Pharmacy.
Especially during the Depression, which dragged on until 1941 and the start of World War II, many students could not afford to rent in Albany and commuted in each day, sometimes from quite a distance.
Luckily, due to the Medical Technology program, by 1944 there were 25 “girls” at ACP and for the first time, ACP classes contained more women than men.
Then “one hot August night the girls of the class were taking out the fellows as part of a sorority initiation when the V.J. announcement came through [over the radio], resulting in a sudden change of plan.” It was August 14, 1945, also known as “Victory over Japan Day,” and the war was over.
In October 1945 “the doors opened to a new era of well being, crowded classrooms and noisy halls.” Dean O’Brien had been right.
The Med Tech program went from a three-year certificate program to a four-year Bachelor of Science program in 1945, with three years spent at ACP and one full year at Bender Laboratory across the street, under Director John J. Clemmer, M.D., and his staff.
In 1947, a Girl’s Club was formed with the first scheduled event a “Bacon Bat” at Thacher Park.
The bowling team joined the Intercollegiate League of the Capital District when it was formed in 1948, while the basketball team became a member of the new Empire State Conference that same year.
For the first time, the program was not limited to “girls only” and the Class of 1949 contained two male Med Tech majors.
In 1949, an Athletic Commission was formed to handle the nitty-gritty details of the burgeoning sports program.
Things certainly were looking up for ACP by 1949, when the yearbook commented on one of several new faculty members hired to deal with the influx in students.
Though they optimistically bought a set of cups for future events, the club disbanded in 1950.
The Newman Club, emphasizing Catholic culture and fellowship, formed in the 1950-51 academic year and was followed shortly thereafter by the Student Christian Association.
The College even had its own Red Cross unit beginning in the spring of 1950, with volunteers assigned to the Motor Corps Service and learning first aid.
With the arrival of Albert M. White in the fall of 1952, the Panthers went on to 13 consecutive winning seasons on the court.
Other school activities included the Camera Club, which faithfully documented daily life at the College, and Mortar and Pestle, which celebrated its Silver Anniversary in 1952 with a new magazine-type format.
The Student Branch of the American Pharmaceutical Association (APhA) at ACP claimed 100 new members by 1952.
Doctor Blythe spoke about his pioneering work with time-release capsules, which hit the market as "Spansule capsules" in 1952.
One 1952 graduate remembered her landlady's first words as "no men, no liquor, no smoking" but students seemed to have fun in spite of the advice!
However, after the Korean war ended in July 1953, veterans flocked back to the College under the G.I. Bill and ACP regained its equilibrium.
The co-ed group, with 20 members, performed in its first program at the holiday festivities in 1953.
As a 1954 article in Mortar and Pestle said, "for the single girl, pharmacy offers a career where she is able to work 40-50 hours a week at a comfortable wage." The upsurge in enrollment meant the need for new facilities, as well as more and revitalized sports and activities at the College.
In 1954, an Interfraternity Council was formed with representatives from each group and the IFC Dance and other activities became an integral part of College life.
Dean Singer previously had taught at ACP until 1954, when he went to University of California at San Francisco for his Ph.D. in pharmaceutical chemistry.
By the time the Salk vaccine was developed in 1955 and the federal government implemented a plan to have the vaccine produced by six pharmaceutical companies, Mortar and Pestle was weighing in on the topic and the need for more pharmacists to go into research.
The new wing was dedicated October 13, 1957, to Arthur Wardle, long-time president of the board of trustees.
1957 also introduced another factor that influenced the future of pharmacy.
At ACP, the 1958 yearbook had a space-age theme and talked about responsibilities of the pharmacist in the age of "Sputniks and Explorers." Even the basketball team was pictured against a starry night sky and drawings of rockets and "spacemen" abounded throughout.
In response to these trends, by 1958 ACP students had formed a student affiliate of the American Chemical Society to introduce students to the "professional side" of pharmacy and the technical skills necessary for a career in pharmaceutical chemistry.
By 1959-60, the basketball team was in its eighth consecutive winning season under coach Al White.
At the beginning of the decade, the "Ropes" even presented ACP with a 50-star flag to commemorate the addition of Hawaii to the United States in 1959.
The American Society of Clinical Pathology, which certified medical technicians, projected that by 1960, 50,000 certified med techs would be needed in the United States.
It was a new era and, with a new five-year program set to debut in 1960, ACP would be ready for it.
At ACP, the 1960's were marked by two key events: the College launched a new five-year pharmacy program in 1960, and Walter Singer ’48 replaced Francis O’Brien ’20 when the latter stepped down as dean of the school.
The dance was first popularized by Chubby Checker in 1960 when his song, "The Twist," reached number one for the first time.
By January 1961, another new club for young women was formed at ACP with the debut of the Alpha Alpha Chapter of Alpha Delta Theta, a professional sorority for college women studying medical technology.
By the early '60s, Kappa Psi was organizing an Open House at the College to interest prospective students in the new five-year Pharmacy program and demonstrate cutting-edge equipment such as ACP's new MiniVac computer, an early computer that went on the market in 1961.
Phi Delta Chi sponsored its first twist party in the fall of 1962, capitalizing on the dance craze sweeping the country.
They listened to jazz on their "hi-fis" and went to see the Smothers Brothers perform when they played at Siena College in 1962.
The Newman Club, for Catholic students, sponsored well-attended folk masses, though some students felt they might be "hootenanny with communion," a reference to a popular 1963 TV show featuring folk musicians who performed on college campuses.
During the 1964-65 season, the Panthers' second as a member of the newly formed Northeastern Collegiate Conference, the team broke 29 school records and captured the conference title, winning White the honor of Coach of the Year.
Soon, even the twist was becoming a bit old hat and, by 1964, a group of fourth-year students, "Pharmacy's answer to the Beatles," was playing at favorite ACP haunts such as the Petit Paris and Ralph's Tavern.
So it was a huge shock to the student body when the "Husky Skipper," as White was affectionately known, resigned as coach in 1965 after 13 winning seasons and a 149-72 record.
While White remained on as director of athletics and advisor to the Athletic Commission, the team continued on under Ed Lynch in the 1965-66 season, and, throughout the rest of the '60s, under coach Willard Rice.
One of the lighter moments of the decade was the appearance of an eight-foot tall chicken, complete with trailer, at ACP during Kappa Psi pledge week in 1965.
Doctor Singer (pictured at right), who had returned to ACP in 1966 as associate dean and professor of pharmacy, would go on to serve 15 years at the helm of the College.
Kappa Psi's Sweetheart Weekend at the Crooked Lake House featured "machine gun-toting Clydes and long-skirted Bonnies" after the hugely popular film debut of Bonnie and Clyde in 1967.
Interview Days, which had been started in 1968, also helped by introducing students to a plethora of pharmaceutical companies from throughout the country.
Against the turbulent background of the late '60s - anti-war protests, the women's movement, the sexual revolution and Robert Kennedy's assassination - the Alembic Pharmakon of 1969 was dedicated to peace among men.
Starting in the early 1970's, the focus of the yearbook became the graduating class as opposed to the entire student body.
The '70s also brought radical change to the dress code at ACP. Beginning in 1970, the Student Council revised the rules to allow for more liberalized dress for classes and enforced the new code from 8:00 a.m. until 5:00 p.m.
President Nixon's "War Against Drugs," which had been launched in 1971, also came to the forefront during the decade and service activities at ACP reflected the prominence of the theme.
The student APhA chapter at ACP was in the national limelight when Jack V. Nicolais Jr. '74 was elected national president of the organization in 1972.
By the 1974-75 academic year, Dean Singer announced a radical change in the curriculum for pharmacy students as well.
Consequently, a job placement office was set up at the College in 1975.
In 1976, a new pharmacy honor society, Rho Chi, open to both men and women, was established when the Gamma Gamma Chapter was started at ACP. The new organization, which recognized scholastic achievement, kicked off with an installation dinner at Jack's Oyster House downtown.
In another new direction, ACP reached out to graduates with a nascent Continuing Education program when Ron McLean '51 and Kenneth Griswold '21, former trustee, were named to head up the Division of Extension Services in 1977.
Homecoming/Parents Weekend was moved from the fall and the first annual winter sports carnival with snow sculpture, basketball games, reception and brunch was held in February 1978.
And, of course, there were toga parties, which skyrocketed in popularity with the 1978 release of National Lampoon's Animal House , starring Saturday Night Live veteran John Belushi.
Eventually, the room was opened at night and by 1979, beer and wine were available through an experimental program worked out with John's Tavern.
ACP celebrated graduation and its 100th birthday in style on June 6, 1981, with a Centen- nial Dinner and Gala Centennial Ball at the plaza.
In 1981, the College marked its 100th anniversary with a huge celebration at the new Nelson A. Rockefeller Empire State Plaza in downtown Albany and broke ground for a new wing for its flagship building on New Scotland Avenue.
By the 1982-83 academic year, ACP needed room for a whopping 578 students, up 7.4 percent from the previous year, with 337 women and 341 men.
While the Rho Chi Pharmacy Honor Society, recognizing scholastic ability, already was firmly ensconced, 1983 brought a second honorary society to the College with the formation of the Omicron chapter of the Phi Lambda Sigma Pharmacy Leadership Society.
Another new group was founded at the College in 1985 when Mainak Amin '87 organized the International Cultural Awareness Club.
By the end of the decade, the women's basketball team had taken home three first-place NAC trophies, including the 24-1 season of 1985-86 led by Martha Naber '86 and Rita Leighton '86.
One impromptu opportunity to let off steam occurred when a freak snowstorm in October 1987 caused the unheard-of cancellation of classes at ACP and led to widescale snowball fights.
The men's basketball team underwent a big change in 1989 when John Denio, after 12 years, 125 wins and two NAC titles, announced his decision to stop coaching.
One big change that radically affected students at ACP came January 1, 1990, when the drinking age was raised to 21 in New York State.
The decade that opened with the Gulf War in 1990 also brought the collapse of the Soviet Union, the O.J. Simpson trial, the Oklahoma City bombing, and the Columbine shootings.
In the spring of 1990 a new lecture hall, chemistry lab, faculty research lab and offices were dedicated, with plans to continue work on the facility throughout the decade.
In 1995, University Heights Association Inc. was established to benefit ACP and its three academic neighbors - Albany Law School, Albany Medical College, and The Sage Colleges.
A new tradition was established at ACP during Doctor Bryant's tenure with the first White Coat Ceremony, which took place on October 10, 1997.
Following the presidency of Kenneth Miller, Ph.D., Claire M. Lathers '69, Ph.D., was appointed as the new president and dean of ACP. In 1998, James J. Gozzo, Ph.D., became ACP's seventh leader and embarked on a dynamic plan for the future.
The ceremony, which formally recognizes Pharmacy student's entry into the professional years of the curriculum, was very successful and, by the 1998-99 academic year, parents also were on hand to witness lab-coated students recite the Pledge of Professionalism.
In 2000, the College expanded for the first time into a second building – the former Christian Brothers Academy, located a short walk from the O'Brien Building.
The dawn of a new decade did not stem the momentum begun in the 2000’s as the College continued to invest in its physical plant at the same time it sought to further diversify its academic programs and institute a new academic structure.
ACP opened its cutting-edge Pharmaceutical Research Institute in 2003 in the former Bender Hygienic Laboratories on Samaritan Road, on the south edge of campus.
The mandated transition to the Doctor of Pharmacy (Pharm.D.) meant that the last B.S. in Pharmacy degrees at ACP would be awarded in 2004.
By 2004, a second on-campus residence hall was added when the College purchased a facility on Samaritan Road from the Episcopal Diocese of Albany and established South Hall as a dorm for freshmen, eliminating the need for off-campus residence facilities.
It would be rechristened the Albert M. White Gymnasium in October 2005 in honor of the beloved former associate dean of student affairs.
In the summer of 2005, Dan Spadaro '23 still remembered his win in the 440-yard relay, but the festivities also included more comical competitions including a three-legged and fat men's race.
In conjunction with Albany Medical College, a new Physician Assistant Studies option was added for the fall of 2006, allowing combined acceptance into ACP’s B.S. in Biomedical Technology and Albany Med’s Master’s-level PA program.
While students began the decade hanging out in the Panthers’ Den in the O’Brien Building for games of pool, darts and ping pong, a major addition to campus life, in fall 2006, was the ACP Student Center.
In 2007, the College acquired the former NYS Department of Transportation building located at 84 Holland Avenue and converted part of the building into apartment-style housing for upperclass students (Princeton and Holland Suites).
Following nearly two years of planning, the Vermont Campus held its first classes on August 31, 2009, with 70 students in the inaugural class.
The summer of 2010 also saw the Lewis Library relocated to the first two floors of the newly renovated Classroom Building (now appropriately called the Library Building). The move was driven in large part by the growing enrollment at the College and the need for additional study space.
And in 2011, the College's first Masters degree was awarded in the study of Pharmacology.
The ACPHS chapter of Colleges Against Cancer (CAC), one of the fastest growing and most successful clubs on campus, reached a zenith in 2011 when it was named Outstanding Chapter of the Year by the CAC national organization.
In 2012, the College joined the United States Collegiate Athletic Association (USCAA) in order to provide student athletes and teams with more opportunities to compete for national tournaments and awards.
A national search was begun immediately to find his successor, and that effort concluded on December 3, 2013, when Greg Dewey, Ph.D., was introduced as just the ninth president of the College.
In the spring of 2013, President Gozzo announced that he would be stepping down at the conclusion of the 2013-14 academic year, after 16 years at the helm of the school.
On December 1, 2015, nearly two years to the day of his introduction as president, Doctor Dewey kicked off the Beyond Practice Ready (BPR) fundraising campaign.
In September 2018, the College opened the Collaboratory in Albany’s South End.
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| Company name | Founded date | Revenue | Employee size | Job openings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Western University of Health Sciences | 1977 | $197.9M | 2,032 | - |
| Bard College | 1860 | $184.9M | 1,326 | 106 |
| East Georgia State College | 1973 | $2.7M | 1 | 6 |
| Lake Forest Graduate School of Management | 1946 | $50.0M | 197 | - |
| Northern Vermont University | 1828 | $9.8M | 200 | - |
| Midwestern University | 1900 | $450.0M | 667 | 98 |
| University of the Sciences | 1821 | $37.0M | 1,234 | - |
| Long Island University | 2006 | $388.9M | 3,237 | 158 |
| D'Youville College | 1908 | $25.0M | 759 | - |
| St. John's University | 1870 | $213.7M | 1,920 | 24 |
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