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Top story: University of Massachusetts announces $175 million transformational gift to its Medical School

As the year comes to a close, the Office of Communications is rerunning some of the big stories we covered in 2021, including the launch of the UMass Chan Medical School-led volunteer Vaccine Corps, the ribbon cutting for the community-based outpatient clinic for veterans on the Medical School campus and the $175 million transformational gift from The Morningside Foundation that led to our name change. Look for these stories on UMassMed News between Dec. 22 and Dec. 30. This story was originally published on Sept. 7, 2021.


Today the University of Massachusetts is announcing a history-making $175 million donation from The Morningside Foundation to UMass Medical School.

The transformational gift is unrestricted and will more than double the Medical School’s endowment. It comes as the Medical School celebrates its 50th year of educating future physicians, nursing leaders and biomedical scientists and as its Nobel Prize-winning research enterprise has grown to $400 million.

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“This gift is a powerful statement about the stature—and the potential—of our medical school, a very special place,” said Chancellor Collins.

In recognition of the gift and of the deep commitment to education, research and health care by the Chan family of investors, entrepreneurs and philanthropists, UMass Medical School will be renamed the UMass Chan Medical School. Its three graduate schools will be renamed: the T.H. Chan School of Medicine; the Tan Chingfen Graduate School of Nursing; and the Morningside Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences.

The announcement was made by UMass Medical School Chancellor Michael F. Collins, who was joined by Massachusetts Gov. Charlie Baker, University of Massachusetts President Martin T. Meehan, and members of the University of Massachusetts Board of Trustees in thanking The Morningside Foundation and the Chan family for the gift.

T.H. Chan, for whom the School of Medicine will be named, is the late patriarch of the Chan family, who was deeply committed to supporting higher education.

The Graduate School of Nursing will be named for the family’s matriarch, Tan Chingfen, a nurse who, the family recalled, administered vaccines to neighborhood children in the 1950s.

The choice of “Morningside” for the Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences reflects the name of the family’s investment group and foundation.

“This gift is a powerful statement about the stature—and the potential—of our medical school, a very special place. The confidence this historic gift conveys about our medical school is breathtaking, permitting us to recruit renowned and innovative faculty, conduct more breakthrough biomedical research, offer financial support to highly qualified and diverse students; and be ever more expansive in fulfilling our public service mission,” said Chancellor Collins in making the announcement.

The Morningside Foundation said in a statement that, “The Morningside Foundation and the Chan family are proud to honor their patriarch and matriarch’s legacy and their deep commitment to the advancement of health and education. There is a powerful alchemy and very special culture at UMass Medical School in which the whole is greater than the sum of its parts.”

“On behalf of the citizens of the commonwealth and the many future health professionals and educators who stand to benefit from this transformational gift to Massachusetts’ first and only public medical school, we are grateful to The Morningside Foundation and the Chan family for their incredible generosity,” said Gov. Baker. “I am deeply appreciative and thank Chancellor Collins for his leadership and commitment to the University of Massachusetts Medical School, its students, its faculty and its future.” 

Marty Meehan, president of the five-campus University of Massachusetts system, said, “The generosity of The Morningside Foundation and the Chan family is an acknowledgment of what the people of the commonwealth have long known: Our medical school is the jewel in the crown of public higher education and support for its world-changing work will pay dividends for many years to come. Gifts of this significance are not possible without the strong management, stewardship of resources and continuity of leadership present across the UMass system and on strong display at the Medical School under Chancellor Collins and his team.”

Chancellor Collins, President Meehan and special guests will hold a media availability today at 10 a.m. in the Boston Room of the UMass Club, One Beacon Street, 32nd Floor. Due to COVID-19 safety measures, media must contact the UMass Medical School Office of Communications to attend and should arrive by 9:30 a.m. The news conference will be live streamed on www.facebook.com/umasschan.

More information, video and photos of the news conference and the Medical School’s new logos will be available following the media availability at https://www.umassmed.edu/umasschan.

UMass Medical School was founded in 1962 to provide affordable, high-quality medical education to state residents and to increase the number of primary care physicians practicing in underserved areas of the state. Its first class of medical students graduated in 1974. In 1979 a PhD program in the biomedical sciences was established, followed by the Graduate School of Nursing, which opened in 1986.