Explore the rich history of CU Anschutz.
The roots of CU Anschutz’s health science programs stretch back to the School of Medicine opening in Old Main at the University of Colorado Boulder in 1883, with the School of Nursing following 15 years later in 1898 and the School of Pharmacy in 1913.
In the early 1920s the university's health programs continued to grow, requiring a move from Boulder. Following a brief relocation to facilities in downtown Denver, the University of Colorado’s health programs planned a move into a newly constructed campus at Ninth Avenue and Colorado Boulevard in Denver. The original quadrangle of four brick buildings welcomed the School of Medicine and School of Nursing on October 1, 1924 at the new campus eventually known as the University of Colorado Health Sciences Center at Ninth Avenue and Colorado Boulevard. The construction and move were joined by the creation of Colorado General Hospital, the forerunner to today’s UCHealth University of Colorado Hospital. The founding of an integrated health campus brought major accolades at the time – the newspaper Boulder Daily Camera described the new facility as “one of the world’s best and most modern.”
World events would bring challenges in the following years. The Great Depression affected state budgets for higher education, impacting both faculty and student opportunities. Soon after, World War II broke out and the university would serve in helping win the war with many School of Medicine faculty serving together in treating soldiers in the Pacific – while also working to combat the injustices of the time. Dean of Nursing Henrietta Adams Loughran and Colorado Governor Ralph Carr worked together to enroll West Coast Japanese-American nursing students to help them avoid internment and continue their education.
Through the second half of the 20th century, CU health programs broke new ground. An increase in federal funding for the National Institutes of Health – which expanded from $3 million after World War II to over $50 million in a few short years – was a major boon to the health sciences, particularly at the University of Colorado Health Sciences Center.
This investment in health research helped to kick start a series of firsts and discoveries for several disciplines throughout the mid-20th century, alongside more full-time faculty. While the university was known as a leader in pulmonary treatment at the time, CU faculty and researchers led in additional areas and marking achievements in medicine such as: open heart surgery, revolutionary work in ultrasound imaging – which led to the current techniques and technology of today – the first-ever liver transplant, chromosomal characterization, innovative child welfare research, critical advancements in public health policy, early efforts in establishing an honor code for medical students and many more.
Alongside these breakthroughs, the university positioned itself as a leader in teaching new generations of health science students. The School of Nursing launched the first nurse practitioner program in the country in 1965 and the School of Dentistry opened in 1973 – the only dental school in the Rocky Mountain region. These new programs, their students and high-profile faculty continued a decades-rich history of health sciences education, research and discoveries at the University of Colorado Health Sciences Center. What followed was the expansion of disciplines and faculty across the university, creating a strong foundation for a research and education ecosystem that extends to the present day.
By the late 1990s, however, the sustained success and growth of the University of Colorado Health Sciences Center at Ninth Avenue and Colorado Boulevard ran into space limitations. The city of Denver had grown around the campus and neighborhood growth restrictions meant a new home would be needed to enable the university to continue providing transformative health discoveries for Colorado and the world.
At the same time, the Fitzsimons Army Medical Center in Aurora was slated for closure by the military, as many of its functions had moved to Fort Sam Houston in Texas. Noting the historical importance of a major health center in Colorado and envisioning the promise and potential of centralizing and connecting health education, care and research on a single campus, local, state and university leaders worked together with the goal of acquiring the land from the military and transforming the historic Fitzsimons army base and hospital in Aurora into an innovative health sciences community. It would be the new home for the University of Colorado Health Sciences Center and its programs.
Construction on new facilities began in the late 1990s and early 2000s at the Fitzsimons campus. In 2006, the campus was renamed the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus in recognition of more than $90 million in initial philanthropic investments from The Anschutz Foundation. The support from The Anschutz Foundation was directed to help in the construction of brand new education, research and patient care facilities on the grounds.
Two years later, the academic and research operations of all CU health sciences schools and colleges relocated to the new campus on the former army base grounds. The years following the move also saw the School of Nursing change its name to the College of Nursing and the founding of a brand new School of Public Health for the state, founded as a collaborative venture between the University of Colorado, Colorado State University and the University of Northern Colorado in 2008. Shortly thereafter in 2011, the School of Pharmacy became the Skaggs School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences – following a gift from the Skaggs family and ALSAM Foundation. UCHealth University of Colorado Hospital and Children’s Hospital Colorado also joined in the move to the CU Anschutz Medical Campus, to realize the vision of a fully integrated health sciences campus now supporting more than 2 million patient visits annually.
The CU Anschutz Medical Campus footprint has also enabled pivots to meet the health science needs and challenges of the 21st century. The Anschutz Health Sciences Building, completed in 2021, was designed specifically to drive collaboration across disciplines – particularly in translational health science research, mental and behavioral health, education and personalized clinical care. Alongside the Anschutz Health Sciences Building, the Bioscience facilities and Fitzsimons Innovation Community continue generating new forms of collaboration between our faculty and researchers and industry partners.
Despite all the changes across the decades, the campus has never lost its spirit of service. When the COVID-19 pandemic began in 2020, every member of campus – faculty, students and staff – contributed to the pandemic response. From treating patients, to vaccine development and trials, to helping state and national leaders with data and policy, alongside support operations to keep the campus operational, CU Anschutz collectively responded to save lives and deliver hope and healing.
Through the COVID-19 pandemic and beyond, CU Anschutz remains committed to the Colorado community it has called home for nearly 150 years. Driven by a mission to solve the most pressing problems in health, CU Anschutz is committed to addressing disparities in healthcare, improving community health through strong local partnerships and expanding education opportunities for future leaders in health and medicine.
Prior to the CU Anschutz Medical Campus, the campus was home to the U.S. Army’s Fitzsimons General Hospital. Originally known as General Hospital 21, the base was planned as a military hospital by the U.S. Army during World War I to treat soldiers suffering from tuberculosis and other lung diseases, opening in 1918. The base was later renamed to honor Lieutenant William Thomas Fitzsimons, the first U.S. Army officer killed in World War I.
The interwar period brought challenges to Fitzsimons, as budget constraints and the Great Depression placed strain on the base and army hospital. Efforts by Colorado’s congressional delegation led to commitments from President Franklin Delano Roosevelt and Congress to construct a new central building for the Fitzsimons Army Medical Hospital, Building 500 – today known as the Fitzsimons Building. The building’s aim was to continue treating tuberculosis and other medical conditions on a larger scale,
The hospital was dedicated on December 3, 1941. Following the outbreak of World War II, as one of the largest and most modern military hospitals in the country, the Fitzsimons base played a key role in caring for sick and wounded soldiers during the war.
The Fitzsimons base has even provided care to the commander in chief. In 1955, President Dwight D. Eisenhower had a heart attack while visiting Denver and spent over a month recovering at Fitzsimons. As his health improved, he often spent time on the large eighth-floor sundeck where he used binoculars to observe the mountains.
The second half of the 20th century saw Fitzsimons base continue to provide innovative care for members of the armed services. In 1960, Fitzsimons was designated an army clinical specialist school by the U.S. Army to act as a professional school for military members, while also adding the army medical equipment and optical school in 1963. Through the intervening decades, Fitzsimons continued to heal, teach and train members of the military, while also paving new ground by launching several rehabilitation programs for amputee patients including skiing and horseback riding.
CU Anschutz maintains this connection to the military history of the Fitzsimons base in the present day by caring for veterans on campus and new medical discoveries through the Center for COMBAT Research.
Interested in learning more about our campus history? Our schools, college and programs have more of their stories to tell below – alongside a map for a self-guided history walking tour of CU Anschutz.
Colorado General Assembly passes legislation to create the University of Colorado.
The School of Medicine opens in Boulder with two students.
CU establishes the School of Nursing.
Pharmacy is established as a department in the School of Medicine.
The School of Pharmacy opens as an independent college.
U.S. Army General Hospital No. 21 opens on the present day grounds of CU Anschutz to treat World War I veterans.
U.S. Army General Hospital No. 21 is formally renamed to the Fitzsimons General Hospital, in honor of Lieutenant William Thomas Fitzsimons – a physician and the first U.S. officer killed in World War I.
CU health programs move to a new campus at Ninth Avenue and Colorado Boulevard in Denver – the University of Colorado Health Sciences Center.
Building 500 (now the Fitzsimons Building) opens at the Fitzsimons Army Medical Center. Building 500 was the largest building in the state of Colorado at the time of its completion.
The School of Nursing becomes an independent school.
President Dwight D. Eisenhower recovers from a heart attack at the Fitzsimons Army Medical Center.
The School of Pharmacy becomes an independent school.
Fitzsimons begins as a clinical specialist school - one of the few health professional schools for the military.
The School of Nursing starts the first nurse practitioner program in the country.
Colorado legislature authorizes funds to open a dental school.
The School of Dentistry enrolls its first class.
The School of Dentistry completes construction on its building at the University of Colorado Health Sciences Center.
The School of Pharmacy moves from Boulder to the University of Colorado Health Sciences Center in Denver.
The Fitzsimons Army Medical Center is slated for closure by the military.
University of Colorado studies the viability of moving its health program operations to the former Fitzsimons Army Medical Center site. That November, the Board of Regents approves.
University of Colorado and the City of Aurora agree on redevelopment terms of the Fitzsimons site.
The Fitzsimons Army Medical Center closes.
The School of Nursing begins offering a Doctor of Nursing Practice.
Fitzsimons campus is renamed Anschutz Medical Campus in recognition of more than $90 million in donations from The Anschutz Foundation to help in the construction of brand new facilities.
UCHealth University of Colorado Hospital and Children’s Hospital Colorado open on the CU Anschutz Medical Campus.
All academic and research operations of all CU health sciences schools and colleges open on the CU Anschutz Medical Campus.
The School of Dentistry undergoes a name change to the University of Colorado School of Dental Medicine.
The School of Nursing changes its name to the College of Nursing.
The Colorado School of Public Health opens and enrolls its first students. The school is formed as a partnership between the University of Colorado, Colorado State University and the University of Northern Colorado.
The School of Pharmacy is renamed the Skaggs School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences following a long history of support and a $10 million gift to build a new 165,000 square foot facility on the CU Anschutz Medical Campus from the Skaggs family.
The 396,000 square foot Anschutz Health Sciences Building opens.
CU Anschutz
Fitzsimons Building
13001 East 17th Place
Aurora, CO 80045
303-724-5000