In 1656, Stearne was appointed the first Hebrew lecturer in Trinity College, Dublin, receiving the degree of M.D. in 1658, and that of LL.D. in 1660. In 1659, he resigned his fellowship; but was appointed to a senior fellowship in 1660, after the
Restoration, receiving a dispensation from the statutes of the university respecting celibacy. He became the same year professor of law. During his tenure in these various offices, Stearne practised as a physician in Dublin, obtaining special permission to reside outside the walls of the college. Stearne is best known as the founder of the Irish College of Physicians. In 1660, he proposed to the university that Trinity Hall, situated in Back Lane, Dublin, then affiliated to the university, of which he had been constituted president in 1654, should be a college of physicians. The arrangement was sanctioned, and Stearne, on the nomination of the provost and senior fellows of Trinity College, in whom the appointment was vested, became its first president. No students were to be admitted who did not belong to Trinity College. In 1662, Stearne was appointed, for life, professor of medicine at the university. In 1667, a charter was granted to the College of Physicians, under which a governing body of fourteen fellows was constituted—of whom
Sir William Petty was one—with Stearne at their head as president for life. ==Death==