•
1868: Cornell becomes the first American university to include a professor of veterinary medicine •
1912: Kirksey L. Curd became Cornell's first Black doctor of veterinary medicine graduate. •
1942: Patricia O'Connor Halloran, class of 1939, becomes the first female zoo veterinarian, working at the
Staten Island Zoo •
1970: The Coggins test, a blood test to identify if a horse is a carrier of
equine infectious anemia, a viral disease found in horses, is developed by Dr.
Leroy Coggins and colleagues. •
Early 1980s: The James A. Baker Institute for Animal Health develops the modified live-virus vaccine for
canine parvovirus type 2, still in use today. •
2005: Cornell launches one of the first comprehensive shelter medicine programs in the country, supported by
Maddie's Fund, called Maddie's Shelter Medicine Program at Cornell University. •
2006: A Cornell horse named Twilight serves as
genome donor for the international Equine Whole Genome Sequencing Project. •
2015: Research at the James A. Baker Institute for Animal Health leads to the first puppies born by
in vitro fertilization. •
2020: The college established the Cornell COVID-19 Testing Laboratory in collaboration with the Cayuga Health System to provide in-house COVID-19 tests for Cornell staff, students, and faculty, allowing the university to reopen and hold in-person study during this time of the
COVID-19 pandemic. In April 2022, it passed 2 million tests. ==Academic programs==