1873–1885: Before Johnson & Johnson Robert Wood Johnson began his professional training at age 16 as a pharmaceutical apprentice at an apothecary run by his mother's cousin, James G. Wood, in Poughkeepsie, New York. Johnson co-founded his own company with
George Seabury in 1873. The New York-based Seabury & Johnson became known for its medicated plasters. There he heard
Joseph Lister's explanation of a new procedure: antiseptic surgery. They manufactured sterile surgical supplies, household products, and medical guides. Those products initially featured a logo that resembled the signature of James Wood Johnson. Robert Wood Johnson served as the first president of the company. and also manufactured the world's first sterile surgical products, including sutures, absorbent cotton, and gauze. The company published "Modern Methods of Antiseptic Wound Treatment", a guide on how to do sterile surgery using its products, and in 1888, distributed 85,000 copies to doctors and pharmacists across the United States. The manual was translated into three languages and distributed worldwide. In 1894, the company began producing Johnson's Baby Powder, the company's first baby product. Kilmer wrote "Hygiene in Maternity", an instructional guide for mothers before and after delivery. In 1904, the company expanded its baby care products with "Lister's Sanitary Diapers", a diaper product for infants. During the
Spanish–American War, Johnson & Johnson developed and donated 300,000 packaged compressed surgical dressings for soldiers in the field Women accounted for half of the company's workforce and led a quarter of its departments. In 1916, the company acquired Chicopee Manufacturing Company in
Chicopee Falls, Massachusetts, to meet demand. In 1919, Johnson & Johnson opened the Gilmour Plant near Montreal, its first factory outside the United States, Named after its Massachusetts facility, Johnson & Johnson built a textile mill and company town, Chicopee, outside Gainesville, Georgia. In 1931, Johnson & Johnson introduced the first prescription contraceptive gel marketed as Ortho-Gynol.
Robert Wood Johnson II became president of the company in 1932. Both male and female Johnson & Johnson employees were drafted and enlisted during World War II. The company ensured no one would lose their job when they returned home. Robert Wood Johnson II was appointed head of the Smaller War Plants Corporation in Washington, D.C. His work ensured U.S. factories with under 500 employees were awarded government contracts.
1943: Credo and going public In 1943, as the company was preparing for its
initial public offering (IPO), Robert Wood Johnson wrote what the company would call, "Our Credo", a defining document that has been used to guide the company's decisions over the years. The company completed its IPO and became a public company in 1944. In 1943,
Vesta Stoudt identified a need for waterproof tape for ammunition boxes in
World War Two. She wrote to
Franklin D. Roosevelt with the idea; the president commissioned Revolite, a subsidiary of Johnson & Johnson at the time, to develop and manufacture a cloth-based adhesive tape.
1944–1999: Acquisitions and international expansion In 1944, the company began selling
Johnson's Baby Lotion. The same year, the company established Ethicon Suture Laboratories. In 1947, G. F. Merson Ltd. was acquired to expand the company's suture business in the United Kingdom. The company was rebranded and absorbed into
Ethicon. Johnson & Johnson
chairman of the board, Robert Wood Johnson, published
Or Forfeit Freedom, in 1947. The book outlined that businesses need to develop
sustainable methods of using
natural resources for the future of business and the planet. In 1955, Ethicon developed a micro-point reverse-cutting ophthalmic needle attached to the suture. Micro-point surgical needles and sutures allowed for advances in modern vision surgery. In 1956, the company opened its first Asia-based operating company in the Philippines. The following year, an operating company opened in India. In 1959, Johnson & Johnson acquired McNeil Laboratories. A year later, the company sold Tylenol for the first time without a prescription. In 1963,
Philip B. Hofmann succeeded Robert Wood Johnson as chairman and CEO. He was the first non-Johnson family member to become chief executive. Hofmann also helped found the
Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. In 1965, Johnson & Johnson acquired Codman & Shurtleff. The acquired company produced neurovascular devices and neurosurgery technologies. In 1968, the company developed the
RhoGAM vaccine. The vaccine prevented Rh hemolytic disease in newborns. In 1969, Ortho Diagnostics, a company subsidiary, launched the Sickledex Tube Test for detecting anemia. The same year, the FDA approved the Johnson & Johnson arterial graft. In 1971, the company launched Hapindex Diagnostic Test, a rapid
hepatitis B test for blood donors. The test was developed to prevent the spread of hepatitis B through blood transfusions. In the 1970s, Johnson & Johnson hired Henry N. Cobb from Pei Cobb Freed & Partners to design its new headquarters. The firm designed Johnson & Johnson Plaza across the railroad tracks from the older section of the Johnson & Johnson campus. In 1973,
Richard Sellars became chairman and CEO of Johnson & Johnson. In 1976,
James E. Burke became the company's chairman and CEO. Johnson & Johnson opened operating companies in China and Egypt in 1985. After the
dissolution of the Soviet Union, Johnson & Johnson expanded into eastern Europe. By 1991, the company had a presence in Hungary, Russia, the
Czech Republic, and Poland. In the 1990s, the company acquired many familiar consumer health brands that made up the Johnson & Johnson family of companies. These acquisitions included
Clean & Clear,
Neutrogena,
Motrin, and
Aveeno. Johnson & Johnson opened an operating company in Israel in 1996. In 1997, Johnson & Johnson acquired Biosense Webster.
DePuy was acquired by Johnson & Johnson in 1998, rolling it into the Medtech business group. In 2003, Ethicon launched
Vicryl Plus Antibacterial Sutures. The products prevent post-surgery infection within stitches. In 2006, Johnson & Johnson acquired Pfizer's consumer healthcare business and merged it with its consumer healthcare business group. The acquisition added brands like
Listerine,
Bengay, and
Neosporin to the company's portfolio. In the same year, Johnson & Johnson's Janssen Pharmaceuticals, launched
Prezista, a protease inhibitor for patients with failed previous HIV therapies. In 2008, Johnson & Johnson acquired
Mentor Corporation for $1 billion and merge its operations into Ethicon. In 2009, the company acquired HealthMedia, later renamed to Health & Wellness Solutions and the Human Performance Institute. In October 2010, J&J acquired
Crucell for $2.4 billion. The subsidiary operates as the centre for vaccines, within Johnson & Johnson pharmaceuticals business group. In 2012,
Alex Gorsky became chairman and CEO of Johnson & Johnson. In November 2015, Biosense Webster, Inc. acquired Coherex Medical Inc. expanding the company's range of treatment options for patients with atrial fibrillation. In 2017, Johnson & Johnson acquired Abbott Medical Optics from Abbott Laboratories for $4.325 billion, adding the new division into
Johnson & Johnson Vision Care, Inc. in 2017. That same year, Johnson & Johnson acquired
Actelion in a $30 billion deal, the largest ever purchase by the company. After the purchase, Johnson & Johnson spun off Actelion's research and development unit into a separate legal entity. In July 2017, Johnson & Johnson Vision Care, Inc acquired
TearScience. In September 2017, the company acquired subscription-based contact lens startup Sightbox. In September of the same year Johnson & Johnson Medical GmbH acquired Emerging Implant Technologies GmbH, manufacturer of 3D-printed titanium interbody implants for
spinal fusion surgery. In March 2019, the FDA approved
esketamine for the treatment of severe depression, which is marketed as
Spravato by Janssen Pharmaceuticals. In 2019, Johnson & Johnson announced the release of photochromic contact lenses. The lenses adjust to sunlight and help eyes recover from bright light exposure faster. The lenses contain a photochromic additive that adapts visible light amounts filtered to the eyes and are the first to use such additives. In November 2020, Johnson & Johnson acquired Momenta Pharmaceuticals for $6.5 billion. In January 2022,
Joaquin Duato became CEO of Johnson & Johnson. In December 2022, Johnson & Johnson acquired cardiovascular medical technology company
Abiomed Inc. for $16.6 billion. Johnson & Johnson began the separation of its consumer healthcare business segment in November 2021. In the split, Johnson & Johnson will retain the Johnson & Johnson name for
prescription drugs and
medical devices, while the second company will sell consumer health products and take over the
Neutrogena,
Aveeno,
Tylenol,
Listerine, Johnson's,
Band-Aid and other brands. In September 2022, Johnson & Johnson chose
Kenvue as the new name for its Consumer Health business. Kenvue went public through an IPO in May 2023, with Johnson & Johnson maintaining a controlling stake of around 91 percent. On July 24, 2023, Johnson & Johnson launched an exchange offer to split-off Kenvue. Following the completion of the exchange offer, Johnson & Johnson will retain approximately 9.5% of the outstanding shares of Kenvue common stock. In 2024, Johnson & Johnson sold off its remaining 9.5% stake in Kenvue, its former consumer products business. Johnson & Johnson holds a patent on the tuberculosis-treating drug
bedaquiline, with secondary patents in at least 25 out of 43 countries with a high burden of tuberculosis blocking affordable generic versions of the drug, preventing millions of people from accessing the life-saving treatment. Though the patent was set to expire in many countries in 2023, Johnson & Johnson applied to extend the patent. On July 13, 2023,
Stop TB Partnership announced that after negotiations with Johnson & Johnson, it had been granted licenses to produce generic versions of the drug. Johnson & Johnson announced several acquisitions in 2024: Ambrx Biopharma for $2 billion (in January), Shockwave Medical for $13.1 billion (in April), and Proteologix for $850 million (in May). In 2024, Johnson & Johnson MedTech released Polyphonic, a digital surgical platform. The platform features surgery planning, surgical video, and telepresence services for laparoscopic surgeries. In January 2025, Johnson & Johnson announced it would acquire neurological drug maker Intra-Cellular Therapies for $14.6 billion, a company specializing in medications for behavioral disorders, including schizophrenia, depression, and bipolar disorder.
Coronavirus (COVID-19) response Johnson & Johnson committed over $1 billion toward the development of a not-for-profit
COVID-19 vaccine in partnership with the
Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority (BARDA) Office of the
Assistant Secretary for Preparedness and Response (ASPR) at the
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). Paul Stoffels of Johnson & Johnson said, "In order to go fast, the people of Johnson & Johnson are committed to do this and all together we say we're going to do this not for profit. That's the fastest and the best way to find all the collaborations in the world to make this happen so we commit to bring this at a not-for-profit level."
Janssen Vaccines, in partnership with
Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center (BIDMC), is responsible for developing the vaccine candidate, based on the same technology used to make its
Ebola vaccine. The vaccine candidate is expected to enter phase 1 human clinical study in September 2020. Demand for the product
Tylenol surged two to four times normal levels in March 2020. In response, the company increased production globally. For example, the Tylenol plant in Puerto Rico ran 24 hours a day, seven days a week. In response to the shortage of ventilators, Ethicon, with
Prisma Health, made and distributed the VESper Ventilator Expansion Splitter, which uses 3D printing technology, to allow one ventilator to support two patients.
Janssen COVID-19 vaccine In June 2020, Johnson & Johnson and the
National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) confirmed its intention to start a clinical trials of J&J's vaccine in September 2020, with the possibility of Phase 1/2a human clinical trials starting at an accelerated pace in the second half of July. On August 5, 2020, the
US government agreed to pay more than $1 billion to Johnson & Johnson (medical device company) for the production of 100 million doses of COVID-19 vaccine. As part of the agreed-upon deal, the U.S. can order up to 200 million additional doses of SARS-CoV-2 vaccine. In September 2020, Johnson & Johnson started its 60,000-person phase 3
adenovirus-based vaccine trial. The trial was paused on October 12, 2020, because a volunteer became ill, but the company said it found no evidence that the vaccine had caused the illness and announced on October 23, 2020, that it would resume the trial. In April 2021, the company reported that its COVID-19 vaccine achieved $100 million sales in the first quarter, accounting for less than 1% of its total revenue.
Jnj acquisition history • Johnson & Johnson • Chicopee Manufacturing Company •
Ethicon •
Mentor Worldwide •
McNeil Pharmaceutical •
Ortho Pharmaceutical •
Cilag Chemie •
Janssen Pharmaceuticals • Codman & Shurtleff •
Frontier Contact Lenses •
Neutrogena • Biosense Webster •
DePuy Manufacturing • ACE Medical • AcroMed • Centocor Biotech •
Mentor Worldwide •
Crucell • Introgene • U-Bisys • SBL Vaccin • Berna Biotech •
Synthes • Stratec Medical • Covagen • Coherex Medical Inc •
Advanced Medical Optics • American Hospital Supply Corporation • VisX Inc. • WaveFront Sciences Inc. • IntraLase Corp. • Visiogen • OptiMedica •
Actelion • CoTherix •
TearScience • Momenta Pharmaceuticals •
Abiomed • Impella CardioSystems AG • Breethe • preCARDIA • Ambrx Biopharma • Shockwave Medical • Proteologix • Intra-Cellular Therapies == Business segments ==