SUNY Optometry began in 1910 as the
Columbia University School of Optometry, which was the first university-based optometry program in the United States. At the time, optometry was mainly eyewear sales and not a true medical profession. In 1956, Columbia's optometry program shuttered due to not wanting to advance their current bachelor's and master's degrees into a
Doctor of Optometry degree, as many other institutions had done at that time. This closure left a void in New York and the entire region, and as a response, a group of Columbia optometrists and philanthropists came together to form the nonprofit, the Optometric Center of New York (OCNY) in 1956. OCNY served as an eye care clinic and continuing optometric education center after the optometry program at Columbia closed. After over a decade of lobbying by OCNY, Governor Nelson Rockefeller signed a bill on April 14, 1971, that officially established the State University of New York College of Optometry. Dr. Alden Haffner became the founding president. In 1972, SUNY Optometry moved into 122 East 25th St. where the OCNY has been operating a clinic for many years. That year, the college took over OCNY's educational, clinical, and vision research programs, firmly establishing itself as a major hub for vision science and education. In 1974, the college established an in-house vision therapy residency. This was the first optometric residency program in the country and the third to receive accreditation status. In 2003, the name of the program was changed to the Dr. Irwin B. Suchoff Residency Program in Vision Therapy and Rehabilitation to honor Dr. Suchoff who was the program's first residency supervisor in 1975 and the nation's first Director of Residency Education. In 1975, the inaugural class of SUNY Optometry graduated, with 17 students receiving their degrees. In 1999, the college moved to its current campus across from
Bryant Park in what was originally the
Aeolian Building, which was built in 1912 for the
Aeolian Company, a piano manufacturer. The building is where music composer
George Gershwin debuted one of his most famous works,
Rhapsody in Blue, on February 12, 1924. SUNY Optometry commemorated the 100th anniversary of Rhapsody in Blue with a special performance of the work on February 12, 2024. In 2024, the Optometric Center of New York (OCNY) was renamed The SUNY College of Optometry Foundation to better align with the organization's mission of support eye care, vision research, and optometric education though the work of SUNY Optometry and the University Eye Center. == Academics ==