Chronology
1600s - 1800s
1636 Harvard College founded
in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
1647 Massachusetts
Bay Colony required an elementary school in towns of 50 families.
1765 The Pennsylvania Hospital (in Philadelphia)
first institution in the U.S. exclusively for the care of the sick. Funded
by voluntary subscriptions.
1785 First Federal
grant made: land was allocated for establishing public schools in the
Northwest Territory.
1787 The Northwest Ordnance endowed States
and territorial universities with land grants.
1789 The Federal Government accepted the
responsibility of providing pensions to disabled veterans of the Revolutionary
War.
1793 The first local health department with
a permanent board of health was formed in Baltimore, Maryland.
1795 Thomas Paine wrote his pamphlet, "Agrarian
Justice," (published in English in 1797) in which he proposed a social
insurance program for the nations of Europe and potentially for the young
American Republic.
1796 The founding of the Boston Dispensary,
Boston, Massachusetts, was the first organized medical care service in
New England. This was the recognized forerunner of present day home care
programs.
July 16, 1798 The Marine Hospital Service
was established by an act of Congress, to provide for the temporary relief
and maintenance of sick and disabled seamen. This was the first prepaid
medical care program in the United States, financed through compulsory
employer tax and federally administered. This service later became the
Public Health and Marine Hospital Service, predecessor to the Public Health
Service of today.
March 2, 1799 States were given Federal help
in quarantine law enforcement. The Marine Hospital Service extended to
Navy men.
May 3, 1803 The first permanent Marine hospital
was authorized to be built in Boston, Massachusetts.
1831 First trade union unemployment insurance
plan in the United States was adopted.
1847 The American Medical Association was founded
and began the formation of State and local societies.
1855 The Government Hospital for the Insane was
established (later became St. Elizabeth's Hospital of Washington, D.C.)
1857 The first municipal pension fund was established
providing disability and death benefits for New York City police.
1857 The Columbia Institution for the Deaf, Dumb
and Blind was founded (later became Gallaudet College).
1860 The United States Census reported 849,000
persons 65 and over (2.7% of the United States population).
1867 Federal Department of Education was established.
1868 The first major industrial medical care
prepayment program, the hospital department of the Southern Pacific Railroad
Company, was organized in Sacramento, California.
1869 The first State Board of Health in the United
States was formed in Massachusetts.
1872 The American Public Health Association was
organized. During its early years this organization was composed largely
of administrative health officers who were concerned with public health
in cities, States, and with the responsibilities of the Federal Government
in this field.
1875 The first private pension plan in American
industry was adopted by American Express. It provided benefits for employees
60 years of age or over who had 20 years service with the company and
were incapacitated for further performance of duty.
1881 Germany's Emperor, William the First, in
a ground-breaking letter to the German Parliament, proposed the adoption
of old-age social insurance.
1882 The first major employee-sponsored mutual
benefit association was established by the Northern Pacific Railway Beneficial
Association which developed a program of complete medical care and other
benefits financed by employer-employee payments.
1883 Germany enacted a pioneer law on national
compulsory health and maternity insurance for industrial workers and their
families.
1888 Austria adopted compulsory health insurance
legislation.
1889 Germany became the first nation in the world
to adopt an old-age social insurance program. Designed by Germany's Chancellor,
Otto von Bismarck, the idea was first put forward, at Bismarck's behest,
in 1881.
1889 The International Congress of Industrial
Accidents assembled in Paris. This was the forerunner to the International
Social Security Association (ISSA). The Congress established the Permanent
International Committee on Social Insurance.
1891 Hungary adopted compulsory health insurance
legislation.
1894 The first statutory retirement system for
teachers was adopted in New York City.
1894 A school health program was inaugurated
in Boston as a means of controlling communicable diseases.
1895 Finland adopted an accident compensation
law.
1896 The first statewide legislation for teachers'
pensions was enacted in New Jersey.
1896 Fidelity Mutual Life Insurance Company became
the first American life insurance organization to provide disability benefits.
1897 The first State law to provide medical and
surgical aid for crippled children was enacted by Minnesota.
1897 Great Britain adopted accident compensation
laws.
1898 Denmark and Italy adopted accident compensation
laws.
1898 A workmen's compensation bill was defeated
in the New York State legislature.
1898 The National Voluntary Old Age Insurance
Institution was organized in Italy.
1898 The first State law in the USA providing
pensions for the blind was enacted in Ohio.