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Johns Hopkins University

Private university in Baltimore, Maryland, U.S.


Private university in Baltimore, Maryland, U.S.

FieldValue
nameJohns Hopkins University
imageJohns Hopkins University's Academic Seal.svg
image_upright.6
latin_nameUniversitas Hopkinsiensis
mottoVeritas vos liberabit (Latin)
mottoeng"The truth will set you free"
established
typePrivate research university
academic_affiliations
endowment$13.06 billion (FY2024)
presidentRonald J. Daniels
provostRay Jayawardhana
undergrad5,318 (2022)
students30,549 (2022)
postgrad25,231 (2022)
total_staff27,300
cityBaltimore
stateMaryland
countryUnited States
free_labelOther campuses
free
free_label2Newspaper
free2*The Johns Hopkins News-Letter*
coor
colorsHeritage blue and spirit blue
athletics_nicknameBlue Jays
sporting_affiliations
mascotBlue Jay
website
logoJohns Hopkins University logo.svg
logo_upright1.1
logo_size270px
accreditationMSCHE
campusLarge city
campus_size140 acre

Johns Hopkins University (often abbreviated as Johns Hopkins, Hopkins, or JHU) is a private research university in Baltimore, Maryland, United States. Founded in 1876 based on the European research institution model, Johns Hopkins is considered to be the first research university in the U.S.

The university was named for its first benefactor, the American entrepreneur and Quaker philanthropist Johns Hopkins. Hopkins's $7 million bequest (equivalent to $ in ) to establish the university and the affiliated Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore was the largest philanthropic gift in U.S. history up to that time. Daniel Coit Gilman, who was inaugurated as Johns Hopkins's first president on February 22, 1876, led the university to revolutionize higher education in the U.S. by integrating teaching and research. In 1900, Johns Hopkins became a founding member of the Association of American Universities. The university has led all U.S. universities in annual research and development expenditures for over four consecutive decades. The School of Medicine, established in 1893, has achieved international recognition for its pioneering biomedical research.

The university consists of ten academic divisions mostly divided among four campuses in Baltimore, with some graduate campuses in Italy, China, and Washington, D.C. The university's two undergraduate divisions, the Zanvyl Krieger School of Arts and Sciences and the Whiting School of Engineering, are located on the Homewood campus adjacent to Baltimore's Charles Village neighborhood. The School of Medicine, School of Nursing, and Bloomberg School of Public Health are located on the medical campus in East Baltimore, alongside the Johns Hopkins Hospital. The university also consists of the Peabody Institute in Baltimore's Mount Vernon neighborhood, Applied Physics Laboratory in Howard County, School of Advanced International Studies, School of Education, and Carey Business School.

Founded in 1883, the Blue Jays men's lacrosse team, which is an affiliate member in the Big Ten Conference, has won 44 national titles. The university's other sports teams compete in Division III of the NCAA, where they are members of the Centennial Conference.

History

Philanthropic beginnings and foundation

On his death in 1873, Johns Hopkins, a Quaker entrepreneur and childless bachelor, bequeathed $7 million (equivalent to $ in ) to fund a hospital and university in Baltimore.

At the time, this donation, generated primarily from the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, was the largest philanthropic gift in the history of the United States, and endowment was then the largest in America. Until 2020, Hopkins was assumed to be a fervent abolitionist, until research done by the school into his United States Census records revealed he claimed to own at least five household slaves in the 1840 and 1850 decennial censuses.

The first name of philanthropist Johns Hopkins comes from the surname of his great-grandmother, Margaret Johns, who married Gerard Hopkins. They named their son Johns Hopkins, who named his own son Samuel Hopkins. Samuel named one of his sons for his father, and that son became the university's benefactor. Milton Eisenhower, a former university president, once spoke at a convention in Pittsburgh where the master of ceremonies introduced him as "President of John Hopkins". Eisenhower retorted that he was "glad to be here in Pittburgh".

The original board opted for an entirely novel university model dedicated to the discovery of knowledge at an advanced level, extending that of contemporary Germany. Johns Hopkins thereby became the model of the modern research university in the United States. Its success eventually shifted higher education in the United States from a focus on teaching revealed and/or applied knowledge to the scientific discovery of new knowledge.

19th century

The trustees worked alongside four notable university presidents, Charles William Eliot of Harvard University, Andrew D. White of Cornell University, Noah Porter of Yale College, and James B. Angell of University of Michigan. They each supported Daniel Coit Gilman to lead the new university and he became the university's first president. Gilman, a Yale-educated scholar, had been serving as president of the University of California, Berkeley prior to this appointment. In preparation for the university's founding, Daniel Coit Gilman visited University of Freiburg and other German universities.

Gilman launched what many at the time considered an audacious and unprecedented academic experiment to merge teaching and research. He dismissed the idea that the two were mutually exclusive: "The best teachers are usually those who are free, competent and willing to make original researches in the library and the laboratory," he stated.

1885}}

To implement his plan, Gilman recruited internationally known researchers including the mathematician James Joseph Sylvester; the biologist H. Newell Martin; the physicist Henry Augustus Rowland, the first president of the American Physical Society, the classical scholars Basil Gildersleeve, and Charles D. Morris; the economist Richard T. Ely; and the chemist Ira Remsen, who became the second president of the university in 1901.

Gilman focused on the expansion of graduate education and support of faculty research. The new university fused advanced scholarship with such professional schools as medicine and engineering. Hopkins became the national trendsetter in doctoral programs and the host for numerous scholarly journals and associations. The Johns Hopkins University Press, founded in 1878, is the oldest American university press in continuous operation.

1880s–1890s}}

With the completion of Johns Hopkins Hospital in 1889 and the medical school in 1893, the university's research-focused mode of instruction soon began attracting world-renowned faculty members who would become major figures in the emerging field of academic medicine, including William Osler, William Halsted, Howard Kelly, and William Welch. During this period the university further made history by becoming the first medical school to admit women on an equal basis with men and to require a bachelor's degree, based on the efforts of Mary E. Garrett, who had endowed the school at Gilman's request. The school of medicine was America's first coeducational, graduate-level medical school, and became a prototype for academic medicine that emphasized bedside learning, research projects, and laboratory training.

In his will and in his instructions to the trustees of the university and the hospital, Hopkins requested that both institutions be built upon the vast grounds of his Baltimore estate, Clifton. When Gilman assumed the presidency, he decided that it would be best to use the university's endowment for recruiting faculty and students, deciding to, as it has been paraphrased, "build men, not buildings." In his will Hopkins stipulated that none of his endowment should be used for construction; only interest on the principal could be used for this purpose. Unfortunately, stocks in The Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, which would have generated most of the interest, became virtually worthless soon after Hopkins's death. The university's first home was thus in Downtown Baltimore, delaying plans to site the university in Clifton.

20th century

In the early 20th century, the university outgrew its buildings and the trustees began to search for a new home. Developing Clifton for the university was too costly, and 30 acres of the estate had to be sold to the city as public park. A solution was achieved by a team of prominent locals who acquired the estate in north Baltimore known as the Homewood Estate. On February 22, 1902, this land was formally transferred to the university. The flagship building, Gilman Hall, was completed in 1915. The School of Engineering relocated in fall of 1914 and the Zanvyl Krieger School of Arts and Sciences followed in 1916. These decades saw the ceding of lands by the university for the public Wyman Park and Wyman Park Dell and the Baltimore Museum of Art, coalescing in the contemporary area of 140 acre.

Prior to becoming the main Johns Hopkins campus, the Homewood estate had initially been the gift of Charles Carroll of Carrollton, Maryland, a planter and signer of the Declaration of Independence, to his son Charles Carroll Jr. The original structure, the 1801 Homewood House, still stands and serves as an on-campus museum. The brick and marble Federal style of Homewood House became the architectural inspiration for much of the university campus versus the Collegiate Gothic style of other historic American universities.

In 1909, the university was among the first to start adult continuing education programs and in 1916 it founded the nation's first school of public health.

Since the 1910s, Johns Hopkins University has famously been a "fertile cradle" to Arthur Lovejoy's history of ideas.

Since 1942, the Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory (APL) has served as a major governmental defense contractor. In tandem with on-campus research, Johns Hopkins has every year since 1979 had the highest federal research funding of any American university.

Professional schools of international affairs and music were established in 1950 and 1977, respectively, when the School of Advanced International Studies in Washington, D.C., and the Peabody Institute in Baltimore were incorporated into the university.

21st century

The early decades of the 21st century saw expansion across the university's institutions in both physical and population sizes. Notably, a planned 88-acre expansion to the medical campus began in 2013. Completed construction on the Homewood campus has included a new biomedical engineering building in the Johns Hopkins University Department of Biomedical Engineering, a new library, a new biology wing, an extensive renovation of the flagship Gilman Hall, and the reconstruction of the main university entrance.

These years also brought about the rapid development of the university's professional schools of education and business. From 1999 until 2007, these disciplines had been joined within the School of Professional Studies in Business and Education (SPSBE), itself a reshuffling of several earlier ventures. The 2007 split, combined with new funding and leadership initiatives, has led to the simultaneous emergence of the Johns Hopkins School of Education and the Carey Business School.[[File:Legg mason tower.jpg|thumb|[[Legg Mason Tower]], home of the new [[Carey Business School]]]]On November 18, 2018, it was announced that Michael Bloomberg would make a donation to his alma mater of $1.8 billion, marking the largest private donation in modern history to an institution of higher education and bringing Bloomberg's total contribution to the school in excess of $3.3 billion. Bloomberg's $1.8 billion gift allows the school to practice need-blind admission and meet the full financial need of admitted students.

In January 2019, the university announced an agreement to purchase the Newseum, located at 555 Pennsylvania Ave. NW, in the heart of Washington, D.C., with plans to locate all of its Washington, D.C.–based graduate programs there. In an interview with The Atlantic, the president of Johns Hopkins stated that, "the purchase is an opportunity to position the university, literally, to better contribute its expertise to national- and international-policy discussions."

In late 2019, the university's Coronavirus Research Center began tracking worldwide cases of the COVID-19 pandemic by compiling data from hundreds of sources around the world. This led to the university becoming one of the most cited sources for data about the pandemic.

In November 2025, following the $1.8 billion gift from alumnus Michael Bloomberg in 2018, the university announced tuition-free plans, for current students in the spring 2026 semester and for new enrollees in the 2026-27 year who were from families earning less than $200,000, in support of making education available to all students based on merit and not means, and citing U.S. Census data showing that around 85% of American households would be eligible. For students from families earning under $100,000, additional aid would cover tuition, fees and living expenses, thus requiring no support from their families.

Johns Hopkins Police Department

In 2019, Johns Hopkins sought and received permission from the Maryland General Assembly to create a private police force to patrol in and around the three Baltimore campuses. The proposal generated opposition from students, faculty, and surrounding community associations. A resolution expressing concerns and raising questions about accountability and oversight of the proposed police department was unanimously passed by the Homewood Faculty Assembly. Protests culminated in a month-long sit-in and building occupation at Garland Hall, the university's administrative building, which ended after Baltimore Police surrounded the building and arrested the participants in May 2019.

Following the murder of George Floyd in 2020, thousands of faculty, staff, students, and community members petitioned the university to reconsider the department. In June 2020, university president Ronald J. Daniels announced a pause of at least two years in the development and implementation of the department.

As part of the agreement with the university on authorizing the police force, the Maryland General Assembly required the creation of a civilian accountability board and a memorandum of understanding (MOU) with the Baltimore Police Department. A draft MOU was released for public comment in September 2022 amidst continued protest and criticism regarding the university's engagement with the community. The finalized MOU, issued in December 2022, grants the Johns Hopkins Police Department primary jurisdiction over university-controlled property and adjacent public areas. Officer recruitment and training began in spring 2024, with active patrols commencing in summer 2024.

Second Trump Administration

Beginning in January 2025, federal funding cuts by the Trump administration's Department of Government Efficiency targeting the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) caused Johns Hopkins to lose $800 million in grants and forced the university to lay off thousands of employees and cancel research projects. In September, the university reported a total decline in research grants awarded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) by approximately 40% compared to the previous year and the termination of more than 80 existing grants, reducing the value of the university's research portfolio by $500 million. In response to these challenges, the university imposed a hiring freeze on new staff members, limited discretionary spending, and indefinitely paused wage increases for employees. After the Trump administration announced it would impose a cap of 15% on indirect or "overhead" research costs, which would reduce the university's research funding by $300 million annually, Johns Hopkins joined 40 other universities in a successful lawsuit seeking to reverse the change.

In February 2025, Leo Terrell, the head of the Trump administration's Task Force to Combat Antisemitism, announced that he would investigate Johns Hopkins University as part of the Department of Justice's broader investigation into antisemitism on college campuses. In July 2025, America First Legal founder, the Trump adviser and white nationalist Stephen Miller, requested that the assistant attorney general Harmeet K Dhillon and the justice department investigate "illegal" diversity, equity, and inclusion practices and "a discriminatory DEI regime as a core institutional mandate" in the university.

Civil rights

African-Americans

Hopkins was a prominent abolitionist who supported Abraham Lincoln during the American Civil War. After his death, reports said his conviction was a decisive factor in enrolling Hopkins's first African-American student, Kelly Miller, a graduate student in physics, astronomy and mathematics. As time passed, the university adopted a "separate but equal" stance more like other Baltimore institutions.

The first black undergraduate entered the school in 1945 and graduate students followed in 1967. James Nabwangu, a British-trained Kenyan, was the first black graduate of the medical school. African-American instructor and laboratory supervisor Vivien Thomas was instrumental in developing and conducting the first successful blue baby operation in 1944. Despite such cases, racial diversity did not become commonplace at Johns Hopkins institutions until the 1960s and 1970s.

Women

Hopkins's most well-known battle for women's rights was the one led by daughters of trustees of the university; Mary E. Garrett, M. Carey Thomas, Mamie Gwinn, Elizabeth King, and Julia Rogers. They donated and raised the funds needed to open the medical school, and required Hopkins's officials to agree to their stipulation that women would be admitted. The nursing school opened in 1889 and accepted women and men as students. Other graduate schools were later opened to women by president Ira Remsen in 1907. Christine Ladd-Franklin was the first woman to earn a PhD at Hopkins, in mathematics in 1882. The trustees denied her the degree for decades and refused to change the policy about admitting women. In 1893, Florence Bascomb became the university's first female PhD.

Freedom of speech

On September 5, 2013, cryptographer and Johns Hopkins university professor Matthew Green posted a blog entitled, "On the NSA", in which he contributed to the ongoing debate regarding the role of NIST and NSA in formulating U.S. cryptography standards. On September 9, 2013, Green received a take-down request for the "On the NSA" blog from interim Dean Andrew Douglas from the Johns Hopkins University Whiting School of Engineering. The request cited concerns that the blog had links to sensitive material. The blog linked to already published news articles from The Guardian, The New York Times, and ProPublica.org. Douglas subsequently issued a personal on-line apology to Green. The event raised concern over the future of academic freedom of speech within the cryptologic research community.

Campuses and divisions

**Main campuses & divisions**
**Homewood**
School of Arts and Sciences
1876

Homewood

Main article: Homewood Campus of Johns Hopkins University

language=en}}</ref>
  • Whiting School of Engineering: The Whiting School contains 14 undergraduate and graduate engineering programs and 12 additional areas of study.
  • Zanvyl Krieger School of Arts and Sciences: The Krieger School offers more than 60 undergraduate majors and minors and more than 40 graduate programs.

The School of Education has a building at the southern edge of the Homewood Campus, adjacent to Wyman Park Dell.

East Baltimore

Collectively known as Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions (JHMI) campus, the East Baltimore facility occupies several city blocks spreading from the Johns Hopkins Hospital trademark dome.

  • Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health: The Bloomberg School was founded in 1916 and is the world's oldest and largest school of public health. It has consistently been ranked first in its field by U.S. News & World Report.
  • School of Medicine: The School of Medicine is widely regarded as one of the best medical schools and biomedical research institutes in the world.
  • School of Nursing: The School of Nursing is one of America's oldest and pre-eminent schools for nursing education. It has consistently ranked first in the nation.

Mount Vernon

  • Peabody Institute: founded in 1857, is the oldest continuously active music conservatory in the United States; it became a division of Johns Hopkins in 1977. The Conservatory retains its own student body and grants degrees in musicology and performance, though all Hopkins and Peabody students may take courses at both institutions.

Harbor East

  • Carey Business School: The Carey Business School was established in 2007, incorporating divisions of the former School of Professional Studies in Business and Education. It was originally located on Charles Street, but relocated to the Legg Mason building in Harbor East in 2011.

Washington, D.C.

In 2019, Hopkins announced its purchase of the former Newseum building located at 555 Pennsylvania Avenue, three blocks from the United States Capitol, to house its Washington, D.C. programs and centers. In 2023, the building was officially reopened as the Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg Center, a 435,000-square-foot education facility that would house several divisions of the university.

  • School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS) is located in the Hopkins Bloomberg Center in Washington D.C., near the National Gallery of Art on Pennsylvania Avenue. In a 2024 survey, 65 percent of respondents ranked SAIS as a top 5 master's degree program in international relations, placing the program as the second-best in the nation. The Hopkins Bloomberg Center will also host programs within the Carey School of Business, Krieger School of Arts and Sciences, and Peabody Institute.

File:Johns Hopkins University - Bloomberg Center (53840479510).jpg|The Hopkins Bloomberg Center (Previously the Newseum)

Laurel, Maryland

The Applied Physics Laboratory (APL), in Laurel, Maryland, specializes in research for the U.S. Department of Defense, NASA, and other government and civilian research agencies. Among other projects, it has designed, built, and flown spacecraft for NASA to the asteroid Eros, and the planets Mercury and Pluto. It has developed more than 100 biomedical devices, many in collaboration with the Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions. Akin to the Washington, D.C. campus for the School of Arts and Sciences, APL also is the primary campus for master's degrees in a variety of STEM fields.

Other campuses

Domestic

  • Columbia, Maryland: branches of the Carey Business School and The School of Education
  • Montgomery County, Maryland, a campus for part-time programs in biosciences, engineering, business, and education

International

  • Hopkins–Nanjing Center
  • SAIS Europe - European campus of the School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS), located in Bologna, Italy

Organization

The Johns Hopkins entity is structured as two corporations, the university and The Johns Hopkins Health System, formed in 1986. The president is JHU's chief executive officer and the university is organized into nine academic divisions.

JHU's bylaws specify a board of trustees of between 18 and 65 voting members. Trustees serve six-year terms subject to a two-term limit. The alumni select 12 trustees. Four recent alumni serve 4-year terms, one per year, typically from the graduating class. The bylaws prohibit students, faculty or administrative staff from serving on the board, except the president as an ex-officio trustee. The Johns Hopkins Health System has a separate board of trustees, many of whom are doctors or health care executives.

Academics

The full-time, four-year undergraduate program is "most selective" with low transfer-in and a high graduate co-existence. The Princeton Review rates the selectivity of Johns Hopkins as 99/99. As of 2025, the cost of attendance per academic year without financial aid is approximately $89,000. However, 51% of full-time undergraduates receive financial aid covering 100% of their need. The admit rate of Hopkins undergraduates to medical school is 80% and to law school is 97%, some of the highest rates in the US. The university is one of fourteen founding members of the Association of American Universities (AAU); it is also a member of the Consortium on Financing Higher Education (COFHE) and the Universities Research Association (URA).

Rankings

As of 2025, Johns Hopkins University was ranked the 7th best university in the nation (tied) and 14th best globally by U.S. News & World Report.

InstitutionSpecializationUS RankSite
Johns Hopkins UniversityOverall7 (tie)U.S. News & World Report
Johns Hopkins UniversityPre-med2Prepscholar, Medicalaid (2021)
Zanvyl Krieger School of Arts and SciencesNeuroscience / Neurobiology4 (tie)U.S. News & World Report
Zanvyl Krieger School of Arts and SciencesMolecular Biology3 (tie)U.S. News & World Report
Zanvyl Krieger School of Arts and SciencesPhysics13 (tie)U.S. News & World Report
Whiting School of EngineeringBiomedical Engineering1 (tie)U.S. News & World Report
Whiting School of EngineeringComputer Science21U.S. News & World Report
Whiting School of EngineeringUndergraduate Engineering13 (tie)U.S. News & World Report
Johns Hopkins School of MedicineMedicine (Research)title=2023-2024 Best Medical Schools: Researchurl=https://www.usnews.com/best-graduate-schools/top-medical-schools/research-rankingsdate=April 25, 2023website=U.S. News & World Reportaccess-date=February 5, 2024archive-date=June 14, 2019archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190614043430/https://www.usnews.com/best-graduate-schools/top-medical-schools/research-rankingsurl-status=live }}U.S. News & World Report
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public HealthPublic Healthtitle=Best Public Health Schoolsurl=https://www.usnews.com/best-graduate-schools/top-health-schools/public-health-rankingsdate=April 25, 2023website=U.S. News & World Reportaccess-date=February 5, 2024archive-date=May 1, 2025archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20250501010324/https://www.usnews.com/best-graduate-schools/top-health-schools/public-health-rankingsurl-status=live }}U.S. News & World Report
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public HealthBiostatisticstitle=Best Biostatistics Programsurl=https://www.usnews.com/best-graduate-schools/top-science-schools/biostatistics-rankingsdate=April 25, 2023}}U.S. News & World Report
Johns Hopkins University School of NursingNursing (Master's)title=2023-2024 Best Nursing Schools: Master'surl=https://www.usnews.com/best-graduate-schools/top-nursing-schools/nur-rankingsdate=April 25, 2023website=U.S. News & World Reportaccess-date=February 5, 2024archive-date=November 5, 2023archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20231105025447/https://www.usnews.com/best-graduate-schools/top-nursing-schools/nur-rankingsurl-status=live }}U.S. News & World Report
Johns Hopkins University School of NursingDoctor of Nursing Practicetitle=2023-2024 Best Nursing Schools: Doctor of Nursing Practiceurl=https://www.usnews.com/best-graduate-schools/top-nursing-schools/dnp-rankingsdate=April 25, 2023website=U.S. News & World Reportaccess-date=February 5, 2024archive-date=February 22, 2018archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180222172832/https://www.usnews.com/best-graduate-schools/top-nursing-schools/dnp-rankingsurl-status=live }}U.S. News & World Report
Peabody InstituteMusic5Niche (2024)
School of Advanced International StudiesInternational Relations2Foreign Policy (2024)
Zanvyl Krieger School of Arts and SciencesHistory8 (tie)U.S. News & World

Undergraduate admissions

Johns Hopkins University
Class of 2029 Applicants
Class of 2029 Admitted (n, %)
SAT Range (middle 50th percentile, 2029 data)
ACT Range (middle 50th percentile, 2029 data)

The university's undergraduate programs are highly selective: in 2021, the Office of Admissions accepted about 4.9% of its 33,236 Regular Decision applicants and about 6.4% of its total 38,725 applicants. In 2022, 99% of admitted students graduated in the top 10% of their high school class. Over time, applications to Johns Hopkins University have risen steadily; as a result, the selectivity of Johns Hopkins University has also increased. Early Decision I is an option at Johns Hopkins University for students who wish to demonstrate that the university is their first choice. These students, if admitted, are required to enroll. This application is due November 1. There is also another binding Early Decision II application due January 3. Many students, however, apply Regular Decision, which is a traditional non-binding round. These applications are due January 3 and students are notified in mid-March. The cost to apply to Hopkins is $70, though fee waivers are available. In 2014, Johns Hopkins ended legacy preference in admissions. Johns Hopkins practices need-blind admission and meets the full financial need of all admitted students.

YearApplicantsGrowthAcceptance rateAcceptedEnrolledYield
2024title=Fast Factsurl=https://apply.jhu.edu/fast-facts/access-date=September 25, 2024website=Johns Hopkins University Admissionslanguage=en-USarchive-date=September 27, 2024archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240927065503/https://apply.jhu.edu/fast-facts/url-status=live }}+17.9%5.7%first=Rebeccalast=Kirkmandate=March 20, 2024title=Johns Hopkins invites 1,749 students to join its Class of 2028url=https://hub.jhu.edu/2024/03/20/johns-hopkins-class-of-2028-regular-decision/access-date=September 25, 2024website=The Hublanguage=enarchive-date=September 25, 2024archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240925184726/https://hub.jhu.edu/2024/03/20/johns-hopkins-class-of-2028-regular-decision/url-status=live }}1,288
2023title=Fast Factsurl=https://apply.jhu.edu/fast-facts/access-date=March 22, 2024website=Johns Hopkins University Admissionslanguage=en-USarchive-date=March 22, 2024archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240322004910/https://apply.jhu.edu/fast-facts/url-status=live }}+3.1%6.3%2,4031,306
202237,156-4.0%6.5%2,4071,310
202138,725+30.8%6.4%2,4761,336
202029,612-8.1%8.8%2,6041,300

Libraries

The Johns Hopkins University Library system houses more than 3.6 million volumes and includes ten main divisions across the university's campuses. The largest segment of this system is the Sheridan Libraries, encompassing the Milton S. Eisenhower Library (the main library of the Homewood campus), the Brody Learning Commons, the Hutzler Reading Room ("The Hut") in Gilman Hall, the John Work Garrett Library at Evergreen House, and the George Peabody Library at the Peabody Institute campus.

The main library, constructed in the 1960s, was named for Milton S. Eisenhower, former president of the university and brother of former U.S. president Dwight D. Eisenhower. The university's stacks had previously been housed in Gilman Hall and departmental libraries. Only two of the Eisenhower library's six stories are above ground, though the building was designed so that every level receives natural light. The design accords with campus lore that no structure can be taller than Gilman Hall, the flagship academic building. A four-story expansion to the library, known as the Brody Learning Commons, opened in August 2012. The expansion features an energy-efficient, state-of-the-art technology infrastructure and includes study spaces, seminar rooms, and a rare books collection.

Johns Hopkins University Press

Main article: Johns Hopkins University Press

The Johns Hopkins University Press is the publishing division of the Johns Hopkins University. It was founded in 1878 and holds the distinction of being the oldest continuously running university press in the United States. To date the Press has published more than 6,000 titles and currently publishes 65 scholarly periodicals and over 200 new books each year. Since 1993, the Johns Hopkins University Press has run Project MUSE, an online collection of over 250 full-text, peer-reviewed journals in the humanities and social sciences. The Press also houses the Hopkins Fulfilment Services (HFS), which handles distribution for a number of university presses and publishers. Taken together, the three divisions of the Press—Books, Journals (including MUSE) and HFS—make it one of the largest of America's university presses.

Center for Talented Youth

Main article: Center for Talented Youth

The Johns Hopkins University also offers the Center for Talented Youth program, a nonprofit organization dedicated to identifying and developing the talents of the most promising K-12 grade students worldwide. As part of the Johns Hopkins University, the "Center for Talented Youth" or CTY helps fulfill the university's mission of preparing students to make significant future contributions to the world. The Johns Hopkins Digital Media Center (DMC) is a multimedia lab space as well as an equipment, technology and knowledge resource for students interested in exploring creative uses of emerging media and use of technology.

Degrees offered

Johns Hopkins offers a number of degrees in various undergraduate majors leading to the BA and BS and various majors leading to the MA, MS and PhD for graduate students. Because Hopkins offers both undergraduate and graduate areas of study, many disciplines have multiple degrees available. Biomedical engineering, perhaps one of Hopkins's best-known programs, offers bachelor's, master's, and doctoral degrees.

Research

View of Mission Operations at the Applied Physics Laboratory in Laurel, Maryland

The opportunity to participate in important research is one of the distinguishing characteristics of Hopkins's undergraduate education. About 80 percent of undergraduates perform independent research, often alongside top researchers. In fiscal year 2020, Johns Hopkins spent nearly $3.1 billion on research, more than any other U.S. university for over 40 consecutive years. Johns Hopkins has had seventy-seven members of the Institute of Medicine, forty-three Howard Hughes Medical Institute Investigators, seventeen members of the National Academy of Engineering, and sixty-two members of the National Academy of Sciences. As of March 2025, 34 Nobel Prize winners have been affiliated with the university as alumni, faculty members or researchers, with the most recent winners being Gregg Semenza and William G. Kaelin.

Between 1999 and 2009, Johns Hopkins was among the most cited institutions in the world. It attracted nearly 1,222,166 citations and produced 54,022 papers under its name, ranking third globally after Harvard University and the Max Planck Society in the number of total citations published in Thomson Reuters-indexed journals over 22 fields in America. In 2020, Johns Hopkins University ranked 5 in number of utility patents granted out of all institutions in the world.

In 2000, Johns Hopkins received $95.4 million in research grants from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), making it the leading recipient of NASA research and development funding. In FY 2002, Hopkins became the first university to cross the $1 billion threshold on either list, recording $1.14 billion in total research and $1.023 billion in federally sponsored research. In FY 2008, Johns Hopkins University performed $1.68 billion in science, medical and engineering research, making it the leading U.S. academic institution in total R&D spending for the 30th year in a row, according to a National Science Foundation (NSF) ranking. These totals include grants and expenditures of JHU's Applied Physics Laboratory in Laurel, Maryland.

In 2013, the Bloomberg Distinguished Professorships program was established by a $250 million gift from Michael Bloomberg. This program enables the university to recruit fifty researchers from around the world to joint appointments throughout the nine divisions and research centers. Each professor must be a leader in interdisciplinary research and be active in undergraduate education. Directed by Vice Provost for Research Denis Wirtz, there are currently thirty two Bloomberg Distinguished Professors at the university, including three Nobel Laureates, eight fellows of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, ten members of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and thirteen members of the National Academies.

Research centers and institutes

Divisional

  • School of Medicine (28)
  • School of Public Health (70)
  • School of Nursing (2)
  • School of Arts and Sciences (27)
  • School of Advanced International Studies (17)
  • School of Engineering (16)
  • School of Education (3)
  • School of Business
  • Applied Physics Laboratory

Others

  • Berman Institute of Bioethics
  • Center for a Livable Future
  • Center for Talented Youth
  • Graduate Program in Public Management
  • Johns Hopkins Institute for Policy Studies
  • Institute for Applied Economics, Global Health, and the Study of Business Enterprise
  • Space Telescope Science Institute

Student life

Race and ethnicityTotalEconomic diversity
Asian{{bartable29%2background:purple}}
White{{bartable20%2background:gray}}
Hispanic{{bartable19%2background:green}}
Foreign national{{bartable15%2background:orange}}
Other{{bartable9%2background:brown}}
Black{{bartable8%2background:mediumblue}}
Low-income{{bartable20%2background:red}}
Affluent{{bartable80%2background:black}}

Charles Village, the region of North Baltimore surrounding the university, has undergone several restoration projects, and the university has gradually bought the property around the school for additional student housing and dormitories. The Charles Village Project, completed in 2008, brought new commercial spaces to the neighborhood. The project included Charles (now Scott-Bates) Commons, a new, modern residence hall that includes popular retail franchises. In 2015, the university began development of new commercial properties, including a modern upperclassmen apartment complex, restaurants and eateries, and a CVS retail store.

Hopkins invested in improving campus life with an arts complex in 2001, the Mattin Center, and a three-story sports facility, the O'Connor Recreation Center. The large on-campus dining facilities at Homewood were renovated in the summer of 2006. The Mattin Center was demolished in 2021 to make room for the new Student Center scheduled to open in the fall of 2024.

Quality of life is enriched by the proximity of neighboring academic institutions, including Loyola College, Maryland Institute College of Art (MICA), UMBC, Goucher College, and Towson University, as well as the nearby neighborhoods of Hampden, the Inner Harbor, Fells Point, and Mount Vernon.

Students and alumni are active on and off campus. Johns Hopkins has been home to several secret societies, many of which are now defunct. Blue Jay Supper Society is the only active secret society with open applications. Membership is open to undergraduate and graduate students as well as alumni.

Student organizations

Main article: List of Johns Hopkins University student organizations

Fraternity and sorority life

Fraternity and sorority life came to Hopkins in 1876 with the chartering of Beta Theta Pi fraternity, which still exists on campus today. As of Spring 2025, Johns Hopkins is home to seven social fraternities and five social sororities, as well as ten culturally-based sororities and fraternities. The seven social fraternities at Hopkins all belong to the national North-American Interfraternity Conference and are locally governed by the Interfraternity Council (IFC). The five social sororities at Hopkins belong to the National Panhellenic Conference and are locally governed by the Panhellenic Association at Johns Hopkins. Alpha Phi Alpha, a historically black fraternity, was founded in 1991, Lambda Phi Epsilon, an Asian-interest fraternity, was founded in 1994, and Lambda Upsilon Lambda, a Latino-interest fraternity, was founded in 1995. Rush for all students occurs in the spring. Most fraternities keep houses in the nearby Charles Village or Oakenshawe neighborhoods, while sororities do not.

Traditions

While it has been speculated that Johns Hopkins has relatively few traditions for a school of its age and that many past traditions have been forgotten, a handful of myths and customs are ubiquitous knowledge among the community. One such long-standing myth surrounds the university seal that is embedded into the floor of the Gilman Hall foyer. The myth holds that any current student to step on the seal will never graduate. In reverence for this tradition, the seal has been fenced off from the rest of the room.

An annual winter event is the "Lighting of the Quads", a ceremony each winter during which the campus is lit up in holiday lights. Recent years have included singing and fireworks.

The Spring Fair has been a Johns Hopkins tradition since 1972 and has since grown to be the largest student-run festival in the country. Popular among Hopkins students and Baltimore inhabitants alike, the Spring Fair features carnival rides, vendors, food and a beer garden. Since its beginning, Spring the fair has decreased in size, both in regard to attendance and utilization of space.

Housing

Living on campus is typically required for first- and second-year undergraduates. Freshman housing is centered around Freshman Quad, which consists of three residence hall complexes: The two Alumni Memorial Residences (AMR I and AMR II) plus Buildings A and B. The AMR dormitories are each divided into houses, subunits named for figures from the university's early history. Freshmen are also housed in Wolman Hall and in certain wings of McCoy Hall, both located slightly outside the campus. Dorms at Hopkins are generally co-ed with same-gender rooms, though a new policy has allowed students to live in mixed-gender rooms since Fall 2014.

Students determine where they will live during sophomore year through a housing lottery. Sophomores in university housing occupy one of four buildings: McCoy Hall, the Bradford Apartments, the Homewood Apartments, and Scott-Bates Commons.

Most juniors and seniors move into nearby apartments or row-houses. Most are located in the neighboring Charles Village community. Forty-five percent of the student body lives off-campus while 55% lives on campus.

Athletics

Main article: Johns Hopkins Blue Jays

Johns Hopkins athletics wordmark

The university's athletic teams are the Johns Hopkins Blue Jays. Even though sable and gold are used for academic robes, the university's athletic colors are spirit blue (PMS 284) and black. Hopkins celebrates Homecoming in the spring to coincide with the height of the lacrosse season. The men's and women's lacrosse teams are in National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I and are affiliate members of the Big Ten Conference. Other teams are in Division III and participate in the Centennial Conference. JHU is also home to the Lacrosse Museum and National Hall of Fame, maintained by US Lacrosse.

The school's most prominent team is its men's lacrosse team. The team has won 44 national titles, nine NCAA Division I titles in 2007, 2005, 1987, 1985, 1984, 1980, 1979, 1978, and 1974, and 29 USILA championships, and six Intercollegiate Lacross Association (ILA) titles.

Notable people

Main article: List of Johns Hopkins University people

As of October 2019, prominent Johns Hopkins faculty and alumni include 29 Nobel laureates, 23 Rhodes Scholars, a Fields Medalist, a president of the United States, and two heads of government of foreign countries.

Notable alumni

As the first American university dedicated towards a research mission, Johns Hopkins was among the earliest institutions in the U.S. to grant doctorates and trained many scholars who later became leaders in their fields, including biologist Thomas Hunt Morgan, who received the Nobel Prize for identifying chromosomes as the mechanical basis of heredity; pragmatist philosopher and psychologist John Dewey; Florence Bascom, considered the "first woman geologist in America"; mathematician John Charles Fields, the namesake of Fields Medal; historian Frederick Jackson Turner, who developed the "frontier thesis"; theoretical physicist John A. Wheeler, who was credited with coining the term "black hole"; and Civil War historian James M. McPherson.

The School of Medicine, founded in 1893, served as a model for modern medical education and is considered one of the leading centers for medical research and innovation in the United States. Its notable graduates include cardiothoracic surgeon Denton Cooley, who performed the first total artificial heart implantation; biotechnologist and inventor Leroy "Lee" Hood; "father of medical genetics" Victor McKusick; pioneering brain surgeon Wilder Penfield; Dorothy Reed Mendenhall, who discovered the Reed-Sternberg cells that characterize Hodgkin lymphoma; and Rochelle Walensky, CDC Director during the COVID-19 pandemic. Modernist poet and novelist Gertrude Stein spent four years at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, but left before completing her degree.

Many Hopkins alumni have entered politics and government. Alumni in the 119th Congress include Representatives Lauren Underwood, Andy Harris, Sara Elfreth, and Kweisi Mfume. Four U.S. Senators, Daniel Brewster, George L.P. Radcliffe, and John Marshall Butler of Maryland and Rudy Boschwitz of Minnesota have studied at Hopkins.

Woodrow Wilson, the first and only U.S. President to hold a doctoral degree, received his Ph.D. in history from Johns Hopkins in 1890. 39th vice president and Governor of Maryland (1967–1969) Spiro Agnew studied chemistry at Hopkins. Cabinet-level officials who attended Johns Hopkins include Secretary of War Newton D. Baker, Surgeon General Antonia Novello, Attorney General Benjamin Civiletti, Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner.

In state and local politics, alumni include Maryland Governor Wes Moore , Lieutenant Governor and Republican National Committee chair Michael Steele, former Baltimore Mayor Sheila Dixon and current president of the Baltimore City Council Zeke Cohen.

Johns Hopkins has produced many diplomats and foreign affairs experts, especially due to the influence of the School of Advanced International Studies, founded in 1943. Students at SAIS have included Madeleine Albright, the first woman to serve as U.S. Secretary of Stateand John Hamre, president and CEO of the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS). State Department official Alger Hiss, who was accused of spying for the Soviet Union by Whittaker Chambers, attended Hopkins as an undergraduate.

In business and finance, Hopkins' alumni include Bloomberg, L.P. founder and Mayor of New York City (2002–2013) Mike Bloomberg, stockbroker and Merrill Lynch co-founder Edmund C. Lynch, Liberty Media chairman and owner John C. Malone, former IBM CEO Samuel J. Palmisano, and former T. Rowe Price CEO and chairman Bill Stromberg.

The Writing Seminars at Johns Hopkins is the second-oldest creative writing program in the nation, and has produced such notable writers as post-colonialist Nigerian author Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, Pulitzer Prize for Fiction winners John Barth and Louise Erdrich, journalist and The Rape of Nanking (1997) author Iris Chang, and jazz poet Gil Scott-Heron.

In television and journalism, alumni include CNN anchor Wolf Blitzer, senior Washington correspondent for NBC Hallie Jackson; political satirist and writer PJ O'Rourke, and Pulitzer Prize-winning New York Times columnist Russell Baker.

In the arts and entertainment, notable alumni include The Addams Family actor John Astin, cinematographer and six-time Academy Award nominee Caleb Deschanel, and horror film director Wes Craven, best known for the A Nightmare on Elm Street franchise and the cult classic films The Last House on the Left (1972) and The Hills Have Eyes (1977) .

In athletics, Johns Hopkins is primarily known for its long and historically dominant lacrosse tradition. Many of the most influential figures in the early history of the sport played at Hopkins, including the namesakes of the NCAA's Schmeisser Award for defensemen and Jack Turnbull Award for best attackman. More recent graduates of the men's lacrosse program include Premier Lacrosse League founder Paul Rabil and Tewaaraton Award winnerKyle Harrison, both considered among the greatest players of their generation. In other sports, Wes Unseld Jr., assistant coach for the NBA's Chicago Bulls and former Washington Wizards head coach, played college basketball at Hopkins.

Nobel laureates

Main article: List of Nobel laureates affiliated with Johns Hopkins University

, there have been 34 Nobel Laureates affiliated with Johns Hopkins as students, faculty, or researchers. Woodrow Wilson, who received his PhD from Johns Hopkins in 1886, was the university's first affiliated laureate, winning the Nobel Peace Prize in 1919.

Eighteen Johns Hopkins affiliates have won the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine. Four Nobel Prizes were shared by Johns Hopkins laureates: George Minot and George Whipple won the 1934 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, Joseph Erlanger and Herbert Spencer Gasser won the 1944 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, Daniel Nathans and Hamilton O. Smith won the 1978 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, and David H. Hubel and Torsten N. Wiesel won the 1981 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine.

Four Johns Hopkins affiliates have won Nobel Prizes in Physics: James Franck in 1925, Maria Goeppert-Mayer in 1963, Riccardo Giacconi in 2002, Bloomberg Distinguished Professor Adam Riess in 2011.

Bloomberg Distinguished Professor Peter Agre was awarded the 2003 Nobel Prize in Chemistry (which he shared with Roderick MacKinnon) for his discovery of aquaporins. Bloomberg Distinguished Professor Carol Greider was awarded the 2009 Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine, along with Elizabeth Blackburn and Jack W. Szostak, for their discovery that telomeres are protected from progressive shortening by the enzyme telomerase.

Notes

References

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