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Cathedral of Learning

Pittsburghers line up for vaccinations in the Cathedral of Learning
Commons Room on February 26, 1957.
Photo courtesy March of Dimes

Celebrating the 50th Anniversary of the Salk Polio Vaccine University of Pittsburgh

To celebrate the 50th anniversary of the Salk polio vaccine, the University of Pittsburgh is planning many events, including a commemorative reception on April 10 and a scientific symposium on April 11–12. Please continue to check this site for updates and more specific information about these activities.

Want to receive an invitation to the community celebration? Click here to submit your contact information.

Want to attend the scientific symposium?
Click here to register.

In some ways, the fear of polio was as terrifying as the disease itself. When the epidemic in the United States peaked in 1952, polio had struck nearly 58,000 people—mainly children and young adults. The most critically ill were confined to a mechanical ventilator known as an iron lung, robbed of their ability to breathe on their own. Others escaped on crutches, crippled but not paralyzed. Panic was pandemic. It is almost impossible to exaggerate the terror that polio caused at the time.

The initial breakthrough that led to the eventual eradication of polio throughout most of the world is credited to Dr. Jonas Salk and his team of researchers at the University of Pittsburgh, who developed the first polio vaccine. In April 1955, when the results of an unprecedented nationwide clinical trial were announced and the vaccine was approved for widespread public use, Newsweek reported: “It was a summit moment in history. None before it in the field of medicine ever received such dramatic affirmation, instant public comprehension, and official blessing.”

It is the 50th anniversary of that milestone—and the people who made it happen—that we remember and celebrate this year.

For more information, contact us at 412-383-7255. For site problems, please email alively@hs.pitt.edu.