Charitable Giving Form - Johns Hopkins Medicine 2025

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Michael Bloombergs $1 billion gift to Johns Hopkins Medical School guarantees the money goes where its needed most, but it also ensures education remains a commodity. Students are still consumers paying for a service.
The university was named for its first benefactor, the American entrepreneur and Quaker philanthropist Johns Hopkins. Hopkinss $7 million bequest (equivalent to $162 million in 2023) to establish the university was the largest philanthropic gift in U.S. history up to that time.
Americas four medical schools belonging to historically black colleges and universities (HBCUs) have been gifted $600m (473m; 550m) by Michael Bloomberg, the former New York mayor and billionaire founder of the financial technology and media company Bloomberg LP.
This new $1 billion gift from Johns Hopkins alumnus Michael R. Bloomberg, founder of Bloomberg Philanthropies and Bloomberg L.P., will secure graduate financial aid at Johns Hopkins in perpetuity. As a result of the gift our School of Medicine will be free for most medical school students.
Mike Bloomberg, the media mogul and former New York City mayor, has given Johns Hopkins University $1 billion to eliminate tuition for most of its current and future medical students, the school and Bloomberg Philanthropies announced on July 8.
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Beginning in the fall of 2024, Johns Hopkins will offer full cost-of-attendance financial aid packages (including tuition, living expenses, and fees) for medical students whose families earn less than $175,000. Additionally, families earning less than $300,000 will receive scholarships that cover the cost of tuition.
What kind of gifts does Johns Hopkins accept? We accept gifts of cash, checks, credit card transactions, and publicly traded securities, in addition to gifts managed by donor advised funds. Gifts of real estate, cultural property, and other types of gifts in kind are generally evaluated before accepted.

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