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Dr. Jane Cooke Wright

Born 1919 · Joined the Ancestors 2013
Fact
Pioneered chemotherapy drug testing on tissue cultures
Fact
Co-founded the American Society of Clinical Oncology
Fact
Highest-ranking Black woman in US medical school administration in 1967

Dr. Jane Cooke Wright pioneered the use of chemotherapy to treat cancer at a time when the field barely existed — and she did it as a Black woman in a medical establishment that doubted both her race and her gender at every turn. Her research on the drug methotrexate led to breakthroughs in treating breast cancer, skin cancer, and leukemia. She developed techniques for testing anticancer drugs on human tissue cultures rather than on patients, transforming cancer treatment from guesswork into science.

Born in New York City in 1919 into a family of physicians — her father, Louis Tompkins Wright, was the first Black surgeon on staff at a New York City hospital — Wright earned her medical degree from New York Medical College in 1945. She joined her father's research at Harlem Hospital and quickly surpassed him, becoming one of the leading cancer researchers in the world.

In 1964, Wright co-founded the American Society of Clinical Oncology, the organization that would come to define modern cancer medicine. She was named associate dean of New York Medical College in 1967 — the highest-ranking Black woman in American medical school administration at the time. Her work saved millions of lives and established the scientific framework that modern oncology is built upon.

You have to keep plugging away. Everyone gets knocked down, but the key is to get back up again.
— Dr. Jane Cooke Wright
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Key Milestones

A Life in Firsts

1919
Born November 30 in New York City
1945
Earns medical degree from New York Medical College
1949
Joins cancer research at Harlem Hospital alongside her father
1964
Co-founds the American Society of Clinical Oncology
1967
Named associate dean of New York Medical College — highest-ranking Black woman in medical school administration
2013
Joined the ancestors at age 93

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