Salt Lake City — The University of Utah today announced a landmark gift of $110 million for its School of Medicine from the George S. and Dolores Doré Eccles Foundation and the Nora Eccles Treadwell Foundation.
The gift will further accelerate the nationally recognized school’s ability to provide the highest quality medical education, advanced research, and patient care, dramatically increasing the school’s endowment and powering critical research. It will also enable the construction of a state-of-the-art new home for the School of Medicine on the health sciences campus.
President Emerita Ruth V. Watkins, Ph.D., and Interim President Michael Good, M.D., announced that the university would rename the school the Spencer Fox Eccles School of Medicine at the University of Utah. The naming acknowledges not only this gift, but the lifetime of leadership, vision, and advocacy of Mr. Eccles, chairman and CEO of the two foundations awarding the grant.
“Through leadership spanning more than five decades, the Eccles family has shaped the University of Utah with remarkable breadth and depth—especially within the health sciences,” Dr. Watkins says. “In particular, Spence has been a leading champion. He has passionately built upon his family’s legacy to advance the University of Utah School of Medicine into a top-tier integrated academic medical institution. Today, he and his family foundations make their boldest and most forward-looking investment for the health of all Utahns. For these reasons and more, we are honored to have the School of Medicine bear his name.”
“This gift sets the course for the future of the School of Medicine,” Dr. Good adds. “Medical education has advanced significantly in recent decades as new discoveries and technologies emerge. At the same time, the state of Utah is experiencing a need for more physicians, particularly in rural areas. This gift presents a unique opportunity: we will provide the most advanced education to raise new generations of health care professionals who will, in turn, improve health for our state and region. Our newly named school will join the ranks of the nation’s preeminent named institutions. We will not just adapt to the future of medicine—we will define it.”
The timing of the gift also holds special meaning for the School of Medicine and Eccles. Fifty years ago, a building named for his father opened its doors. The Spencer S. Eccles Health Sciences Library was the first significant capital project at the university to be funded by the Eccles family. Since then, the younger Eccles has dramatically expanded his family’s vision. The Eccles family and associated charitable foundations have supported the School of Medicine and health sciences in areas spanning cardiovascular and genetics research, nursing, ophthalmology, orthopedics, pharmacology, critical care, and more.
“I have long believed that no state or region can become truly great without a world-class medical center at its nucleus,” Eccles says. “We hope this seminal grant—the largest ever awarded by our foundations—will help ensure the university not only provides the highest quality medical education for the doctors who serve Utah and the entire Intermountain West but also furthers the excellence of health care for all our citizens and impacts the future of medicine through its groundbreaking research.”
The University of Utah has long been a special place for Eccles. An Ogden, Utah native, he arrived on campus in the early 1950s and quickly adapted to campus life. His success as a four-year letterman and All American on the U’s ski team and his active participation in the Beta Theta Pi fraternity set an early precedent for his later renown as a Utah Man. It was also at the U where he met Cleone Peterson of Fairview, Utah, who would become his wife of more than 54 years before her passing in 2013. Sharing Cleone’s unwavering spirit of community and generosity and valuing her rural Utah roots, these tenets have become the cornerstones of Mr. Eccles’ philanthropy.
Hailing from a long tradition of generosity, he once wrote, “I was fortunate to be born into a family that believes in the importance of giving back and doing our best to leave things better than we found them. I was also taught that we can make an even greater impact by joining together with others.”
For nearly two decades, Eccles led the Eccles family’s banking empire at First Security Bank until its historic merger with Wells Fargo in 2000. Throughout his career, Eccles and his businesses have become recognized for focusing on going above and beyond in delivering exceptional quality and service.
“Since ‘Giving 110 percent’ has been a legacy theme during my leadership of First Security Bank, this $110 million grant takes on special meaning for all of us,” Eccles says. “It’s an investment in the future of our fellow citizens—particularly in the medical students today and those to follow—who will have opportunities to practice medicine in innovative ways never before imagined, committing themselves ‘110 percent’ to improving and saving lives!”
Dr. Good praised that philanthropic spirit. “The University of Utah—and the School of Medicine in particular—would not be the institution it is today without the visionary support of the Eccles foundations and families, and especially Mr. Eccles,” Dr. Good says. “Today, he defines the next century for this institution and our great state. On behalf of the current and future generations of caregivers to pass through our halls, I express our profound gratitude. The name Spencer Fox Eccles will forever be identified with healing, discovery, optimism, and compassion.”
University of Utah Health is the only academic medical center in the Intermountain West, providing patient care for nearly 10 percent of the geographic area of the continental United States. This gift will catalyze the most critical evolution in the School of Medicine’s history and be used across three primary areas: education, research, and facilities.
The gift includes $40 million for endowment, which will enrich student scholarships, recruitment of top-flight faculty, and innovative medical education programs; $40 million for research, focused on cardiovascular science and heart disease; and $30 million for a new, state-of-the-art School of Medicine building. These resources will allow the School of Medicine to develop innovations in health care delivery (especially for rural and underserved populations), advances in teaching models and timelines, and, eventually, make future increases in the size of the medical school class possible. The health and well-being of Utahns and citizens in the Intermountain West will benefit from every aspect of the gift.
“This is a defining moment for the School of Medicine at the University of Utah,” Dr. Good adds. “The opportunity before us now is to achieve preeminence—in our people, programs, and facilities. We are confident this gift will bring better health for the people of Utah and beyond by preparing the highest-caliber medical students for the challenges of the future. We also believe it will lead to path-breaking research that will improve care, extend life expectancy and function, restore health, and enhance quality of life.”