Bristol-Myers Squibb Co.

History

YearDetail
1887 BRISTOL-MYERS SQUIBB CO. was founded as CLINTON PHARMACEUTICALS.
1892 Dr. Squibb forms a partnership with his sons, Edward and Charles, and the firm is renamed E.R Squibb & Sons.
1895 First breakthrough a product called Sal Hepatica salts, marketed as a tonic and laxative.
1899 Bristol and Myers rename their business the Bristol, Myers Company, which outgrows its home in Clinton, New York. The company relocates — first to Syracuse and then, in 1899, to Brooklyn to better serve customers in New England and Pennsylvania.
1901 Bristol-Myers introduces Ipana toothpaste, featuring a disinfectant to prevent tooth decay and gum disease. 
1902 E.R. Squibb & Sons establishes its first quality-control laboratory.
1905 E.R. Squibb & Sons purchases an ether manufacturing plant in what was then the wilds of New Brunswick, New Jersey. 
1914 Squibb Biological Laboratories division produces antitoxins, serums and vaccines.
1917 E.R. Squibb & Sons pioneers the standardization of digitalis, derived from the foxglove plant as an early treatment for heart conditions.
1919 The company expands westward by opening a distribution center in Chicago, and also organizes an export department in Brooklyn.
1938 Established Squibb Institute for Medical Research in New Brunswick, New Jersey.
1943 Bristol-Myers acquires Cheplin Laboratories in Syracuse, New York, enabling it to mass produce penicillin during World War II. This marks the company’s entry into ethical drug development. 
1944 Squibb opens the world’s largest penicillin production facility in New Brunswick, New Jersey.
1948 Bristol Laboratories introduces Flo-Cillin 96, a long-lasting injectable penicillin and also introduced Bufferin, a new pain reliever.
1956 Bristol-Myers enters the cancer drug development field,  building on collaborations around promising antibiotics with the Microbial Chemistry Research Foundation of Japan.
1959 Bristol-Myers acquires the hair-coloring company Clairol, which was founded in 1931 by Joan and Lawrence M. Gelb. Their son, Richard L. Gelb.
1966 Bristol-Myers Products research and development laboratories in Hillside, New Jersey.
1967 Bristol-Myers acquires Mead Johnson.
1971 Squibb establishes worldwide headquarters in Princeton, New Jersey.
1974 Bristol Laboratories introduces cancer chemotherapy agent Blenoxane.
1983 The FDA approves Bristol Laboratories VePesid.
1989 Bristol-Myers merges with Squibb, creating a global leader in the health care industry. 
1991 FDA approves TAXOL.
1997 Bristol-Myers Squibb opens a 433-acre research campus in Hopewell, New Jersey.  
1998 President Bill Clinton awards the National Medal of Technology — America’s highest honor for technological innovation — to Bristol-Myers Squibb.
1999 The Bristol Myers Squibb Foundation announces SECURE THE FUTURE.
2001 The Bristol-Myers Squibb Children’s Hospital opens as part of Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital in New Brunswick, New Jersey. 
2001 Acquired DuPont pharmaceuticals.
2008 Celgene and Accerleron Pharma announce research collaboration to develop therapies for cancer and other rare diseases. 
2009 Bristol Myers Squibb acquires Medarex, Inc.
2010 Celgene and Agios Pharmaceutical, Inc. announce global strategic collaboration focused on targeting cancer metabolism.
2018 Celgene gains INREBIC (fedratinib) from IMPACT BioMedicines purchase. 
2018 The acquisition contributes to Celgene’s stature as a premier cellular immunotherapy. 
2019 European Commission approves combination regimen for REVLIMID (lenalidomide) and Imnovid (pomalidomide). 
2019 Bristol-Myers Squibb  acquired Celgene.
2020 Bristol Myers Squibb acquires MyoKardia.
2021 Bristol Myers Squibb and Eisai announce global strategic collaboration for Eisai’s antibody drug conjugate.
2022 Bristol Myers Squibb acquires Turning Point Therapeutics.