It depends whether you add the word "successfully" to your question or not. Here's a timeline: http://www.wellcomecollection.org/whats-on/events/in-or-out/transplant-timeline.aspx It includes "successful" and "unsuccessful" attempts at transplanting things.
The first organ transplant occurred in 1954, when Ronald Lee Herrick donated one of his kidneys to his brother, Richard. The surgery was led by Dr. Joseph Murray, who later won a Nobel prize for developing the surgical technique regarding kidney transplants. The surgery took place in Boston, Massachusetts.
1954, kidney transplant between two male identical twins.
The cornea in 1905.
The kidney
The Kidney
kidney
kidney
A heart.
A kidney.
A kidney.
The first successful organ transplant occurred in 1954, when a man donated one of his kidneys to his twin brother.
A kidney
A kidney
kidney
worldwide- the kidney
The first successful organ to be transplanted was a kidney. In 1954, a man donated one of his kidneys to his twin brother.
The first successful organ to be transplanted was a kidney. In 1954, a man donated one of his kidneys to his twin brother.
Heart, kidneys, lungs, liver, pancreas, corneas, and small intestine are all commonly transplanted. Almost everything can be transplanted, it's whether the transplant is "successful" that's the problem. Brains are never successfully transplanted. Faces are only just successful. Limbs can be but usually are not, since they are not essential for life. It is whether the organ is essential for life that dictates whether it is commonly transplanted or not.