 
First Female MD
Dr. Elizabeth Blackwell (1821 - 1910) was born in
England, and grew up in Cincinnati where she moved in 1937. She graduated from the Geneva Medical College in
western New York in 1849, becoming the first woman doctor in the United States.
As a child, Blackwell was educated by tutors.
After her father died, she and her family operated a private school, where
Blackwell found herself more and more interested in medicine. At the time,
it was unheard of for a woman to consider a medical career, but that didn't
stop Blackwell. She felt strongly that women deserved to have the option
of seeing a woman doctor, who might best be able to understand a woman's unique makeup.
In 1847, Blackwell started on a quest to earn a
medical degree. It was difficult to find a school willing to accept her,
however. She was rejected by 29 medical schools. Some schools thought her
application was a joke. Others were shocked that a woman would consider
applying. Her persistence won out though, when she was finally accepted into
Geneva Medical College in western New York in 1847. A fellow classmate described
the scene as Blackwell arrived at her first class in medical school: "A hush
fell over the class as if each member had been stricken with paralysis...A
death-like stillness prevailed during the lecture." Blackwell graduated first in
her class.
During her career which spanned several
countries, Elizabeth Blackwell published many books. Among them:
- The Religion of Health (1871)
- Counsel to Parents on the Moral Education of
Their Children (1878)
- The Human Element in Sex (1884)
- Pioneer Work in Opening the Medical
Profession to Women (1895)
- Essays in Medical Sociology (1902)
Blackwell also founded a hospital in New York
entirely staffed by women in 1857. It ran for over thirty years, but she was
drawn to England, and returned there in 1869, where she helped
organize the
National Health Society and founded the London School of Medicine for Women.
In
1875, Blackwell was appointed professor of gynecology at the London School of
Medicine for Children. While in England, Blackwell lectured extensively and was
the first woman to have her name entered in the British Medical Register.
One of Blackwell's best-known quotes sums up
her determination, "If society will not admit of woman's free development, then
society must be remodeled."
Photos, copies of her letters of admission to
medical school, and more information about Elizabeth Blackwell are available at
the
National Institutes of
Health website.

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