Eleanor Mears
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9 December 1917
Campaigner
Eleanor Mears | |
|---|---|
| Born | Ellen Cowie Loudon 9 December 1917 |
| Died | 18 May 1992 (aged 74) Sleaford, Lincolnshire, England |
| Occupation(s) | Medical practitioner Campaigner |
| Years active | 1940–1992 |
Eleanor Cowie [Ellen Cowie] Mears (née Loudon; 9 December 1917 – 18 May 1992) was a Scottish medical practitioner and campaigner. She began working in the medical practice when she took over the London practice of a male doctor who was enlisted for the war effort. Mears became popular with the women in her cachement area who discussed their gynaelogocial problems in a way they could not do so with male doctors. She later moved to Christchurch, New Zealand after the Second World War before returning to London in 1954 and becoming the Family Planning Association's first medical secretary and was then made the Planned Parenthood Federation's medical secretary. Mears was a fellow of both the Royal Society of Medicine and the Society for Endocrinology and was a medical campaigner on abortion and euthanasia issues.
On 9 December 1917, Mears was born in Willowbank, Cleland, North Lanarkshire,[1] in Scotland.[2] Her family was the Loudon family, who were successful builders in the local area.[3] Mears was the second of three children to the builder William Loudon, and his wife Helen Cowie, née Robertson. She was intended to be christened Ellen but the name was misheard and the name was put as Helen on her birth certificate instead. Between 1924 and 1930, Mears attended school in Cleland before moving to Wishaw High School until 1935.[1] She went on to study medicine at the University of Edinburgh despite her parents believing a woman should not be working in the medical profession.[3] Mears was a popular and prominent student, holding left-wing political views. She was a member of the Student Christian Movement, occasionally preached in the Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh, and played golf and hockey for the University of Edinburgh. In mid-1940, Mears graduated MB ChB.[1]