Ella Blaylock Atherton

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Born
Ella Blaylock

January 4, 1860
DiedSeptember 4, 1933(1933-09-04) (aged 73)
Citizenship
British
Ella Blaylock Atherton
Born
Ella Blaylock

January 4, 1860
DiedSeptember 4, 1933(1933-09-04) (aged 73)
Citizenship
British
EducationQueen's University
OccupationPhysician

Ella Blaylock Atherton (January 4, 1860 – September 4, 1933) was a British-born American physician. Atherton was the first woman in the province of Quebec to earn a diploma in medicine from a Canadian institution. She was the first woman admitted to a medical society in the U.S. state of Vermont, the first to be president of a local medical society in New Hampshire, and the first woman to perform abdominal surgery in New Hampshire.

Ella Blaylock was born January 4, 1860, in Ulverston, Lancashire, England. She was the daughter of William and Margaret Blaylock (née Schollick),[1] and granddaughter of Thomas Blaylock.[2]

Atherton was educated by private tutors, and also at Georgeville Academy and McGill Normal School in Montreal. She graduated with honors from McGill Normal School in 1881.[citation needed]

Atherton's desire to study medicine was reportedly met with opposition from all of her friends except her mother. She therefore decided to educate herself, serving for two years as principal of Mansonville Academy in Quebec, and tutoring during her whole college course. While there, she studied medicine with Dr. J. McMillan, of Mansonville.[citation needed]

The following year, Atherton entered a medical school at Kingston, Ontario. Her first course of lectures was at the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons, where she studied alongside male students. Much friction resulted, leading to the founding of the Woman's Medical College, affiliated with Queen's University, Kingston. At the women's college, Atherton attended three courses of lectures, and earned diplomas in medicine and surgery from Queen's University in 1887.[1] (Margaret Amelia Corlis had graduated in 1885.[3])

While in college, Atherton served assistant demonstrator of anatomy for one year, and later for one year had led the practical anatomy class. Atherton was the first woman in the province of Quebec,[1] and the eighth in Canada, to earn a diploma in medicine from a Canadian institution.[2]

Career

In 1887, Atherton was refused a license to practise in Quebec due to her gender. Her experience is of interest from the fact that three years later, 1890, the census gave 3,555 women physicians in the United States. She was also physician in charge, for six months, to the Kingston City Dispensary.[2]

During the year following her graduation, Atherton moved to Newport, Vermont to practice medicine. She later practiced in Nashua, New Hampshire. Her papers from 1898 onwards are held at Dartmouth College.[4]

Beginning in 1889, Atherton served as physician to the Home for Aged Women in Nashua, and in 1894, Atherton joined the staff of the Nashua Emergency Hospital. Atherton focused her work on diseases affecting women and children, and performed all the minor and some of the capital gynecological operations.[2]

Atherton was the first woman admitted to a medical society in the state of Vermont, first to serve as president of a local medical society in New Hampshire; and the first woman to perform abdominal surgery in New Hampshire.[1]

During the summer of 1926, Atherton toured the hospitals of Europe with a group of other American physicians.[5]

Affiliations

Personal life

References

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