Josie English Wells
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1876
Josie English Wells | |
|---|---|
| Born | Josephine English 1876 |
| Died | 20 March 1921 (aged 44–45) Nashville, Tennessee, U.S. |
| Education | Meharry Medical College, 1904 |
| Occupations | Physician, activist |
| Employer(s) | Fisk University; Meharry Medical College |
Josie English Wells (1876-20 March 1921)[1][2] was an African American physician and one of three women to graduate from Meharry Medical College in 1904.[3][2] She was the first female faculty member at Meharry,[4] and the first woman of any race to open a private practice in Nashville, Tennessee.[3]
Josephine English was born in Holly Springs, Mississippi in 1876 to Berry English, a freedman and carpenter,[5] and his wife Eliza.[2][3]
In her earlier life, English worked as a nurse.[2] She married George Wells, a Latin professor at Rust College, and the couple had a daughter, Alma.[2][3] Soon after her birth in 1896, George Wells died, leaving Josie a single parent.[2] Josie Wells then moved to San Antonio, Texas, in order to lead a nursing program at a hospital there.[2] This was led by Dr. G.J. Starnes, a graduate of Meharry Medical College, who likely saw Wells' potential.[2]
Wells entered Meharry's four-year medical program in 1900.[3][1] She graduated in 1904, one of three women graduates.[1] The school had only recently begun admitting women, with Georgia E. L. Patton its first female graduate in 1893.[6]