Laura Forster

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Laura E. Forster at the age of 21 in Germany.

Laura Elizabeth Forster (1858–1917) was an Australian medical doctor, surgeon and nurse noted for her service in France, Belgium, Turkey and Russia during World War I.

Laura Elizabeth Forster was born in the Sydney suburb of Ryde in 1858 to William Forster (1818-1882), a landowner, poet, politician and Premier of New South Wales during 1859–1860, and his wife Eliza Jane Wall (1828-1862). Laura was the fifth of six children from this marriage. Eliza died in 1862 and William married Maud Julia Edwards (1846-1893).[citation needed] With Maud, William had five children, including three sons who were killed in World War I while with the Australian Imperial Force. Shortly after William Forster's death in 1882, Laura accompanied her stepmother and half sister, Enid, to England. Maud eventually married John Burn Murdoch, of Edinburgh, and a captain in the Royal Engineers. Laura remained in England.[citation needed]

Forster attended Sydney schools through about 1879. On 1 November 1887, Forster entered the University of Bern in Switzerland, as a medical student. At Bern University, she studied 12 semesters at the Pathological Institute researching muscle spindle fibers. She graduated in 1894 and was certified to practice medicine in the United Kingdom the following year.[1]

Career

Death

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI