Suoma af Hällström

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Born
Suoma Helena Lindstedt

10 March 1881
Died3 November 1954(1954-11-03) (aged 73)
OthernamesSuoma Loimaranta after 1906
OccupationsDoctor, member of the Lotta Svärd
Suoma af Hällström
Born
Suoma Helena Lindstedt

10 March 1881
Died3 November 1954(1954-11-03) (aged 73)
Other namesSuoma Loimaranta after 1906
OccupationsDoctor, member of the Lotta Svärd

Suoma Helena Loimaranta-Airila, (first married surname af Hällström), (née Lindstedt; surname Finnicized to Loimaranta before marriage) (10 March 1881 – 3 November 1954) was a Finnish doctor and an active member of the Lotta Svärd women's auxiliary paramilitary organisation.[1][2][3]

Suoma Helena Lindsted was born on 10 March 1881 in Kuopio, Northern Savonia, Finland to Hilma (née Nyholm) and Wilhelm Lindstedt, a county vicar. Loimaranta graduated from high school in 1901. She and a number of her siblings changed their Swedish surname to the Finnish Loimaranta in 1906 as part of the Finnicization surname switch inspired by Romantic nationalism.[1] About 70,000 Finns changed their surnames between 1906 and 1907 in response to a call from author Johannes Linnankoski to mark the centenary of the Finnish nationalist, philosopher and statesman Johan Vilhelm Snellman.[4]

Suoma Loimaranta qualified as a licensed doctor of medicine in 1910. Dr. Loimaranta became a specialist in pulmonary diseases in 1916.[1]

Medical career

Takaharju Sanatorium

Dr. Suoma Loimaranta worked as an assistant doctor at the Takaharju sanatorium from 1910 to 1915, and as a Medical Board doctor in 1915–1916. She then held the posts of district doctor in Lohja, Kurkijoen and Tampere, and worked as an infectious diseases inspector in Tornio and Lauritsala. During the 1918 Finnish Civil War, she was the doctor at the anti communist White's Field Hospital No. V. The following year she became the chief doctor of the Tampere prison camp, set up after White forces led by General Mannerheim captured the city after the Battle of Tampere, taking about 10,000 Red prisoners on 6 April 1918.[5][1]

Personal life

Lotta Svärd and political beliefs

References

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