BLACKWELL
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BLACKWELL
Other important writings were:
"The Laws of Life," 1S52.
" Medicine as a Profession for Women," 1860.
"The Religion of Health," 1869.
" Wrong and Right Methods of Deal- ing with the Social Evil," 1883.
"The Human Element in Sex," 1SS4.
"Pioneer work in Opening the Medical Profession to Women," 1895.
A. B. W.
London Times, June 2, 1910. N. Y. Evening Post, June 1, 1910. Mary Putnam Jacobi, in "Women's Work in America."
Personal information from Dr. Emily Black- well.
Blackwell, Emily (1S26-1910).
Emily Blackwell, a pioneer woman physician and dean of the Woman's Medical College of the New York In- firmary, was born in Bristol, England, in 1S26. A younger sister of Dr. Eliza- beth Blackwell,
In 1848 Emily began a course of med- ical reading with Dr. Davis, demonstra- tor of anatomy in the Cincinnati College. Like Elizabeth she brought perfect health and indomitable energy to her work. Earning as teacher the required funds she worked hard in both capacities and in 1851 applied for admission to the Medical School at Geneva, New York, where her sister had graduated in 1849. To her surprise she was rejected. The same faculty which had testified the presence of her sister "had exercised a beneficial influence upon her fellow students in all respects and the average attainments and general conduct of the students during the period she had passed among them were of a higher character than those of any class which had been assembled in the college since the connec- tion of the president with the institution, they were not prepared to consider the case of Elizabeth as precedent." She applied in vain to several other colleges, but the Rush Medical College at Chicago accepted her as a student for a year; for this permission the college was cen- sured by the State Medical Society and
the second term was refused her. She
was however received by the Medical
College of Cleveland, Medical Branch of
Western Reserve University, Ohio, and
graduated thence in 1854. During one
summer vacation she was allowed to
visit in Bellevue Hospital, New York,
when Dr. James Wood was just initiating
the system of regular clinical lectures.
After graduating Emily went to Europe
and became the private pupil and assist-
ant of the celebrated Dr. (afterward Sir)
James Simpson of Edinburgh. His
testimonial to her would be worth quot-
ing at length.
Many such complimentary letters Miss Blackwell received from great physicians in London and Paris in whose hospital wards she faithfully studied. Thus equipped she returned to New York in 1S56 to join her sister Dr. Elizabeth, who had secured her charter to open the New York Infirmary for Women and Children — the first women's hospital in America — with the double object of furnishing free aid by women physicians and of giv- ing women medical students a chance for study and practice. The Legislature gave $1,000 a year to each dispensary in New York, and Dr. Emily obtained it without opposition for their dispensary. She was identified with her sister in the Sanitary Aid Association and in the establishment of the college of the New York Infirmary for Women and Chil- dren, of which she was dean for many years, and after Elizabeth Blackwell's re- turn to England in 1S69, the burden of the hospital fell upon her shoulders.
She was for years an officer of the New York Committee formed to oppose the state regulation of vice. She wrote and read papers on the medical aspect of the question and in every way helped to defeat the bill.
She had a large practice in New York City until 1900, when she retired, re- moving to Mont Clair, New Jersey.
Dr Emily Blackwell was a woman of high character, of wide reading and in- formation, and delighted in everything beautiful. She had a warm heart,