by
Cat Clark
March 15, 2007
LifeNews.com Note: Cat Clark is author of "The Truth About Susan B. Anthony: Did One of America's First Feminists Oppose Abortion?" the feature story in the Spring 2007 issue of The American Feminist,® and "Herstory" on Pearl Buck, and has served as a past editor of The American Feminist. You can sign up for more Herstories from Feminists for Life by going here.
In
1849 Dr. Elizabeth Blackwell (1821-1910) became the first woman
to receive a medical degree from an American medical school, and
in 1859 became the first woman on the British medical register.
She was ardently anti-abortion and pro-woman, choosing to enter
the field of medicine partly because she was repulsed that the term
“female physician” was applied to abortionists.
Born
in
Initially repulsed by the idea, more than one event contributed to Blackwell’s entering the medical profession. “The idea of winning a doctor’s degree,” she wrote, “gradually assumed the aspect of a great moral struggle, and the moral fight possessed an immense attraction for me.”
The idea was suggested, for example, by a friend dying of cancer, who told her “If I could have been treated by a lady doctor, my worst sufferings would have been spared me” and recommended that Blackwell devote her intellect and love of study to the service of suffering women. “Why don't you study medicine?” her friend asked.
Related
concerns eventually convinced Blackwell. Struck by an article in
the
The gross perversion and destruction of motherhood by the abortionist filled me with indignation, and awakened active antagonism. That the honorable term “female physician” should be exclusively applied to those women who carried on this shocking trade seemed to me a horror. It was an utter degradation of what might and should become a noble position for women…. I finally determined to do what I could do “to redeem the hells,” and especially the one form of hell thus forced upon my notice.
The
fact that other people considered her medical education impossible
only spurred Blackwell on. She read medical texts with physician
friends and applied to several medical schools. She was eventually
accepted by

After
gaining more practical experience in clinics and studying midwifery
in Paris and London, where she met Florence Nightingale, Blackwell
returned to the United States, where in 1857 she incorporated her
dispensary as the New York Infirmary for Women and Children with
her sister Emily—America’s second female physician—and their friend
Dr. Marie Zakrzewska. The Infirmary was
the first American hospital staffed by women, providing medical
training and experience for women doctors as well as care for the
poor. Blackwell later opened a women’s medical college at the hospital,
based on a plan developed with Nightingale.
In
1869, Blackwell returned to
References:
Prolife Feminism Yesterday and Today, Mary Krane Derr, Rachel Macnair, Linda Naranjo-Huebl, eds.
Encyclopedia Britannica Profiles 300 Women Who Changed the World, (http://search.eb.com/women/article-9015561).
National Institutes of Health Office of Research
on Women's Health, National Library of Medicine, “Celebrating
Child of Destiny: The Life Story of the First Woman Doctor, Ishbell Ross, (New York: Harper and Brothers, 1949), p. 88.


