1865: Elizabeth Garrett becomes the first woman in England to receive a medical license.
It didn’t come easy.
Bound by the restrictions on sex and class that
She tried applying to medical school. Several — actually all — turned her down. With the conventional path blocked, Garrett enrolled as a nursing student at Middlesex Hospital. While there, she sat in on some medical classes but was booted after the male students complained.
Nevertheless, she hung in there and continued studying independently. Because the Society of Apothecaries had no rule specifically barring women from taking its medical examination, Garrett took the exam on this day in 1865 and, lo, was one of three candidates (from a field of seven) to pass. It enabled her to obtain a certificate to begin practicing medicine.
(It should be noted that the Society of Apothecaries immediately changed its rules to prevent other women from pulling the same stunt. Not cricket, you know.)
Garrett opened a dispensary for women, and later became a visiting physician to the East London Hospital. Still lacking a formal medical degree, Garrett learned French and slipped across the Channel to the University of Paris, where more enlightened attitudes prevailed. She earned her degree, which the British Medical Register refused to recognize.
Undaunted, Garrett (now Elizabeth Garrett Anderson by marriage) opened the New Hospital for Women in London, which was staffed entirely by women. Elizabeth Blackwell came on staff as a professor of gynecology.
Garrett’s persistence, and subsequent success, shook the British medical establishment to its foundations. The old-boy network finally cracked in 1876, and from then on, women were admitted to British medical schools.
Source: BBC
Image: Elizabeth Garrett/Hulton-Deutsch Collection/Corbis
This article originally appeared on Wired.com Sept. 28, 2007.
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Authors: Tony Long