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List of African-American women in medicine
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    List of African-American women in medicine

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    Nurses at Oak Ridge Hospital in the 1940s.

    African-American women have been practicing medicine informally in the contexts of midwifery and herbalism for centuries. Those skilled as midwives, like Biddy Mason, worked both as slaves and as free women in their trades. Others, like Susie King Taylor and Ann Bradford Stokes, served as nurses in the Civil War. Formal training and recognition of African-American women began in 1858 when Sarah Mapps Douglass was the first black woman to graduate from a medical course of study at an American university. Later, in 1864 Rebecca Crumpler became the first African-American woman to earn a medical degree. The first nursing graduate was Mary Mahoney in 1879. The first dentist, Ida Gray, graduated from the University of Michigan in 1890. It wasn't until 1916 that Ella P. Stewart became the first African-American woman to become a licensed pharmacist. Inez Prosser in 1933 became the first African-American woman to earn a doctorate in psychology. Two women, Jane Hinton and Alfreda Johnson Webb, in 1949, were the first to earn a doctor of veterinary medicine degree. Joyce Nichols, in 1970, became the first woman to become a physician's assistant.

    This is an alphabetical list of African-American women who have made significant firsts and contributions to the field of medicine in their own centuries.

    1800s

    Susie Baker, later Susie Taylor, a Civil War nurse.
    Susie Baker, later Susie Taylor, a Civil War nurse.

    A

    B

    C

    D

    • Halle Tanner Dillon became the first woman licensed as a physician in Alabama.
    • Sarah Mapps Douglass became the first woman to complete a medical course of study at an American university in 1858 when she graduated from the Ladies' Institute of the Pennsylvania Medical University.
    • Juan Bennett Drummond, 1888 graduate of the Women's Medical College of Pennsylvania, became the first African American woman doctor licensed in Massachusetts.

    E

    • Matilda Evans in 1897 becomes the first African American woman to earn a medical license in South Carolina.

    F

    • Sara Iredell Fleetwood graduated from the Freedmen's Hospital Nursing Training School in 1896.
    • Louise Celia Fleming in 1891 became the first African American woman to enroll in the Women's Medical College in Philadelphia.
      Louise Celia Fleming, an early African American physician.
    • Martha Minerva Franklin graduated from nursing school in 1897 and worked to improve racial equality in nursing.
    • Sarah Loguen Fraser in 1879 became the first woman and African American to graduate from the Syracuse College of Medicine and became the fourth African American woman to become a doctor.

    G

    • Artishia Garcia Gilbert in 1898 became the first African American woman to register as a licensed physician in Kentucky.
    • Ida Gray became the first African American woman to become a dentist when she graduated from the University of Michigan in 1890.
    • Eliza Ann Grier in 1897 was the first African-American woman to practice medicine in the state of Georgia.

    H

    J

    • Sarah Garland Boyd Jones in 1893 became the first woman physician licensed in Virginia.
    • Sophia B. Jones was a Canadian-born American medical doctor, who founded the nursing program at Spelman College. She was the first black woman to graduate from the University of Michigan Medical School and the first black faculty member at Spelman.

    M

    P

    R

    S

    T

    W

    1900s

    25th Station Hospital Unit, U.S. Army Black Nurses In Liberia during WWII.

    #

    A

    B

    C

    D

    E

    F

    G

    • Jessie G. Garnett in 1919 became the first woman to graduate from Tufts Dental School.
    • Marilyn Hughes Gaston, in 1990 becomes the first black woman doctor appointed to the Health Resources and Services Administration's Bureau of Primary Health Care.
    • Wilina Ione Gatson in 1960 becomes the first African American graduate of the University of Texas nursing school.
    • Fannie Gaston-Johansson in 1998 earned full professorship and tenure at Johns Hopkins School of Nursing, the first African American woman to earn that position.
    • Helene Doris Gayle, in 1995 becomes the first woman and African-American appointed as Director of the National Center for HIV, STD, and TB Prevention at the US CDC.
    • Florence S. Gaynor becomes the first African American woman to "head a major teaching hospital" in 1971.
    • Mary Keys Gibson in 1907 became the first African American in the Southern United States to earn a nursing certificate.

    H

    I

    J

    K

    L

    M

    N

    O

    P

    R

    S

    T

    V

    W

    Y

    • N. Louise Young was the first African American woman practicing medicine in Maryland, beginning in 1933.

    2000s

    A

    B

    E

    G

    H

    J

    • Thea L. James is the Associate Professor, Associate Chief Medical Officer, and Vice President of the Mission at the Boston Medical Center.
    • Michele Johnson, became the first woman and African American promoted to a full professorship of Radiology and Biomedical Imaging and of Neurosurgery at the Yale School of Medicine in 2014.
    • Paula A. Johnson is the first African-American president of Wellesley College, chairwoman of the Boston Public Health Commission, former professor at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health

    O

    • Elizabeth O. Ofili in 2000 became the first woman to serve as president of the Association of Black Cardiologists.

    R

    S

    • Jeannette E. South-Paul in 2001 became the first African American to serve as permanent department chair at the University of Pittsburgh department of family medicine.

    W

    Sources


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