Kate Campbell Hurd-Mead
Kate Campbell Hurd-Mead (April 6, 1867 – January 1, 1941) was a pioneering feminist and obstetrician[1] who promoted the role of women in medicine. She wrote A History of Women in Medicine: From the Earliest of Times to the Beginning of the Nineteenth Century in 1938. She was born in Danville, Quebec, Canada, and died in Haddam, Connecticut, United States.
Life
Hurd-Mead was the eldest of three children born to Edward Payson Hurd, a practicing physician, and Sarah Elizabeth (Campbell) Hurd. In 1870, the family moved to Newburyport, Massachusetts, where she attended public schools.[2] She decided to study medicine out of respect for her father's career as a doctor, and on the advice of the well-respected physician, Dr. Mary Putnam Jacobi.[3] She became a student at the Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia in 1885, where in 1888 she graduated as an M.D. She became an intern at the New England Hospital for Women and Children in Boston where she studied with Dr. Marie Zakrzewska.[3] She did post-doctoral work in Paris, Stockholm, and London.[2]
On her return to America in 1890 she became the medical director for the Bryn Mawr School for Girls in Baltimore where she instituted the school's innovative preventive health program, which included physical education and periodic medical examinations.[3] Together with Dr. Alice Hall she founded the Evening Dispensary for Working Women and Girls of Baltimore City,[2] the first institution in Baltimore to employ women physicians.[3] She was a strong proponent of the then new maternal hygiene and infant welfare models.[3]
In 1893, Dr. Hurd married William Edward Mead, Ph.D., who was professor of early English at Wesleyan University and they moved to Middletown, Connecticut to be close to his university.[2][3]
Hurd-Mead was one of the original founders and the consulting gynecologist at the Middlesex County Hospital in Connecticut from 1907 until her retirement in 1925.[3]
She also helped to organize the Middletown District Nurses Association (1900), was vice president of the State Medical Society of Connecticut (1913-1914), president of the American Medical Women's Association, and organizer of the Medical Women's International Association (1919).
At a meeting of the Johns Hopkins Historical Club in 1890 she had become interested in the history of women physicians. She conducted extensive research and published Medical Women of America (1933) and in 1938 the first comprehensive history of women's role in medicine, A History of Women in Medicine: From the Earliest of Times to the Beginning of the Nineteenth Century.[4]
She argued strongly for the real existence of Trotula, the Sicilian woman physician of the Middle Ages, who some historians had tried to argue was not a real person but a name for a collection of works.[5]
Dr. Hurd-Mead died at the age of 73 in a bushfire near her home while trying to assist her caretaker who also died in the fire.[2]
External links
Library resources about Kate Campbell Hurd-Mead |
By Kate Campbell Hurd-Mead |
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- Papers, 1939. Schlesinger Library, Radcliffe Institute, Harvard University.
References
- ↑ Green, Monica Helen (2008). Making women's medicine masculine: the rise of male authority in pre-modern gynaecology. Oxford University Press. p. 29. ISBN 0-19-921149-3.
- 1 2 3 4 5 "Hurd-Mead, Kate Campbell, 1867-1941. Papers, 1939: A Finding Aid". Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America. Radcliffe College, Harvard. 1982. Retrieved 11 December 2009.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 "Dr.Kate Campbell Hurd-Mead". Changing the Face of Medicine. National Library of Medicine. 25 March 2004. Retrieved 11 December 2009.
- ↑ "Kate Campbell Hurd-Mead". Dinner Party Database of notable Women. Brooklyn Museum. March 21, 2007. Retrieved 11 December 2009.
- ↑ Whaley, Leigh Ann (2003). Women's history as scientists. Contemporary Issues in Science Series. Volume 1 (A guide to the debates of Women's History as Scientists: Controversies in Science). ABC-CLIO. p. 162. ISBN 1-57607-230-4.