Louisa Martindale

For the suffragist born 1839, see Louisa Martindale (feminist).
Louisa Martindale

Dr. Louisa Martindale, CBE, MB/BS (Lond.), FRCOG, JP (30 October 1872 – 5 February 1966) was an English physician, surgeon, and writer. She also served as magistrate on the Brighton bench, was a prison commissioner and a member of the National Council of Women. She served with the Scottish Women's Hospitals at Royaumont Abbey in France in World War I, and as a surgeon in London in World War II. Through her writings she promoted medicine as a career for women.

Early life

Louisa Martindale was born in Leytonstone, Essex, the first child of William Martindale (c. 1832–1874) and his second wife Louisa, née Spicer (1839–1914). The family had a Congregational Church background. Her mother, "a champion of a larger life for women",[1] was an active suffragist and a member of the Women's Liberal Federation, and of the executive committee of the National Union of Women's Suffrage Societies. In the 1880s, Mrs. Martindale held open house for Brighton shop girls on a regular basis, and thus young Louisa would have grown up in an environment supportive of her future career.[2]

After the death of William Martindale the family moved to Cornwall, and thence to Germany and Switzerland, finally returning to England to live in Lewes, East Sussex. In 1885 the family moved again, this time to Brighton so that Louisa and her sister Hilda could attend Brighton High School for Girls. From an early age it had been decided that Louisa should become a doctor, and at 17 she was sent to Royal Holloway, University of London in Egham and obtained her London Matriculation in 1892. She then entered the London School of Medicine for Women in 1893, gaining her MB in 1899, and her BS. In 1901 she went north to Hull as an assistant to Dr. Mary Murdoch (1864–1916), the beginning of her professional life.

Professional life

After five years in Hull, in 1906 Martindale gained her Doctor of Medicine and returned to Brighton. She started her own general practice and very soon was asked to join the Lewes Road Dispensary for Women and Children (which in 1911 became the Lady Chichester Hospital, Brighton Branch) as a visiting medical officer. In 1920 she was instrumental in the setting up of the New Sussex Hospital for Women in Windlesham Road, Brighton, and held the post of senior Surgeon and Physician there until 1937. She left Brighton and Hove in 1922, moving to London to start a Surgical Consultant Practice but continued to operate part-time at the New Sussex Hospital.

Martindale's medical interests were sometimes controversial, especially her studies of venereal disease and prostitution; her book Under the Surface (1909), in which she spoke quite openly about these very topics,[3] apparently caused a stir in the House of Commons. Nonetheless she was awarded with the CBE in 1931.[4]

She secured a long and distinguished life and career in medicine, carrying out over 7000 operations. Her work brought her respect and acknowledgment from both her colleagues and her patients: she was made a Fellow of the Royal College of Obstetricians in 1933, and was a member of the Royal Society of Medicine. Eventually she became a specialist in the early treatment of cervical cancer by X-ray and she later lectured extensively throughout the UK, the United States, and Germany.

Personal life

An active member of the Brighton Women's Franchise Society, she also served as Magistrate for many years on the Brighton bench, became President of the Medical Women’s Federation in 1931, was a Prison Commissioner and a member of the National Council of Women. She served with the Scottish Women’s Hospitals at Royaumont Abbey in France in World War I, and as a surgeon in London in World War II. Martindale never married and lived for more than three decades with another woman, Ismay FitzGerald[5] (c. 1875-1946), daughter of Baron FitzGerald of Kilmarnock. Some scholars are wary of identifying Martindale as a lesbian; Geoffrey Walford, for instance, does not state whether Martindale's "woman-centred lifestyle" specifically entailed a lesbian relationship.[6] Others are more explicit and unhesitatingly propose Martindale's lesbianism,[7] referring for instance to her 1951 autobiography A Woman Surgeon, in which she writes quite openly and tenderly (though without giving explicit detail) about her love for FitzGerald.[8]

Death

Martindale retired from practice in 1947 and died on 5 February 1966, aged 93.

Works by Louisa Martindale

References

  1. Martindale, Hilda (1970). Some Victorian Portraits and Others. Ayer. p. 15. ISBN 978-0-8369-8030-1.
  2. Crawford, Elizabeth (2001). The Women's Suffrage Movement: A Reference Guide, 1866-1928. London: Routledge. p. 387. ISBN 978-0-415-23926-4.
  3. Hall, Lesley A. (2005). Outspoken Women: An Anthology of Women's Writing on Sex, 1870-1969. Taylor & Francis. p. 63. ISBN 978-0-415-25372-7. And yet surely, so long as thousands of our women have been led through poverty, ignorance, or misfortune, to live a life of shame, the least we can do is to try to find out what lies at the root of this social evil, so that we may the better help to free women from the slavery it involves
  4. Law, Cheryl (2000). Women, a Modern Political Dictionary. I.B. Tauris. pp. 105–6. ISBN 978-1-86064-502-0.
  5. Hall, Lesley A. (2005). Outspoken Women: An Anthology of Women's Writing on Sex, 1870-1969. Taylor & Francis. p. 318. ISBN 978-0-415-25372-7.
  6. Walford, Geoffrey (2003). British Private Schools: Research on Policy and Practice. London: Routledge. p. 70. ISBN 978-0-7130-0228-7.
  7. Hamer, Emily (1996). Britannia's Glory: A History of Twentieth-Century Lesbians. Cassell.
  8. Hamer, Emily (1999). Gert Hekma, Franz Eder, Lesley A. Hall, eds. "Keeping their fingers on the pulse: Lesbian doctors in Britain, 1890-1950". Sexual Cultures in Europe: Themes in Sexuality. Manchester: Manchester UP: 139–55. ISBN 978-0-7190-5321-4. Retrieved 2008-12-16. [Louisa] sums up their relationship briefly but concisely: 'She was, I thought, very unusual looking and beautiful...I invited her to come with me for a fortnight, with the result that she stayed thirty-five years' Quoted from A Woman Surgeon, pg. 228, in Hamer pg. 142

Sources

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