Elizabeth Blackwell: General Correspondence

  • 100% Completed
Elizabeth Blackwell is widely considered to be the first American woman to receive an academic medical degree. Her papers contain extensive diaries from 1836 to 1908, family and general correspondence, and speeches and writings which document her efforts to open the medical profession to women in the United States and England. She encountered many difficulties in establishing the New York Infirmary for Women and Children with her sister Dr. Emily Blackwell and their colleague Dr. Marie Zakrzewska, in 1854, and struggled fifteen years later to found a women's medical college in the United States. She wrote widely on various aspects of medicine, including women’s health concerns, and her papers include many of her published works unavailable elsewhere.

Elizabeth Blackwell’s general correspondence documents her efforts to open the medical profession to women in the United States and England. Included are numerous letters from Anne Isabella Milbanke Byron (Baroness Byron) and Florence Nightingale who gave support to Blackwell's medical work abroad.

Filter pages: