Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania Medicine

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The Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania (founded in 1850), later renamed as The Medical College of Pennsylvania (MCP) after opening its doors to men in 1970, was the second medical institution in the world established to train women in medicine and offer them the M.D. degree. (New England Female Medical College had been established two years earlier.) Originally called The Female Medical College of Pennsylvania, the college changed its name to Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania in 1867. The associated Woman's Hospital of Philadelphia was founded in 1861.

The college built a new campus in East Falls in the 1920s, which combined teaching and the clinical care of a hospital in one overall facility. It was the first purpose-built hospital in the nation. In 1993, the college and hospital merged with Hahnemann Medical School. In 2003, the two colleges were absorbed by the Drexel University College of Medicine.


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Founding

Smedley's History of the Underground Railroad cites Dr. Bartholomew Fussell with proposing, in 1846, the idea for a college that would train female doctors. It was a tribute to his departed sister, who Bartholomew felt could have been a doctor if women had been given the opportunity at that time. Her daughter, Graceanna Lewis, was to become one of the first women scientists in the USA. At his house. The Pines, in Kennett Square, Pennsylvania, he invited five doctors to carry out his idea. The doctors invited were: Edwin Fussell (Bartholomew's nephew) M.D., Franklin Taylor, M.D., Ellwood Harvey, M.D., Sylvester Birdsall, M.D., and Dr. Ezra Michener. Graceallen was also in attendance. Dr. Fussell would support the college, but had little to do with it after it started in 1850 in Philadelphia.

One doctor, Ellwood Harvey (who attended the 1846 meeting, but would not start teaching at the college until 1852), helped keep the school alive along with Edwin Fussell. Dr. Harvey not only taught a full course load, but took on a second load when another professor backed out. Dr. Harvey also took on patients for his practice, which included Philadelphia abolitionist and UGRR historian, William Still, and his family. It was most likely Still who told him about a slave hiding in Washington DC named Anne Maria Weems. Harvey took her, disguised as male buggy driver, from in front of the White House to Philadelphia and eventually New York City. She eventually made it to Canada. With the $300 reward, from Lewis Tappan, for rescuing Weems, Dr. Harvey bought a papier-mâché dissection manniquin for the college. Ann Preston was one of the first students to graduate from the Female Medical College of Pennsylvania.

Harvey was later sued for libel after a former instructor at the college, Dr. Longshore, was forced out. Longshore then started a rival women's medical college at the Penn Medical University. Longshore, using his previous connections at the Female Medical College, began to raise money for his own college.

Clara Marshall (1847-1931), graduate of the Medical College of Pennsylvania and Dean from 1888 to 1917, considered the founder of the school to have been Fussell. Other students considered Joseph S. Longshore and William J. Mullen to be the primary founders. Most considered these three men, whether official founder or not, to be instrumental in the creation of the Female Medical College of Pennsylvania.

The Feminist Movement during the early to mid 19th century contributed support for the Female Medical College of Pennsylvania. The Society of Friends in Philadelphia, a large group of Quakers, were supportive of the women's rights movements and the development of the Female MCP.

MCP was initially located in the rear of 229 Arch Street, Philadelphia (the address was later changed to 627 Arch Street when Philadelphia renumbered streets in 1858). In July 1861, the board of corporators of the Female Medical College of Pennsylvania chose to rent rooms for the College from the Woman's Hospital of Philadelphia on North College Avenue.


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Deans of the College

The first dean of what was then known as the Female Medical College was a man: Nathaniel R. Mosely, appointed 1850-1856. The second dean was also a man, Edwin B. Fussell, who held the position from 1856 to 1866.

From then on, the Woman's College had a long history of female deans, lasting almost 100 years. The first woman to be a dean of this (or any) medical school was Ann Preston. The follow women were deans of the college in the years stated:

  • Ann Preston, 1866-1872
  • Emeline Horton Cleveland, 1872-1874
  • Rachel Bodley, 1874-1886
  • Clara Marshall, 1886/1888-1917
  • Martha Tracy, 1917-1940 (Henry Jump served as interim dean during Tracy's sabbatical.)
  • Margaret Craighill, 1940/1943-1943/1946
  • Marion Spencer Fay, 1946-1963

No woman was found to replace Marion Fay. After her, the position of dean was held by Glen R. Leymaster from 1964-1970, at which time the institution became known as the Medical College of Pennsylvania.


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Woman's Hospital of Philadelphia

In part to provide clinical experience for WMC students, a group of Quaker women, particularly Ann Preston, founded the Woman's Hospital of Philadelphia in 1861.


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Issues in clinical training

The Female Medical College of Pennsylvania faced difficulties in providing clinical training for its students. Almost all medical institutions were confronted with the demand for more clinical practice due to the rise of surgery, physical diagnosis, and clinical specialties. During the 1880s, clinical instruction at the Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania relied mainly on the demonstration clinics.

In 1887, Anna Broomall, professor of obstetrics for the Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania, established a maternity outpatient service in a poor area of South Philadelphia for the purpose of student education. By 1895, many students cared for three or four women who were giving birth.


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East Falls campus and Drexel University

In the late 1920s the college raised money to build a new campus. Designed by Ritter & Shay, the most successful of the Philadelphia urban architecture firms in the 1920s, the East Falls Campus was the first purpose-built hospital in the nation. The design allowed both teaching and hospital care to take place in one facility, helping provide for more clinical care. Post-WWII housing shortages in the city were a catalyst for development of additions to the East Falls Campus, the first of which was the Ann Preston Building (designed by Thaddeus Longstreth), which provided housing and classrooms for student nurses.

Today, the building is known as the Falls Center. It is operated by Iron Stone Strategic Capital Partners as student housing, commercial space, and medical offices.

In 1993 the Medical College of Pennsylvania merged with Hahnemann Medical College, retaining its Queen Lane campus. In 2003, the two medical colleges were absorbed as a part of Drexel University College of Medicine, creating new opportunities for the large student body for clinical practice in settings ranging from urban hospitals to small rural practices.


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Notable alumnae

  • Ruth Bleier, a neurophysiologist, activist, and feminist
  • Rebecca Cole, (class of 1867) the second African-American female physician in the United States
  • Matilda Evans, (class of 1897) the first African-American female physician licensed to practice in South Carolina
  • Rita Sapiro Finkler, Ukrainian-born endocrinologist, gynecologist and pediatrician
  • Eliza Ann Grier, (class of 1897) the first African-American female physician in Georgia
  • Saniya Habboub, Lebanese medical doctor (class of 1931)
  • Susan Hayhurst, the first woman to receive a pharmacy degree in the United States
  • Sabat Islambouli, first licensed female doctor in Syria
  • Anandi Gopal Joshi, first Western trained female physician to practice medicine in India
  • Anna Sarah Kugler was the first medical missionary of the Evangelical Lutheran General Synod of the United States of North America. She served in India for 47 years.
  • Clara Marshall (class of 1875), dean of Woman's Medical College from 1888 to 1917
  • Keiko Okami, one of the first licensed female doctors in Japan
  • Joanne Overleese, general surgeon, as well as one of the few doctors to have played in All-American Girls Professional Baseball League history
  • Susan La Flesche Picotte, (class of 1889) the first Native American female physician
  • Linda A. Pape, cardiologist; Professor UMass Medical School
  • Patricia Robertson, a NASA astronaut and physician.
  • Kazue Togasaki (1897-1992), one of the first two women of Japanese ancestry to earn a medical degree in the United States.
  • Martha Tracy (class of 1904), dean of Woman's Medical College from 1917 to 1940
  • Jennie Kidd Trout, first female licensed medical doctor in Canada
  • Charlotte Whitehead Ross, a Canadian female physician who practiced in Montreal and Manitoba in the late 1800s and early 1900s.
  • Harriot Kezia Hunt, Honorable MD recipient, women's rights activist, teacher.
  • Elizabeth Reifsnyder, opened first woman's hospital in Shanghai
  • Lillian Welsh (class of 1889), physician and educator, advocate for public health and preventative medicine

Fictional alumnae

  • Dr. Michaela Quinn, protagonist of the television drama Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman

Source of the article : Wikipedia



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