Ann Preston

Ann Preston

Ann Preston, c. 1867
Born (1813-12-01)December 1, 1813
West Grove, Pennsylvania, United States
Died April 18, 1872(1872-04-18) (aged 58)
Occupation Doctor, activist,educator

Ann Preston (December 1, 1813 – April 18, 1872) was an American doctor, activist, and educator.

Early life

Ann Preston was the first woman dean of a medical school, the Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania (WMCP), which was the first medical school in the world to admit exclusively women. At a time when the medical profession was nearly all-male and considered unacceptably coarse for women to enter, Ann Preston campaigned for her female students to be admitted to clinical lectures at the Blockley Philadelphia Hospital, and the Pennsylvania Hospital. Despite the open hostility of male medical students, and sometimes of male faculty, Preston determinedly negotiated the best educational opportunities for the students of WMCP.[1]

Preston was born in 1813 in West Grove, Pennsylvania, outside of Philadelphia, to prosperous farmer and prominent Quaker Amos Preston and his wife Margaret Smith Preston. One of eight siblings, she was educated in a local Quaker school and later briefly attended a Quaker boarding school in nearby Chester, Pennsylvania. The Chester County Quaker community was ardently abolitionist and pro-temperance, and the Preston family farm, Prestonville, was known as safe harbor for escaped slaves.[2] As the eldest daughter, Ann took on the responsibility of caring for family during her mother’s frequent illnesses, interrupting her formal education.[3] She began to attend lectures at the local lyceum, belonged to the local literary society, became a member of the Clarkson Anti-Slavery Society, and was active in the temperance and women’s rights movement.[2][3]

Once her younger siblings were old enough, Preston began to work locally as a schoolteacher. In 1849, she published a book of nursery rhymes, Cousin Ann's Stories. By the 1840s, she became interested in educating women about their bodies and taught all-female classes on hygiene and physiology.[1] She was privately educated in medicine by apprenticing to Dr. Nathaniel Moseley from 1847–1849. Unable to gain admittance to medical schools because of their policies against admitting women, Preston entered the Quaker-founded Female Medical College of Pennsylvania (later changed to Woman’s Medical College of Pennsylvania in 1867) at the age of 38 as a student in its inaugural class of 1850.[3] While studying at the Female Medical College In 1851, Preston wrote to her friend and fellow Quaker activist Hannah Darlington:

“The joy of exploring a new field of knowledge, the rest from accustomed pursuits and cares, the stimulus of competition, the novelty of a new kind of life, are all mine, and all for the time possess a charm. And then, I am restful in spirit and well satisfied that I came.”[4]

She graduated in 1852, one of eight women awarded a medical degree.[1] Dr. Preston returned to the college the following year for postgraduate work,and was appointed professor of physiology and hygiene there in 1853. In 1862 she lead the effort to found the Woman’s Hospital of Philadelphia in order to provide sorely needed clinical training to the college’s students.[3] During the American Civil War, the college closed for the 1861-2 sessions due to lack of regular finances. At this time Preston, whose health has always been precarious, fell ill from rheumatic fever, stress, and exhaustion, and was admitted to the Pennsylvania Hospital for the Insane for three months to recuperate under the care of Dr. Thomas S. Kirkbride, a Quaker physician who advocated for the “humane treatment” of the mentally ill.[1][3]

When the Female Medical College resumed operations in October 1862, it re-opened in rooms rented from the Women’s Hospital of Philadelphia. In 1864, a rift emerged among the faculty when Dean Edwin Fussell tried to prevent student Mary Putnam Jacobi from graduating with a medical degree, feeling that she did not meet the required qualifications. Other faculty, including Dr. Preston, strongly supported Jacobi and disagreed with the decision. Following the incident, Fussell, an early faculty member and nephew of college founder Bartholomew Fussell, resigned and Preston became dean of the college from 1866–1872.[5][6]

Career at Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania

Ann Preston was the first woman to become the dean of a medical school, a position that allowed her to champion the right of women to become physicians.[7][8] Preston was also what historian Steve Peitzman calls an “Institution builder,” guiding the college through its post-war rebuilding and growth. She was a "fighting Quaker, her weapons being moral suasion, active example, and...the forceful written word.” [3] In addition to the hospital she founded before becoming dean, she opened a school of nursing, and continued to push for educational opportunities for the female students of Woman’s Medical College, including more and better clinical experience. In 1867 the Philadelphia County Medical Society objected to the practice of medicine by women. Ann Preston's response in part was "...we must protest...against the injustice which places difficulties in our way, not because we are ignorant or incompetent or unmindful in the code of medical or Christian ethics, but because we are women." Preston's defense disarmed much of the adverse criticism.[9]

In 1868, Preston negotiated with Philadelphia's Blockley Hospital to allow Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania students to attend the general clinics there. In 1869 she made a similar arrangement with the Pennsylvania Hospital, where in November 1869, a group of about thirty of Woman's Med students were verbally and physically harassed by male medical students.[1][3] Anna Broomall, 1871 graduate of Woman's Med and future faculty member, recalled " the [male] students rushed in pell-mell,stood up in the seats, hooted, called us names and threw spitballs, trying in vain to dislodge us." [3] The incident sparked a very public debates in the local and national press about the propriety of the presence of female medical students at clinical demonstrations but the result was the inevitability and acceptance of co-ed clinics.[3]

In addition to educating medical students and advocating for woman physicians, Dr. Preston also practiced medicine, attending at Woman's Hospital and maintaining her own private practice. She never married, but led a rich and active social and professional life, including establishing a household "where dear friends live with me in harmonious relations, and do much to make this an orderly home circle." [3] She continued to write and work for social reform until she suffered from an attack of acute articular rheumatism in 1871, which left her in a weakened state. She suffered a relapse the following year and died on April 18, 1872.[5]

Bibliography

Files of Ann Preston

Quotes

'No lordly Turk, smoking on his ottoman, could better depict the depravation which public manners would suffer, if Turkish women, should openly walk, side by side with fathers, husbands, and brothers, to the solemn Mosque, than some among us have portrayed the perversion our society must undergo if woman shares with man the office of Physician.'

“A Mother,” letter to the Herald Tribune, Mar. 5, 1870. WMC, College Scrapbooks, #3, 1868, 1869, Jan. 1870- Aug. 1871, 86." [11]

'Wherever it is proper to introduce women as patients, there also it is in accordance with the instinct of truest womanhood for women to appear as physicians and students.'

Quoted in The Liberated Woman’s Appointment Calendar, Lynn Sherr and Jurate Kazickas, eds. 1975" [12]

Achievements

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 National Library of Medicine (14 October 2003). "Changing the Face of Medicine. Biography: Dr. Ann Preston". National Library of Medicine. Retrieved 22 April 2016.
  2. 1 2 Foster, Pauline Poole (1984). Ann Preston, M.D. (1813-1872): A Biography. The Struggle to Obtain Training and Acceptance for Women Physicians in Mid-Nineteenth Century America. Philadelphia, PA: University of Pennsylvania.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Peitzman, Steven J. (2000). A New and Untried Course: Woman's Medical College and Medical College of Pennsylvania, 1850--1998. New Brunswick, New Jersey: Rutgers University Press. ISBN 081352816X.
  4. Preston, Ann (4 January 1851). "Letter from Ann Preston to Hannah Darlington". Women Physicians, 1850s--1970s. Drexel University College of Medicine Legacy Center Archives and Special Collections. Retrieved 22 April 2016.
  5. 1 2 Kelly, Howard Atwood (1912). A cyclopedia of American medical biography: comprising the lives of eminent deceased physicians and surgeons from 1610 to 1910. W.B. Saunders company. pp. 291–292.
  6. Windsor, Laura Lynn (2002). Women in Medicine: An encyclopedia. ABC-CLIO. p. 164. ISBN 1-57607-392-0.
  7. Ogilvie, Marilyn Bailey; Harvey, Joy Dorothy (2000). The Biographical Dictionary of Women in Science: L-Z. Taylor & Francis. p. 1051. ISBN 0-415-92040-X.
  8. De Rosa, Deborah C. (2005). Into the mouths of babes: an anthology of children's abolitionist literature. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 161. ISBN 0-275-97951-2.
  9. 1 2  Wilson, James Grant; Fiske, John, eds. (1892). "Preston, Ann". Appletons' Cyclopædia of American Biography. New York: D. Appleton.
  10. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 "Ann Preston, M.D. papers, 1831-1880". PASCAL Finding Aids. University of Pennsylvania. Retrieved 11 April 2016.
  11. Wells, Susan (2001). Out of the dead house nineteenth-century women physicians and the writing of medicine. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press. p. 93. ISBN 9780299171735.
  12. The Quotable Woman Revised Edition The First 5,000 Years by Elaine Bernstein Partnow

External links

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