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Virginia G.
Drachman
WITH A HEART Women
Doctors and the
Paradox of Separatism the
New England
at
Hospital
1862—1969
Cornell University Press ITHACA AND LONDON
Copyright
All rights reserved.
©
1984 by Cornell University Press
Except for brief quotations
in a review, this book,
or parts thereof, must not be reproduced in any form without
permission in writing from the publisher. For information, address Cornell University Press, 124 Roberts Place, Ithaca,
First
New
York. 14850.
published 1984 by Cornell University Press. Published in the United
Kingdom by
Cornell University Press Ltd., London.
International Standard
Book Number 0-8014-1624-8
Number 83-45930
Library of Congress Catalog Card
Printed in the United States of America
Librarians: Library of Congress cataloging information
appears on the
The paper
in this
book
is
acid- free
last
and
page
of the book.
meets the guidelines
for permanence and durability of the Committee on Production (Guidelines for
Book Longevity of
the
Council on Library Resources.
To my mother and father, Sally
Ann and
Stanley
Drachman
Digitized by the Internet Archive in
2012
http://archive.org/details/hospitalwithhearOOdrac
Contents
Preface
/ /
1.
"The Mother of Us
2.
"This All-Women's Hospital"
3.
"The
4.
"Whisperings of Discontent"
103
5.
"We Must Get Them and Keep Them'
122
6.
"The
1
5
7.
"We
i
78
Sick
21
All"
We Would
44
Heal"
7*
Institution Is at a Crisis"
Will Lose
Our
Hospital"
I
Conclusion
196
Abbreviations
203
Notes
205
Bibliography
*4*
Index
252 7
Illustrations (pp.
gi-ioi)
Dr. Marie Elizabeth Zakrzewska, founder of the
New England
Hospital, about 1870
Lucy Goddard,
first
president of the
New England
Hospital
Ednah Dow Cheney, longtime supporter and second president of the
New England
Hospital, 1884
Main building of the New England Hospital, erected
in
Roxbury,
Massachusetts, in 1872, ten years after the hospital's founding Dr. Lucy Sewell,
first
resident physician at the
New England
Hospital Dr. Susan Dimock, surgeon
program Adult's
at the
ward
and organizer of the
New England
at the
Hospital
New England
Hospital
Operating room
at the
New England
Hospital
Children's
ward
at the
New England
Hospital
Newborns
at the
Nurses
at the
New England
New England
Hospital
Hospital
nurses' training
—
Preface
Founded
in
Boston in 1862 by Dr. Marie Zakrzewska, the
gland Hospital for
Women
tant all-women's medical institutions in America. For
century,
it
provided
New
En-
and Children was one of the most impor-
women
more than
a
doctors with valuable clinical experience
and professional training and offered women patients medical care by doctors of their own sex. Born of and nourished by separatism the nineteenth-century solution to sexual discrimination tal,
by the turn of the century, confronted
its
—the
hospi-
most formidable
chal-
lenge: the opportunities of integration.
This book
tells
the story of the
women
doctors at the
Hospital during a century of separatism.
study of an all-women's hospital cal institution in
America.
and of the women doctors twined. Barred from the nineteenth-century
women
—indeed,
It
is
the
New England historical
first
of any all-women's medi-
The fates of the New England Hospital who worked there were inextricably interall-male
doctors
medical schools and hospitals,
made
through their own, all-female medical
their professional
institutions.
Built
journey
upon
the
foundation of nineteenth-century separatism, the all-women's hospitals
and medical schools provided women doctors with profesfrom men. But as the century drew to a
sional opportunities apart
1
1
Preface close, the all-male
medical institutions began to open their doors to
women. The opportunity
to work with male physicians represented major step forward for women doctors. At the same time, it threatened the survival of the all-women's medical institutions that had launched women's medical careers. The result was a paradox: whereas separatism originally laid the path to equality for women in medicine, gradually integration became a competing route to pro-
a
women
fessional equality, challenging the separatist traditions of
doctors.
The
story of the
women doctors at the New England
integration; ultimately that story reveals the for **.
Hospi-
recounts the fate of separatism in a world beginning to accept
tal
women
in
Historians have
contexts:
paradox of separatism
America.
examined the
women
history of
doctors in three
sexual discrimination, sisterhood, and professionalism.
Some
believe that nineteenth-century male physicians deliberately
tried
to
prevent
women from becoming
doctors, that only the
emergence of an organized woman's movement enabled nineteenthwomen to make inroads into the medical profession, and that the decline of the woman's movement in the twentieth century
century
women
contributed to a professional setback for crimination interpretation
is
important because
ing point for understanding the history of ica. It
uncovers the obstacles
women
and emphasizes women's unity
it
doctors.
provides the
women
doctors in
tell
dis-
start-
Amer-
doctors encountered from
in struggling for success.
discrimination perspective does not
The
men
But the
the whole story.
By focusing
women
doctors and
almost exclusively on the relationship between
woman's rights, it minimizes the impact of the transformation of American medicine on the lives of women doctors. Moreover, the discrimination interpretation overemphasizes the conflict between men and women and obscures the valuable support some men provided. From this point of view, the New England Hospital stands as a "feminist showplace" in a hostile world of male physicians rather than as a women's hospital that was both apart from, yet also a part of, the mainstream of American medicine. x
The second
interpretation
of the history of
focuses on the importance of female
Advocates of
lives.
this point
and ideas of women 1
2
in
women
doctors
culture in their professional
of view argue that the shared values
American
society
shaped the ways
in
which
Preface
women
doctors justified their professional careers and practiced
medicine. This perspective
is
significant because
beyond the sphere of the home
culture
how women brought
revealing
their
it
own unique
women
medicine. Yet this approach spotlights
expands female
into the medical profession,
experiences into
doctors as
women
at
the expense of their professional identities, obscuring the sim-
between
ilarities
"The
women and men
third interpretation views
fessionals.
From
this perspective,
physicians. 2
women women
doctors primarily as pro-
doctors emerge
and
first
foremost as practitioners of medicine. Instead of portraying them as
from men doctors (as the focus on female culture odds with men doctors (as the sexual discrimination
distinctly different
suggests) or at
perspective contends), supporters of this view believe that female
doctors shared essentially the same scientific and professional stan-
dards and practiced medicine
in fundamentally the same ways as male doctors. This perspective is important because it places women doctors within the mainstream of American medicine and demon-
men. But in doing so, it tips the scale in favor of these similarities and clouds the important differences that distinguished women from men doctors. 3 strates their similarities to
Individually, these interpretations present an incomplete picture
women
and professionalism were all part of the historv of women in medicine. Moreover, these interpretations lie at opposite ends of a spectrum and provide conflicting visions of women doctors. At one end the sexual discrimination and female culture viewpoints depict women doctors primarily as women; at the other end of the spectrum, the profesof
doctors. Sexual discrimination, sisterhood,
sional interpretation views
The
doctors.
women
doctors principally in their role as
women
two approaches focus on
first
almost ex-
clusively in political terms, either in their struggles against
their unity with
women. The
women
third takes
men
or
in
out of the political
arena and examines them chiefly in terms of their work. While each interpretation
new
tack:
doctors.
It
it
a significant contribution, this study takes a
synthesizes the dichotomized historiography of
portrays the
women and tion
makes
doctors,
and a medical
women
doctors
and interprets the
institution.
at
the
New England
hospital as a
women's
women as
both
institu-
1
At the heart of the historv of the
women
doctors
at
the
New
13
Preface
England Hospital
is
separatism, the foundation of women's lives in
nineteenth-century America. Beginning with the development of separate "spheres" in antebellum America,
women
spent their
lives
and mothers, while men claimed the public arena kept women in their own sphere, away own. Separatism as their from men, and it encouraged the development of a distinct female culture that tied women together in the bonds of sisterhood. Ultimately, separatism became the driving force that nineteenth-centurv women used to change their lives. Through a variety of institutions, clubs, and societies, women sought to expand the boundaries of their sphere. Although separatism dominated women's lives in the at
home
as wives
nineteenth
emerged
century,
at the
opportunities
for
end of that century, began
integration, to
which
shape women's
first
lives in
the twentieth. 5
Separatism guided the history of the women doctors at the New England from the hospital's founding in 1862 through its close a century century
later. The sexual discrimination that isolated nineteenthwomen in the home also barred women doctors from men's
-hospitals. At the
same
time, the sisterhood that nineteenth-century
women found among themselves motivated women doctors to estab"• lish their own all-women's hospitals. Indeed, the New England Hospital
was a vivid example of the growth of women's
institutions in
nineteenth-century America. But opportunities for integration in the twentieth century shook the foundations of like the
New
women's
institutions
England, challenging their separatist tradition.
At the same time, the
New England
the transformation of medicine in
Hospital must be cast within
modern America. During
quarter of the nineteenth century and the
first
the
last
quarter of the twen-
American hospitals evolved from institutions of medical charity and social control into institutions of medical science. As the modern hospital emerged, leadership shifted from lay trustees concerned with charity and social control to doctors motivated by the tieth,
demands of icies that
scientific
medicine. Doctors increasingly adopted pol-
looked inward to their professional needs and concerns
Whereas the "deservwards seeking food and
rather than outward to the needs of the sick.
ing poor" had originally filled the hospital
shelter as well as medical attention, paving patients
now went
to the
Preface hospital exclusively for medical care.
medical charity, the pitals of
its
perspective,
New England
Founded
as
an
institution of
Hospital evolved, like other hos-
From this who worked
day, into an institution of medical science. its
and
history
that of the
women
doctors
there are an integral part of the scientific, professional, and institutional transformation
of medicine in modern America. 6
*— Ultimately the history of the hospital and
its
women
doctors must
be viewed as both women's history and medical history. Separatism
and medical science formed the cornerstone of the New England, making the hospital and its women doctors unique in American history.
This study captures their uniqueness rather than directly
comparing women and men doctors in their respective hospitals. The latter approach tends to leave out of account the practices and ideas of women that do not bear direct comparison with those of men. Instead, this expanded case study incorporates comparisons with
men when
appropriate but keeps the history of women doctors
themselves always at center stage.
one women's hospital and its doctors, I have tried to weave their story into the broader fabric of American history. Indeed, the general shift from sexual separatism to integration, the emergence of a modern medical profession, and the erosion of Victorian moralism by the rise of a science of society in America were enacted in the lives of the women doctors at the New England Hospital. These important social changes constantly presented the women doctors with new problems and chal-
Although
this
book
details the story of
lenged them to find novel solutions. As the story of the doctors at the '
struggle to
New England
become
women
Hospital so vividly shows, a woman's
a doctor was but the
first
step in her
more endur-
ing struggle to be a doctor.
Many people and writing of this book.
institutions I
am
have helped
me
throughout the
grateful to the Rockefeller Foundation,
Mary Ingraham Bunting Institute of Radcliffe College. Tufts University, and the Henry A. Murray Research Center: A Center
the
for the Study of Lives at Radcliffe College for their generous sup-
port as I researched and wrote this book. The staffs at the Sophia Smith Collection of Smith College, the Francis A. Countway Librar)
Preface
Harvard University, the Arthur and Elizabeth on the History of Women in America at Radcliffe College, and the Massachusetts Historical Society and in particular Susan Boone at Smith College and Richard Wolfe at the
of Medicine
at
Library
Schlesinger
—
—
Countway Library gave valuable assistance. I also thank Steven Fuhrman, who helped me collect data on the doctors and interns at the New England Hospital; Dianne Saran, who typed the final draft; Norma Toney, who did some last-minute typing; Carolyn Guber, who proofread the typescript; George Marcopulous, who made some last-minute corrections; and other members of the history department out
at
Tufts University
my work on
Permission
this
who helped
Women
through-
quote from various unpublished collections has
to
kindly been granted by the Francis A. cine, the
at various points
book.
Countway Library of Medi-
Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of America, the Massachusetts Historical Society, the Sophia
in
Smith Collection of Smith College, the Board of Trustees of the
New
England Hospital, the Huntington Library, Amyas Ames, and Mrs. Francis T. P. Plimpton.
Portions of
my
which originally appeared
articles,
in Journal of
American Culture, 3 (1980), 660—672, and Journal of Social History, 15 (1982), 607-619, have, with kind permission of these journals, been incorporated into Chapters
The photographs
are
3, 4,
and
6.
reproduced with the permission of the
Sophia Smith Collection of Smith College and the Board of Trustees
New England Hospital. Over the years I have benefited from the
of the
ideas
and guidance of
I owe my earliest interest in history to Eric RothHenry Graff gave generously of his wisdom and experience. My discussions with Karen Blair about nineteenth-century women have been very helpful. Michael Frisch and Jesse Lemisch encour-
many
historians.
schild.
aged
me
at
an early stage of
Many people
my
research.
offered valuable suggestions on
all
or parts of
this
Gert Brieger, Gerald Grob, James Reed, Susan Reverby, Charles Rosenberg, Sarah Stage, and Morris Vogel helped me to
book.
its
medical context. Barbara Brenzel, Mari Jo Buhle, Nancy
Ann
Lane, Regina Morantz, and Elizabeth Pleck raised impor-
deepen Cott,
tant questions
16
about the
lives
of nineteenth-century women.
Preface
I
me
am
particularly indebted to Ellen DuBois,
the importance of studying
evolution of
my work
women
who
doctors.
first
suggested to
She has followed the
for the past ten years, giving generously of her
time and her ideas. She has consistently challenged
me with
her
own
encouraged me to develop my own She understands perhaps better than anyone the long intellec-
insights, yet simultaneously ideas.
road that has led to
tual
this
book.
family has provided invaluable support. My parents encourme to pursue my interest in history and helped make possible me to do so. My daughter Abigail provided joyful interruptions
My aged for
it
and moments of sheer delight throughout the preparation of this book. My daughter Eliza, just two weeks old as I write this, inspired
me
in the final stages
Finally,
sustained
than
I
I
me
of
this
work.
husband, Douglas Jones. His belief in me has throughout my work. He has helped me in more ways
thank
my
can possibly express; but
I
know he understands. Virginia G.
Drachman
Newton Massach usetts ,
17
Hospital with a Heart
"The Mother of Us All"
.Backward, turn backward, O Time in thy flight, Back to the dreams, grown reality bright, Dear early days, ere our work we began; Days when we wait, while thought ripens to plan; Days of our hopes, and our doubts, and our care; Days of depression, but never despair. Poor was the cradle, where our bantling was laid, Round it we watched, and we sighed, and we prayed.
—Julia Sprague, for
An
Women
"The New England Hospital and Children," 1896
impressive group assembled in Boston's Chickering Hall on Oc-
They had come
tober 29, 1902. respects to the
women
in
woman who had
to say
goodbye
dedicated her
—
to
life to
pay their
last
the "cause of
medicine," Dr. Marie Zakrzewska (pronounced Zak-shef-
ska). Dr. Zak, as
New
she was popularly known, had founded the
England Hospital for
Women
and Children
in
Boston
in 1862.'
For
the next forty years, until her death in 1902, she had devoted her life to
tice
the hospital, providing
and female
women doctors with
patients with medical care
training
and prac-
from physicians of
their
own sex. The hospital had grown and thrived under her leadership. From its tenuous beginnings with just a handful of beds, Zakrzewska had turned the New England Hospital into one of the most important women's medical institutions in the nineteenth century. Now she was dead. The size of the crowd in the chapel indicated there were main who would miss her. All the physicians from the hospital were present, among them Drs. Emma Call, Elizabeth Keller, and Emily and
Hospital with a Heart
Augusta Pope. They had come to the New England in its early years the all-male hospitals were closed to women, and they had
when
t
dedicated their professional
lives to
among the mourners including Ednah Dow Cheney, it.
Also
were several of the original directors, who had worked with Dr. Zakrzewska since the hospital's inception. Other women in the crowd, while not so closely linked to the hospital, had been among Zakrzewska's longtime friends. Among them were two prominent leaders of the woman's movement, Mary Livermore and Julia Ward Howe. They and other feminists, including Sarah and Angelina Grimke and Lucy Stone, had been loyal friends of Zakrzewska and advocates of the New England Hospital. Their support of her efforts for women doctors and Zakrzewska's participation in such feminist causes as the New England Woman's Club and suffrage linked Zakrzewska and her all-women's hospital to the woman's movement of the nineteenth century.
Men also mourned Dr. Zakrzewska's death: Henry F. Blackwell; young William Lloyd Garrison, the son of the famous abolitionist; Frederick May; and the Reverend Charles G. Ames. All these men believed in the cause of women in medicine and gave their support to Dr. Zakrzewska and her hospital. Scattered among the women at the memorial, they lent distinction to the group just as their association with the New England Hospital helped enhance its public recognition and acceptance. Other prominent male reformers, such as Theodore Parker, Wendell Phillips, and William Lloyd Garrison, would have been there as well had their deaths not preceded Zakrzewska's own. 2
"^
Zakrzewska's friends were a notable group, and she measured up
of them. Her life was one of impressive achievement. She was an accomplished midwife, a pioneer woman doctor, and the founder of a women's hospital. She was also one of the earliest to the best
members of the New England Woman's Club, a suffrage supporter, and an ardent abolitionist. In an age when few women ventured beyond their homes, Zakrzewska forged a unique path. From her earliest years, her experiences seemed to prepare her for a life of significant public
accomplishment.
Marie Elizabeth Zakrzewska was born tober 6, 1829.
22
Her
father,
an officer
in Berlin,
Germany, on Oc-
in the Prussian
army, was a
"The Mother of Us All"
descendant of the aristocratic Zakrzevvski family.
One
powerful
in
"republican
Zakrzevvski family lost
Poland
in
families its
which they lived
tury. Zakrzewska's
of
agitators"
wealth and position fell to
when
of the most Poland,
the
the parts of
Russia in the late eighteenth cen-
grandfather fled to escape the Russian czar,
re-
jected the Catholic church, and
became a Protestant and a liberal thinker. Marie's father, Martin Ludwig Zakrzevvski, followed his own father's example and became a freethinker. 3 ** Zakrzewska derived her political views from her father's side of the family; her mother's side provided the medical focus. Her grandmother was a veterinary surgeon, and her mother, Frederika C. W. Urban, was a midwife. Marie Zakrzewska was the eldest of five sisters and one brother. In her earliest years she amused herself in typical childlike ways, telling stories to her sister Minna, one year younger than herself, and plaving with dolls. As Zakrzewska fondly recalled, her dolls frequentlv "needed to be nursed and doctored," and she, as the young phvsician, cared for each one until it died. Thus, her fantasv plav with her dolls revealed not only
her vivid childhood imagination, but her
early awareness of disease
and death,
as well as
her identification
with the role of the doctor. 4
From her
Zakrzewska displayed the independence and willfulness that enabled her to make her childhood fantasy
come
earliest girlhood,
true
and
to
become one of
the pioneer
America. Already by the age of five when she
first
women
doctors in
started school, she
had adopted her parents' advice to "do right and fear nobody." The teachers "disliked me," Zakrzewska recalled, "because I would not and obey arbitrary demands without being given some reason because I insisted on following my own will when I knew I was right." Throughout her girlhood, Zakrzewska never felt truly com.
.
.
fortable or accepted at school. Despite her obvious intelligence, even
and would have dismissed the "ugly and naughty" child when her family could no longer pay her tuition, had
the principal disliked her
it
not been for her "noble" father. 5
During these early school years, Zakrzewska began to chart a course that deviated from the traditional path of most girls her age. She described herself as industrious, punctual, and keenly perceps 3
Hospital with a Heart
tive,
yet carelessly dressed, ill-groomed,
thought of herself
and
unattractive. In fact she
as "excessively]" ugly, with
her "large nose over-
shadowing the undeveloped features" of her face. Even her peers and relatives ridiculed her. An aunt, Zakrzewska recalled, would say of unattractive people that they were "almost as ugly as Marie." Lacking the social graces of her female schoolmates, Zakrzewska was always "quiet, shy, and awkward" among them. "I never made friends with the girls, or felt like approaching them," she explained. Instead she found her playmates among her male peers. "I joined the boys in all their sports, sliding and snowballing with them in winter, and running and playing in summer. With them," she recalled, "I was merry, frank, and self-possessed." 6 Not until Zakrzewska was eleven did she share a friendship with a girl. Her friend, twelve-year-old Elizabeth, was a devout Catholic and was preparing to become a nun. In her devotion to Elizabeth, Zakrzewska aspired to become a Catholic and a nun herself. As freethinkers, her parents, who had renounced all religion, tolerated their daughter's flirtation with Catholicism. It was not long, however, before Zakrzewska adopted her parents' religious skepticism. When Elizabeth informed her that the church forbade their friendship unless she converted to Catholicism immediately, Zakrzewska gave up her friend and the Catholic church. Indeed, faced with what she saw as the "despotism of theology," Zakrzewska permanently renounced all organized religion and was from that day until her death a freethinker
like
her parents.
Left once again without any close friends, Zakrzewska remained isolated
and unhappy
until, at the
age of twelve, she formed an
attachment to one of her teachers, a
Through
this
awkwardness began
ment of her new first
man
twenty years her senior.
"most peculiar friendship," Zakrzewska's adolescent to
change. With the kindness and encourage-
"teacher-friend," Zakrzewska began to care for the
time about her appearance and her manners, striving always to
"gain his approbation" as well as that of her other teachers and her
Her new personal regimen had a positive effect on her teachwho began to favor her over the other students. Her classmates,
peers. ers,
however, resented her new, privileged position and ridiculed her and isolated her even more. Their rejection made Zakrzewska more
24
"The Mother of Us All"
dependent on her "teacher-friend," with
many of her
whom
she spent her daily
"A strong attachment grew up between us," she remembered. "He became a necessity to me and I revered him like an oracle." 7 This relationship came to an abrupt end when the teacher-friend fell ill with consumption. On the morning of his death, he sent for Zakrzewska at school. 8 By the time she received permission to leave the classroom, he was dead. "This blow fell so heavily upon me," Zakrzewska recalled, "that I wished to leave school at once," and at lunch hour, sharing
private thoughts.
the age of thirteen she quit. For Zakrzewska, school was an important training
ground
for rejecting traditions, espousing unpopular
and enduring ridicule, disapproval, and loneliness. At home, Zakrzewska chafed at her unequal treatment with her brother. Although she was a superior student, her father required her to do housework even though she wanted to read in the evenings; her brother, who disliked his studies, was compelled to do
causes, challenging femininity,
girl,
When
Marie complained, she was told that because she was a she "never could learn much." 9 But the message from home
lessons.
was not quite so
simplistic. Despite
to to
her father's insistence that
his
he nevertheless wanted her to be able "earn an independent, responsible livelihood," rather than simply marry. Zakrzewska's mother, a successful midwife, provided the
daughter learn domestic
skills,
role model. 10
An
early
childhood
experience
Zakrzewska's interest in medicine.
with
When
illness
first
aroused
she was nine, she spent a
year in an ophthalmic hospital as a companion to a blind cousin.
There she first witnessed inadequacies and injustices in hospital care and experienced the desire to "some day ... be a head nurse to prevent such wrongs." 11
The
following year, having contracted an
eye infection herself, she was placed under the care of a physician
who
influenced her profoundly. Struck by Zakrzewska's youth, en-
encouraged her to accompany him on his hospital rounds. Even though she could not see, Zakrzewska could hear his questions and directions, and she quickly became his
ergy,
and
curiosity, the physician
loyal pupil.
When
she regained her sight, the doctor presented her
with two books, one on the history of midwifery and the other on the
25
Hospital with a Heart
history of surgery. "Both
were so
read them through during the time
I
date
my
Ironically,
it
interesting," she recalled, "that
six
weeks of vacation.
.
.
.
From
I
this
study of medicine." 12
was shortly after her outspoken father
lost his
post in
army that Zakrzewska found the opportunity to explore her new medical interest. With the family on the brink of poverty, Zakrzewska's mother became a midwife. Between the ages of fourteen and eighteen, Zakrzewska eagerly accompanied her mother on her lying-in visits. By the time Zakrzewska was sixteen, she was actively assisting her mother in many of the deliveries. The experience did more than provide valuable practical experience in the art of midwifery. It exposed the young girl as well to the bitter realities of life among the poor women who made up over half her the Prussian
and meanness in palaces," she recalled, "virtue among prostitutes, and vice among socalled respectable women." 13 These visions, stamped permanently on her mind, aroused her deep sympathy for the poor whom she strove to help throughout her life. mother's practice.
Despite the
"I
human
saw nobleness
in dens,
misery she witnessed so regularly, Zakrzewska
was extremely happy during the years she worked with her mother.
was as free," she recalled, "as any German girl could be." 14 At the age of eighteen, when most girls were concerned about parties, fashion, even marriage, Zakrzewska made a decision about her career. "I
She chose to become a midwife like her mother. Her decision provoked a conflict at home. It pleased her father, who wanted his daughter to be able to support herself in adulthood. Her mother, however, who had worked out of financial necessity rather than from choice, did not approve. Despite the disagreement between her parents, Zakrzewska applied to the School for Midwives in Berlin.
Founded
in the early
nineteenth century to educate
women
as
midwives, the school was the product of more than a century of
debate in Prussia over the place of midwifery. Although
en
women had
women
in the profession of
traditionally attended other
wom-
was not until the late seventeenth century that Justine Ditrichin Siegemundin, the wife of a distinguished Prussian in childbirth,
civil
officer,
26
it
became known
as the country's first great midwife.
"The Mother of Us Air
Siegemundin decided
to study
midwifery after she was incorrectly
diagnosed as being pregnant. She quickly achieved
local fame as a and an instructor in midwifery. In 1690 she wrote a book on midwifery based on the records of her own cases. It was the first book on midwifery written by a woman in Germany, and it was widely read and influential in
practicing midwife, a consultant in difficult cases,
the profession. Despite
among many
physicians
its
success,
who
it
aroused strong controversy
believed that obstetricians, not mid-
wives, should train midwives.
The
furor over Siegemundin's book
did not impede her career, however. She held the important position of court
that post
midwife
when he
Brandenburg and retained Brandenburg into the kingdom of Prussia
to Frederick III of
raised
her death in 1705, physicians again sought to credit female midwives, and many women left the profession. in 1701. After
dis-
In 1818 a series of laws was passed to regulate the practice of
female midwives. in all cases
One
law required them to
of irregular confinements. While
an important medical check, Another law prohibited any
it
call in a
this
male physician
may have provided
clearly limited midwives'
woman
autonomy.
without formal education in
midwifery from practicing. This law led
to the
founding of the
School for Midwives in Berlin, the school to which Zakrzewska
sought entry in 1844. 15 * Acceptance was by no means automatic.
The
school accepted only
two applicants a year, and competition was keen. Many of the appliwidows of civil officers, seeking financial independence. For several years, Zakrzewska's application was
cants were the wives or
passed over in favor of these older married women.
Zakrzewska
ifyas
befriended by Dr. Joseph
fessor of midwifery in the university
Herman
Finally,
Schmidt, pro-
and the School for Midwives
and director of the Royal Hospital Charite of Berlin. Zakrzewska found that Dr. Schmidt had a deep respect for women and a strong faith in their intellect and potential. She turned to him for help as she had turned to her teacher several years before. Schmidt took a keen interest in Zakrzewska and used his influence to gain her acceptance into the school. This was no small feat. Indeed, not until Schmidt called personally on the king, who held the doctor in high esteem, did Zakrzewska finally gain admission. Once '-'T
Hospital with a Heart
enrolled, she
became Schmidt's
private pupil,
and he trained her
to
succeed him as professor in the School for Midwives and chief ac-
coucheuse
among
aroused deep resentment
in the hospital. His intentions
the male doctors in the hospital, for they strongly opposed
^^placing a
woman
in a position
of such authority. Over the course of
half a year, the controversy intensified,
and Zakrzewska ultimately woman's rights.
found herself the catalyst for a public debate over
While diplomats expressed concern about the emancipation of womSchmidt showered the government with letters attesting to women's capability to assume the responsibilities he proposed to give en,
^
Zakrzewska.
During
this
period of public debate Zakrzewska's mother and
fa-
ther switched their respective positions on their daughter's professional aspirations. Zakrzewska's mother, convinced of her
daugh-
to midwifery, became her staunch supporter. Her on the other hand, shocked by the public attention his daughter's ambitions had provoked, urged her to abandon her career and to marry. Both parents remained fixed in their new positions so that until each died, Zakrzewska's mother remained the ter's
commitment
father,
loyal advocate of
her daughter's professional aspirations, while her
father continued to resist her efforts to forge a professional Finally, all
life.
formal opposition to Zakrzewska's appointment gave
way, and at the age of twenty-two, a jubilant Zakrzewska took over the weighty duties of her mentor.
"The joy
that
I
felt,"
she recalled,
"was great beyond expression." 16 Her happiness was short-lived,
however, for Schmidt,
who had been
day she assumed her new
ill
for
responsibilities.
some
The
time, died the very
loss
was more than a
personal one for Zakrzewska, as she had always relied on Schmidt to
support and protect her from the It
hostility
of the other male doctors.
was not long before she found her enemies too formidable Despite her short tenure as
to
months later. chief accoucheuse and professor of
handle by herself, and she resigned her position
six
midwifery, the experience had a lasting effect. Zakrzewska learned
two important lessons: the value of male support and the burden of male opposition. Schmidt had been an important ally, shielding her from her adversaries and smoothing her way to the top. His death underscored her own vulnerability
28
as a
woman and prepared
her
"The Mother of Us All" for the alienation
and struggle she
later
endured
as a
woman
man's profession. This lesson ultimately became important
New England
Hospital, for Dr. Zakrzewska
made
in a
at the
a point of seeking
the advice and support of respected male physicians and philanthropists in
Schmidt
Boston. Furthermore, Zakrzewska's close relationship with
formative point in her career was influential in shap-
at the
ing her professional identity. She adopted the professional values of
her mentor, one of the most influential physicians
brought them
to
New England
Hospital.
Having
Her
left
in Berlin,
America, where she strove to maintain them
and
at the
the Charite, Zakrzewska faced an uncertain future.
special training with
Schmidt had prepared her for more than a "What was I to do?" she asked. "I was not
typical midwife's practice.
made
is commonly done. My education and demanded more than this." 17 Only months before his
to practice quietly, as
aspirations
death, Dr. Schmidt had
shown her
a report
announcing the opening
of the Female Medical College of Pennsylvania. "In America," he
had told his protegee, "women will now become physicians." Schmidt had given Zakrzewska a new goal. Whereas she had once wanted to be a midwife like her mother, with Schmidt's encouragement, her new aspiration was to become a physician like her mentor. She decided "to go to America to join in a work open to womanhood on a larger scale." 18 Her mother encouraged her, but her father again told her to get married.
When
she agreed to take her third
Anna, she won her father's reluctant acquiescence. At the age of twenty-four, Zakrzewska left her family, her homeland, and the sister,
prospect of a successful career in midwifery to seek greater medical opportunities for herself in America.
Her motives were more than purely also
wanted
to
professional, however. She
expose the despotism of her homeland and
pressive policies toward
women.
its
op-
"I came for a purpose/' she
re-
had to show to those men who had opposed me so strongly was a woman that, in this land of liberty, equality, and fraternity, I could maintain that position which they would not per-
called. "I
because mit to it
I
me
at
home." 19 Nevertheless, despite her
was an enormous personal
can assure you that
this
sacrifice for
political convictions,
her to leave Germany.
was the hardest moment
I
ever knew,
29
1
she
Hospital with a Heart
recalled of the day she left
imprinted the
street, the
home. "Upon my memory is forever window behind which my moth-
house, the
er stood waving her handkerchief." 20
Two months
Marie Zakrzewska arrived in New York ready Though her goal was ambitious, it was by no means an impossible one. Other women in America were already doctors. Some, such as Boston physician Harriot Hunt, apto forge
later,
her career as a doctor.
prenticed with a practicing doctor before establishing a practice.
Adamson Dolley, and Clemence Lozier, trained at homeopathic, eclectic, or other irregular medical schools. Although the orthodox, regular medical community shunned irregular institutions, the latter provided a popular Others, including Lydia Folger Fowler, Sarah
alternative for
were divided
and
its
many
as well
nineteenth-century doctors.
on
this issue.
Some found
institutions appealing because of their
principles, their milder therapeutics,
women
in medicine.
On
and
the other hand,
Women
doctors
irregular medicine
unorthodox medical
their relative tolerance of
women who
identified with
the regular branch of medical practice dismissed irregular
women
doctors as inferior and claimed they threatened the efforts of
wom-
en to attain equality with regular male physicians. Zakrzewska shared this latter point of view. Having trained
Germany
at a
regular institution tied to the medical
elite,
in
she consid-
ered neither an irregular medical school nor even an apprenticeship satisfactory.
Only
a regular medical school
would do. Her goal was
not without precedent. Elizabeth Blackwell had recently graduated
—
from the Geneva Medical College in New York the first woman in America to receive a diploma from a regular medical school. Her sister Emily was at the medical school at Western Reserve College in Cleveland. Other significant signs were the recent founding of the New England Female Medical College in Boston, which gave women formal training in midwifery, and the Female Medical College of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia, which offered women regular medical training apart from men. Encouraging signs extended beyond the field of medicine. By the middle of the century, women throughout the Northeast began to expand their lives beyond the limits of their homes. They joined church organizations, moral reform societies, and temperance orga3o
"The Mother of Us All" nizations.
Many became
involved in antislavery
activity.
And
only a
hundreds of women gathered in Seneca Falls, New York, endorsed suffrage, property rights, and other reforms for women, and launched the formal beginnings of a woman's rights movement. Initially, Zakrzewska did not identify with this early feminism. Yet it was not long before her personal experience showed her that the woman's movement and the entrance of women into medicine were closely entwined. Throughout her first year in New York, Zakrzewska was far from realizing her goal of becoming a doctor. In a small apartment above a grocery, she hung out her shingle. While she waited for the pafew years before Zakrzewska's
tients
arrival,
who never came, her sister Anna took a job with a dressmaker, home only two dollars and seventy-five cents after a long
bringing
week of work. Penniless, friendless, and unable to speak English, the two young women struggled simply to survive. Finally, in desperation Zakrzewska took their last five dollars and invested all but twenty-five cents in worsted materials and an advertisement in a German paper for women who could knit. In this way she launched a business producing worsted goods in her tenement apartment. The enterprise became a financial success and pulled Zakrzewska and her sister out of their poverty. At the same time, it had important implications for Zakrzewska's future:
that she later used at the to the tragic lives
of
it
gave her business experience
New England
Hospital,
many German women who,
and
it
exposed her
unlike herself, were
when they became acquainted," she explained, "with many of those unfortunates who had been misled and ruined on their arrival by persons pretending, friendship." 21 Their ruined lives evoked in Zakrzewska a deep and lasting sympathy that she seduced, sexually exploited, and forced into prostitution arrived in America. "I
first
extended to the many immigrant women who sought care at the New England Hospital. While Zakrzewska made her small worsted business a success, a later
full
year in
New York
Gity brought only frustration regarding her
primary goal of becoming a doctor.
Armed
with letters of support
male physicians in Berlin, she tried to make contact with male physicians in America, expecting the same support from them. But they only discouraged her efforts. "Evervwhere my inqui-
from
influential
Hospital with a Heart
ries
about
women
doctors were received with a pitiful shrug of the
shoulders," she explained. "I had idealized the freedom of America
and
especially the
reform of the position of women" she com-
plained. 22
Only when Zakrzewska sought the help of women did she receive encouragement. In the spring of 1854, she visited the Home for the Friendless, hoping that the women who ran it would be able in some way to help her launch her medical career. Zakrzewska received the help she sought. Only two days after her
visit, the matron of the meet Dr. Elizabeth Blackwell. Following graduation from Geneva Medical College in 1849, Blackwell had opened a small outpatient dispensary for poor women and children on New York's Lower East Side. 23 The meeting between Zakrzewska and Blackwell was significant for both, marking the beginning of a lifelong relationship. "From this call of the 15th of May, 1854, I date my new life in America," Zakrzewska recalled. "Now," she continued, "I was Finding the welcome and the beginning of which I had dreamed, and all the many days of disappointment were instantly forgotten." 24 Dr. Blackwell too was delighted with her new acquaintance. Of this initial meeting she wrote to her sister Emily, "I have at last found a student in whom I can take a great deal of interest. There is true stuff in her, and I shall do my best to bring it out." 25 While Zakrzewska gave Blackwell invaluable aid in the infirmary, Blackwell became Zakrzewska's medical preceptor and English instructor and helped her gain acceptance as a student in the medical department of Western Reserve College. Their relationship symbolized in microcosm the isolation of women doctors in mid-nineteenth-century America and the striking need for the friendship and colleagueship a community of medical
home arranged
women
for her to
could provide. 2
*'
With Blackwell's help, Zakrzewska began her formal medical training in the
fall
of 1854. Entering medical school was a turning
marking the first formal step in attaining her goal of becoming a doctor. But it had significance that extended beyond her career plans. It changed her attitude toward the woman's rights movement in America from skepticism to support. The help she received from Blackwell and from the women at the Home for the point in her
32
life,
"The Mother of Us All" Friendless
showed her
that
women
willingly offered the professional
help she did not receive from men. Moreover, the financing of her
medical education in Cleveland demonstrated even more clearly her
dependence on the organized
efforts of
women. Blackwell provided
the books she needed. Caroline Severance, the president of the
Ladies Physiological Society in Cleveland, gave Zakrzewska free
room and board. 27 The Ohio Female Medical Education
Society, an
organization of women seeking to forward women's medical careers, paid her lecture fees. Having personally benefited from the collective efforts
ticism
of so
many women
she did not know, Zakrzewska's skep-
about woman's rights dissolved into deep appreciation. In
recalling her
change of heart, she explained, "the 'crowing hens' of
Cleveland," as she had originally perceived them, "had taken
under
their
wing
to shelter
me and
to
promote my
efforts." 28
me
This
personal experience ignited Zakrzewska's interest in woman's rights. In later years she
commitment
made her own
contribution to the cause, for her
women in medicine became New England Hospital.
to equal opportunities for
a central building block of the
Zakrzewska's experiences during her student days in Cleveland
opened her eyes
to
more than woman's
rights.
Through Caroline
Severance, Zakrzewska met the Reverend A. D. Mayo, an abolitionist
and woman's tion.
From
who led a small Universalist congregamen and women who made up Mayo's unorthodox
rights activist
the
group, Zakrzewska encountered a range of new ideas beyond abolition and woman's rights, including free love, free soil, spiritualism, and Fourierism. As a medical student in Cleveland, Zakrzewska began to receive what she termed her education in "American Civilization." "It was a most valuable episode of my life," she recalled, "turning all my views topsy-turvey, uprooting me, so to say, from all German conservatism, and throwing me into this chaotic medley of
contradictions." 29
While a medical student, Zakrzewska endured a major tragedy: The visit her, died aboard ship.
her mother, enroute to America to
news almost paralyzed me," Zakrzewska explained of perhaps the deepest personal loss of her father
became even more
imploring her in
life.
:U)
To make
matters worse, her
rigid in his opposition to her career plans,
letters to give
up her work and threatening 33
to
Hospital with a Heart
withhold financial assistance should she ever need
it. "If you were a one letter, "I could not find words in which to express my satisfaction and pride but you are a woman," he continued, "a weak woman; and all that I can do for you now is to grieve and to weep." 31 Despite the strength of his words, Zakrzewska's father never swayed her in her plan to become a doctor. When she graduated from Western Reserve in 1856, she joined the handful of women who were to open the medical profession to women. Returning to New York to set up a medical practice, Zakrzewska
young man," he wrote
in
.
quickly learned that for a
woman,
professional success.
tee
against female physicians.
.
a medical degree did not guaran-
Instead,
The
.
she
felt
the strong prejudice
prevailing view was that they had
overstepped the proper boundaries of womanhood. In addition, the public associated "female physicians" with abortionists. Indeed,
was during that the
this
very period
when Zakrzewska returned
infamous abortionist,
her notoriety. Her
Madame
name "was on
Restelle,
was
to
it
Xew York
at the
peak of
everyone's tongue as typifying the
Zakrzewska explained. Because of the widespread horror and mistrust of female physicians, Zakrzewska found that "people were afraid to employ a woman physician openly" and 'female physician,'
"
were even unwilling to rent office space to her. 32 Zakrzewska the back portion of her house. Zakrzewska moved into Blackwell's busy household of relatives, which included her brothers, Henry and Samuel, and their respective wives, Lucy Stone and Antoinette Brown Blackwell. The reunion between Zakrzewska and Blackwell reestablished their close friendship and rekindled their shared interests. In particular, it renewed their desire to resume their dispensary, or outpatient work, which Blackwell had terminated because of lack of funds. To reopen the dispensary required $500, a sum neither woman could raise. "It seems an impossibility," Zakrzewska wrote at the time, "to find friends for our cause. Nobody seems to feel the need that landlords
Finally, Elizabeth Blackwell offered
of a hospital or dispensary for the practical training of women physicians." Frustrated in
New
her unsuccessful attempts
to raise
money
in
York, Zakrzewska found encouragement from Dr. William
Channing, a Boston physician who had brought a female patient to New York to be treated by Blackwell. Channing was enthusiastic 34
'The Mother of Us All"
about the idea of a women's hospital, and he encouraged Zakrzewska to seek financial support in Boston, "the hothouse of all reforms." 33
Zakrzewska had been Cleveland.
Through
to
Boston once, during her student days in Hunt she had met such leading
Dr. Harriot
reformers as Sarah and Angelina Grimke, William Lloyd Garrison, Theodore Parker, and Wendell Phillips, as well as Dr. Channing. Remembering what she perceived then to be the relative tolerance for women doctors in Boston compared with New York or Cleveland, Zakrzewska took Channing's advice and went to Boston in 1856 "to beg for an institution for American women." 34 Through her friends Harriot Hunt and Caroline Severance, who had moved from Cleveland to Boston, Zakrzewska met men and women who were interested in her venture. Women such as Abby May, Lucy Goddard, and Ednah Dow Cheney, and men such as William Lloyd Garrison and Samuel Sewall, opened their homes for Zakrzewska to speak to small groups on behalf of the infirmary. These women and men, influential reformers in antislavery, woman's rights, and other causes, became Zakrzewska's new friends. Seven years later they
provided the nucleus of her support for the founding of the
New
England Hospital. After two visits to Boston in 1856, Zakrzewska returned to New York with pledges of $650 for the new infirmary. By the spring of 1857, Zakrzewska and Blackwell had raised the money they needed, and on May 1 1857, they opened the doors to the New York Infirmary for Women and Children. For two years Zakrzewska donated her energy and skills to the infirmary, serving as resident physician, superintendent, housekeeper, and instructor. The work was de,
manding and
barely supported her basic needs. "In truth," she re-
had to earn by outside practice, the money to buy a holiday or Sunday dinner, as the Institution was too poor to afford a decent table." 35 During the time Zakrzewska was at the New York Infirmary, she made another visit to Boston, calling on the friends she had made during the previous trip. Anxious to attract her to their city, they encouraged Zakrzewska to come to Boston to organize a clinical department in the New England Female Medical
called, "often
College.
I
Hospital with a Heart
The New England Female Medical
College was founded by Sam-
uel Gregory, a lecturer in physiology noted for his widely read
pam-
phlets on sexual morality and midwifery. Gregory studied at Yale
College in the early 1840s, and then embarked on his lecture career,
speaking throughout
New England on
a range of topics such as
phrenology, mesmerism, and licentiousness. In 1844 he published his first pamphlet, Facts and Important Information for Young Men on the Self-indulgence of the
Sexual Appetite.
The pamphlet
sold over
42,000 copies and established his reputation. In the mid- 1840s, Gregory began to express alarm about the growing numbers of male
accoucheurs and the threat he believed they posed
to
female virtue.
In a series of pamphlets including Man-Midwifery Exposed, Medical
and Letter to Ladies in Favor of Female Physicians, Gregory argued that only women should attend women in the delivery room. In a further attempt to banish men from the delivery room, he opened the New England Female Medical College in 1848 to pro-
Morals,
vide
women
with formal training in midwifery. Innovative in his
efforts to train
women in medicine, he was nonetheless rooted in women that emphasized modesty, piety, and
traditional views of passivity.
Moreover, though Gregory held an honory medical de-
gree from the Eclectic Pennsylvania Medical College, he not only
was outside the regular medical profession but was a vocal it.
critic
of
36
Zakrzewska ultimately views of
her
visit
women to
lost
patience with Gregory's traditional
as well as with his
Boston
in the winter
unorthodox medical
ideals.
On
of 1859, however, she saw the would have for women
potential value she believed Gregory's school
medicine once she had established a clinical department. Persuaded by her friends in Boston of their commitment to clinical training for women, and confident that the New York Infirmary was in
on firm ground, she seized this opportunity to organize her own clinical department in Gregory's school. While her friends in Boston applauded her decision, her father in Germany wrote her of his deep displeasure with her new course of action. "Whether or not I succeeded," explained Zakrzewska, he believed "I was disgracing the family and German womanhood in general, by accepting a position which caused
36
my name
to
come
— "The Mother of Us Air
prominently before the public." 37 In exasperation, Zakrzewska wrote a letter to her father demanding that he accept her decisions or never write her again. This
Zakrzewska
felt
letter,
from her
ration of her emancipation
father. Ironically,
with her father's death, and Zakrzewska never
read
when
written at a time
confident about her future, was an important declait
coincided
knew whether he
it.
The death of her father did not impede Zakrzewska and she began her work at the New England Female Medical College confident that she would be able to offer clinical training in medicine to women.
Her experiences
at the college,
however, did not
live
up
to
her
high expectations. Sharp differences quickly developed between herself
and Gregory. Zakrzewska,
en could succeed
in
like Blackwell, believed that
equal footing with the best male physicians.
doom women's
wom-
medicine only by entering the profession on an
To do
otherwise would
Gregory did not share Zakrzewand very quickly the two began to clash. From the beginning, Zakrzewska received little support from Gregory for the clinical department she was trying to build. Attendance in her department was not a requirement, and she found that only a efforts to failure.
ska's professional standards,
few students, the better ones, chose to
more, her requests for times with hostility.
When
ample, one of Gregory's
visit
it
regularly. Further-
apparatus were often rejected, some-
clinical
she petitioned for a microscope, for ex-
allies
described her request as "another one
of those new-fangled European notions which she
tries to intro-
duce." 38 In another instance, her disagreement with Gregory over
standards put Zakrzewska in the awkward position of obstructing the medical careers of two
performed poorly on
women. When two of Gregorys
port their graduation. In this
women, Zakrzewska did not support every woman only those
students
exams, Zakrzewska refused to supcase, as in all her medical work for
their final
who met her
in
medicine
standards of excellence.
Like Zakrzewska, the Lady Managers of the College also suffered
under the
dictatorial
hand of Gregory, who denied them any mean-
ingful influence in the business of the school. Ultimately, the strain
between Gregory and his allies on the one hand, and Zakrzewska and her allies on the other, became a struggle over who would have 3 7
Hospital with a Heart final authority at the college. According to Zakrzewska's supporters, Gregory was determined to keep all the power for himself. "His will is law," lamented one of Gregory's adversaries. "At first, he put down Mrs. G and now it appears to me that he has been determined to put down Dr. Zakrzewska." 39 But Zakrzewska would not let Gregory subdue her. Frustrated by her lack of autonomy, the obstacles to her clinic, and her inability to preserve her professional
—
Her
standards, she resigned in 1862.
supporters, including
Ednah
Cheney, Abby May, and William Lloyd Garrison, left with her. "The whole occurrence brought about a split in the college," Zakrzewska recalled,
orable
intelligent men, among whom was the Honsome of the men professors, also resigned." 40
"and the most
S. E.
Sewall and
In leaving the
New England Female
Medical College, Zakrzewska
preserved her professional integrity and her strong commitment to
women
standards of excellence for
doctors. Yet she was once again
without a vehicle for implementing them. "In 1862, after disconnecting myself from the
New England Female
Medical College in
Boston," she recalled, "I stood alone once more, time,
and
me.
was no longer needed
I
still
as the result
at the
of
my
in
my life's work, as it appeared to New York, yet nothing could I show
eight years' labor." 41 Zakrzewska did have a goal, at
Gregory's school strengthened her
importance of clinical training for women.
work again on the old
plan," she explained,
"Namely
"I
decided
to
to establish the
education of female students on solid principles, that
them
for the third
beginning of
however, for her experience belief in the
now
is,
to
educate
in hospitals." 42
This time, Zakrzewska had a strong nucleus of "A few friends Mr. George William Bond, Mrs. Ednah D. Cheney, and Miss Lucy Goddard true, firm friends of the educa-
—
support.
tion of
women
—
stood beside me," she recalled. Almost immediately
New England Female Medical College, they pooled energy and resources, "remnants of hospital furniture valued $150 which remained from our experiment in connection with
after leaving the their at
the
New England Female
England Hospital for
Medical College," and opened the
Women
and
Children. 43
New
Unlike Gregory's
school, Zakrzewska's hospital followed the standards of the regular
male medical profession. From
its
founding
er work, Dr. Zakrzewska devoted her
Even her private practice and her private 38
until she
life to
could no long-
the hospital.
life
overlapped with her
— 'The Mother of Us Air
work
at the hospital. In the hospital's earliest years,
Zakrzewska used
her private practice to demonstrate a woman's capabilities cine
and
to
consistently
medi-
so,
she
measured herself against the standards of the male phy-
emulated.
sicians she
in
win approval from male physicians. In doing "It
was
my
determination," she explained, "to
prove to the profession, as well as the only the same
(if
laity,
that a
woman
has not
not more) physical endurance as a man, while
thus created a good foundation of respect for
women
physicians." In
her effort to prove her endurance, Zakrzewska attended the night and day regardless of distance or weather.
I
"No
sick
cases could or
would I refuse," she recalled. She walked, even in the night, through Roxbury, South Boston, Dorchester, Brookline, and Cambridge in temperatures often below zero. This nighttime traveling "was absolutely
needed," she explained, "to dispel the prejudice against wom-
do night work." The following year, Zakrzewska bought a "second-hand buggy and a horse" to make her house calls easier and to improve her professional image. The buggy "became a an's ability
to
matter of necessity," she recalled, "to uphold the professional quette and dignity of a
woman
eti-
physician as an equal with men." 44
Like most nineteenth-century professional
women, Zakrzewska
never married. Her decision reflected the prevailing values of nineteenth-century American society, which denied middle-class
women
both career and marriage. Indeed, balancing the two was a feat few
women
of her day ever achieved.
Still,
Zakrzewska would have pre-
ferred to marry. Recognizing the limits she personally experienced as a single
younger woman doctor to marry: "I happiness that exists for us poor mortals
woman, she advised
want you to enjoy all which is by no means
a
in the single life." 45 Despite
her personal
preference for marriage, Zakrzewska remained single
—and
not
out of deference to nineteenth-century social values. She believed that the severe headaches from which she suffered all her solely
adult
life
were symptoms of an obscure hereditary nervous disorder.
Since marriage without children was unthinkable to her, she chose a
Zakrzewska's "brain trouble," as she called her condition. was a private tragedy and a bitter irony. While she dedicated her public life to medical science, her personal life was clouded by medisingle
cal
life.
ignorance and her suffering shared with practically no one. married, she headed a busy house-
Though Zakrzewska never
39
Hospital with a Heart
hold. In i860, she
house
in
borrowed S500 from Samuel Sewall
Roxbury. There she
settled with
to
two of her
purchase a sisters;
her
and the German radical, Karl Heinand son. She had the greatest affinity with Heinzen, a republican and a freethinker who had emigrated from Germany to America in the 1850s. In America he established himself as one of the leading German-American journalists. Throughout his publishing career, he espoused radical ideas and supported radical causes, including abolition and woman's rights. 46 As a child, Zakrzewska had learned about Heinzen, "the pioneer of Republicanism in Germany," from her father, who read his writings in secret. She met Heinzen in New York, and they became lifelong friends. When Heinzen moved to Boston, Zakrzewska longed to follow him there. Indeed, she confessed in a private letter at the end of her life that it was Heinzen, as much as any professional invalid friend, Julia Sprague;
zen, his wife,
interests,
who
attracted her to Boston. 47
and son became a permanent part of Zakrzewska's household when she moved to Roxbury in i860. Heinzen committed his time to his radical journal, Pionier, publishing essays on diet reform, education, music, and geography, as well as excerpts from the writings of Darwin, Dickens, Poe, and Harriet Beecher Stowe. Though clearly a vehicle for Heinzen's radical ideas, Heinzen,
his
wife,
the Pionier was, according to William Lloyd Garrison, "the ablest,
most independent, and high-toned of
all
German papers
in the
country." 48 Zakrzewska played a major role in keeping the journal
donating monev whenever she could. At the same time, Heinzen took every opportunity to use the Pionier to publicize Zakrzewska, her lectures, and the New England Hospital. Heinzen and his family lived with Zakrzewska until his death in her home in 1880. Until then, he and Zakrzewska formed the nucleus of a social center for their German and American friends. With the families of William Lloyd Garrison, Caroline Severance, and German radical Louis Prang living down the street, her various sisters moving in and out, and her hospital friends dropping bv, Zakrzewska led a busy private life. l9 Still, the New England Hospital was the center of Zakrzewska's life. "It was the object of her most intense affection, the child of her afloat,
4
'The Mother of Us Air
prime and of her old age," explained Emily Pope. Through every vicissitude," Pope continued, "from the poverty of its beginning to '
the time in 1900 beautiful
when she
rejoiced with us at the opening of our
was her pride and joy." 50 Dr. England Hospital her energy, drive,
new
surgical building,
it
Zakrzewska brought to the New and persistence; the wisdom of her personal experience; her strong
women
commitment to the highest standards in regular medicine; and her deep sympathy for poor women. She wove these concerns into the New England Hospital so that in principle and in policy it bore her stamp. As her friends at the hospital explained on the occasion of her seventieth birthday: "In her belief in
doctors; her
thought, the New England Hospital was born. Because of her zeal and untiring energy and the aid of a few earnest friends, it became a fact. And from that day to the present one, as wise woman, skillful physician, and faithful friend, she has been an inspiration to all." 51 There were many whose lives Dr. Zakrzewska touched. The mourners at her memorial service were testimony to her influence. The oldest members in the crowd, the ones who had known her the longest and worked with her the closest, would miss her most. But even they had found her stubborn, impatient, and tactless. Her old friend William Lloyd Garrison once warmly described her as "a woman of decided opinions and the frankest speech." 52 And Ednah Cheney described her as a woman with a "quick, impatient temper" who "sometimes gave offense." 53 Even Zakrzewska considered herself "too frank and candid" and wished she had been "brought up with more reserve." 54 Still, throughout her life, Zakrzewska held tightly to her principles, regardless of the consequences, and she paid the price of popularity for her convictions. The younger doctors were less tolerant of her than their predecessors. Thev respected her, but many of them had found her difficult to work with
and hard
to
understand.
To
them, Zakrzewska's persistence was
merely stubbornness, and her commitment to a separate all-women's hospital was both outdated and a sacrifice of professional standards.
Some had
recently collided with her on a variety of issues.
young doctors
at the
memorial service said goodbye and directors bade farewell
leader; the older doctors
friend
and comrade.
The
to their crust)
Ironically, only in death
to their loyal
was she able
to bring
41
Hospital with a Heart
them
had long been unable to agree. But the moment. To be sure, several of the original group, like Drs. Emma Call and Emily Pope, would continue to work at the hospital and give it a continuity with the past. But new leaders had emerged. Among the crowd stood younger doctors such as Mary Hobart and Sarah Bond who were ready to bring the hospital all
together, for they
unity was merely for a
into the twentieth century.
For the moment, however, the stage They planned the program, sat on
still
belonged
to the pioneers.
the platform,
and gave the
speeches. Moreover, at Dr. Zakrzewska's funeral only three months before,
it
was Zakrzewska herself who had commanded center
Prepared
as she
was
in life for the
she was prepared for this
last
many meetings
stage.
she attended, so
gathering with her friends and fellow
workers. Only weeks before her death she wrote her final goodbye, to
be read
Mrs.
her funeral. In death, as in
at
Emma
thirty years,
Butler, a
member
life,
she had the
last
word.
of the board of directors for over
read Zakrzewska's farewell
letter:
my whole lifetime, I have had my own way as much as any being can have it without entirely neglecting social rules or trespassing upon the comfort of others more than is necessary for During
human
self-preservation.
And now, upon this occasion, I wish to have my own way in taking who shall come for the last time to pay such respect as
leave of those
custom, inclination and friendship shall permit, asking them to accept the assurance that I am sorry to pass from them, this time never to return.
.
.
.
am
not speaking of fame, nor do I think that my name, difficult though it be, will be remembered. Yet the idea for which I have worked, the seeds which I have tried to sow here and there, must live and spread and bear fruit. 55 I
Dr. Zakrzewska was correct.
Her name was
all
but forgotten after
her death. Yet the successes of women doctors throughout the twentieth
century were testimony to the permanency of her accomplish-
New England Hospital was her legacy to women doctors, one which they could look
ments. In particular, the future generations of
back to with pride. As the younger William Lloyd Garrison declared in his eulogy:
42
"Now
her triumphs and services have become historic
"The Mother of Us All" records, while the
New England
Hospital, whose foundation she once her monument and the city's pride.
laid
more than
the
,,
in tribulation,
is
The death of
at
Dr. Marie Zakrzewska represented
death of a pioneer tors,
woman
doctor.
Two
generations of
" ,,i
women docwomen in
symbolizing both the hopes and the struggles of
remember this leader and her beloved hospital. moment, the memorial and eulogy of Dr. Zakrzewska kindled the women's nostalgia for the New England Hospital, its founder, and a bygone day when the hospital held a central place in the lives of women doctors. As they stood there together, they all knew that, for better or worse, the New England Hospital in 1902 was a very different place from what it had been when Zakrzewska medicine, joined to If only for a
founded
it
in 1862.
A}
—
2
"This All-Women's Hospital'
L>(hild
of
Gladly
we gave of our
promise,
fair
Grown comely
in figure,
Winning the way Disarming the
still
to
pleading for more,
love, thought,
and
store.
ripening in grace,
high honor and place.
confirming the friend, Boldly advancing, its right to defend. Faith for
its
foe,
motto, and truth for
its
guide,
Child of our hope, become child of our pride!
—Julia Sprague, for
The New England July
1,
1862.
doctors for
It
Hospital for
was the
women
Elizabeth Blackwell's
(and their children) tant strands in the
Women
first
"The New England Hospital and Children," 1896
Women
hospital in
patients
and Children opened on
New England run
and the second
by
women
in the country, after
New York Infirmary. As a hospital for women only, the New England symbolized two imporgrowth of
institutions in nineteenth-century
America. It was part of the nineteenth-century hospital movement one of a number of privately supported voluntary hospitals in Boston, including the Massachusetts General, the Children's, and the Boston Lying-in, which were founded to serve the medical needs of the sick poor and the professional interests of physicians. At the same time, it was one of the many separate institutions founded by women for women that constituted the nineteenth-century woman's movement. Zakrzewska's original reasons for founding the New England Hospital combined the purposes of voluntary hospitals with those of other all-women's institutions. She had three specific goals: to provide sick women with medical care from doctors of 1
44
"This All-Women's Hospital"
their
own
sex, to give
them
able to
women
doctors the clinical tiaining unavail-
at male-controlled hospitals in the city,
and
to train
nurses. 2
The combination of the made the New England a
and female dimensions its day. By offering women doctors hard-to-find professional opportunities and sickwomen medical care from doctors of their own sex, the New England made its own unique contribution to social change in nineteenth-century America. It expanded the woman's movement into the field of medicine and nudged the hospital movement into the arena of feminism. With a successful blend of the separatist ideals of the woman's movement and the principles of regular medicine, the hospital attracted the support of constituents from the woman's movement, the medical profession, and the inner circle of Boston's reformers. Under Dr. Zakrzewska's leadership, women doctors and benefactors became the hospital's central force, donating time, money, and professional commitment. Male reformers and physicians aided in the founding and running of the New England by lending their support to this hospital for women only. By the end of its first decade, the New England Hospital emerged as a premier women's hospital's medical
special institution in
women patients, providing clinical women interns, and opening up professional opportunities for trained women doctors. As an all-women's institution, the New England Hospital was both medical institution, treating
training for
unique and
was unique as a medical institution, but it was many organizations founded and run by women in the second half of the nineteenth century. This "female institution building" of the late nineteenth century was a long-term consequence of the changing status of women in antebellum America. 3 As typical;
it
only one of
commercialization and industrialization
moved production
outside
men followed the means of production into the women remained home to care for their families. This
the home,
public
world;
sexual
development of separate and the private world men work for "spheres" the public world of of the home for women. The development of the home as woman's sphere changed women's lives in the nineteenth century. Their exclusion from the public arena of politics and commercial production division of labor translated socially into the
—
15
Hospital with a Heart
caused them to lose economic and
political status.
Though some
women joined the industrial labor force, they were not equals with men and were generally felt to be out of place
working-class treated as in a
work environment.
The
relegation of
women
to the domestic sphere gave
them
a
separate identity apart from men. As daughters, wives, and mothers,
women
shared a set of experiences that brought them together in bonds of sisterhood. Mothers and daughters shared special relationships; married women were often more emotionally tied to
close
female friends than to their
But the separation of
own
women
spouses. into the private sphere did
more
than encourage close personal relationships and foster a sense of sisterhood
among women.
In addition, separatism became the
springboard from which nineteenth-century
change
their lives.
Throughout the second
women
sought to
half of the century, they
gathered together in separate, all-women's groups to reform society
and to improve their own lives. They began their own antislavery and temperance societies, organized their own literary and philanthropic clubs, and founded their own seminaries and colleges. Through their separate institutions, women sought to expand the boundaries of their lives beyond the home. Yet women sought more than simply to share the public sphere with men. They wanted to change it as well. In particular, they shared a vision of a society in which the piety, morality, and domesticity of the home would inform the world outside. Only the radical wing of the woman suffrage movement, led by Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton, sought total equality with men in the public arena. Most women modeled their institutions on the male counterparts from which they were excluded while simultaneously infusing them with the values unique to the private sphere. The all-women's
colleges, for
example,
offered training in traditional academic subjects as well as domestic skills;
the
Women's
Christian
Temperance Union sought
to abolish
drinking, eradicate the sexual double standard, and promote
wom-
an suffrage under the banner of Home Protection. The hundreds of organizations women founded around the country constituted the nineteenth-century woman's
movement and made
separatism the
cornerstone of contemporary feminism. 4
Born of the separatism 46
that
was fundamental
to nineteenth-cen-
"This All-Women's Hospital"
tury feminism, the
movement
of
its
New England
Hospital was part of the woman's
day. 5 Zakrzewska
may have shared Anthony's and
women with men, but she had own experiences in New York, Cleveland, and
Stanton's vision of full equality for
learned from her
Boston that integration with male doctors on any clinical training,
With
ble.
this in
or professional societies
level
women
women's hospital modeled
doctors: the creation of a separate
it
women
Boston
in
May, Caroline Severance, Lucy Goddard, and Ednah in the
all-
men. This was more than a grew naturally out of Zakrzew-
friendships with influential
were leaders
to clinical
after those of
pragmatic decision, however, for
All
—education,
practically impossi-
mind, she chose the only feasible route
training for regular
ska's close
—was
woman's movement and
Dow
— Abby
Cheney.
actively involved in
separate all-women's institutions. Cheney, for example, had helped
women. May was an execNew England Woman's Auxiliary of the United
establish a short-lived school of design for
utive
member of the
Commission. Severance had been
States Sanitary activist
when
a
woman's
rights
she lived in Cleveland. In 1868, Cheney, May, and
Severance were founding members and officers of the
Woman's Club,
the pioneer, with
New
New England
York's Sorosis, of women's
With the New England Woman's Club as their expanded their reform activities on behalf of women. They began a horticultural school for women, founded Girls' Latin School in Boston, sponsored lectures on dress reform, and orgaclubs in America. base, they
nized the Massachusetts School Suffrage Association to assure
wom-
en's participation in school-board elections/ 1
As leaders of
a range of all-women's organizations, these
women
eagerly supported the establishment of a medical institution for
women.
Initially
in their position as
primary responsibility was fund
when she tal,
came
to
Boston
raising.
to raise
they persuaded her to leave
clinic at flict
first
the
New England Female Lady Managers, their Impressed with Zakrzewska
they became involved in the
Medical College where,
money
New York
New England Female
for Blackwell's hospi-
in
order
Medical College.
to establish a
When
the con-
between Zakrzewska and Gregory led to Zakrzewska's resignafollowed her and helped her to found the New England
tion, they
Hospital.
While May, Severance, Goddard, and Chene) were
all
among 47
the
Hospital with a Heart hospital's earliest supporters, Goddard and Cheney, in particular, committed years of work to it. Born in Portland, Maine, Goddard lived most of her life in Boston. Daughter of a family of philanthropists, she "mingled in Boston's most cultivated society." At the same time, she developed a keen interest in medicine. When Gregory opened the New England Female Medical College, she brought her interest in medicine and her commitment to philanthropy to the school. When Zakrzewska's clinic at Gregory's school collapsed, Goddard threw her energy into the New England Hospital, serving as its president through its first quarter-century. Goddard helped direct and sustain the hospital, and despite her "brusque manners," she was highly respected for her work and for her "tender and sym-
pathetic" actions. Fittingly,
Goddard spent
the
last
days of her
life as
Though unaware of where she was, she said whom she had served for so many years: "Everybody
a patient at the hospital.
of the doctors is
so kind
and
it
seems
as if they loved to take care of you." 7
members of the original board of directors, Ednah Dow Cheney made the longest commitment to the New England Hospital. As a young woman in her teens, Cheney's personal contact with leading reformers such as Margaret Fuller, Theodore Parker, and
Of all
the
Bronson Alcott inspired her
zeal for reform.
One
of her early con-
women, and like Goddard, Severand May, she became a Lady Manager at the New England Female Medical College, then left with Zakrzewska to help establish the New England Hospital. She was the hospital's secretary at its founding in 1862, became its president when Goddard resigned in 1887, and continued in that capacity until 1902 when she resigned
cerns was medical education for ance,
because of
illness shortly
before her death.
The commitment of such women as Cheney, Goddard, Severance, and May to the New England Hospital attracted support from other woman's movement. As editors of the Woman's JourMary Livermore, Julia Ward Howe, and Lucy Stone gave the
leaders of the nal,
announcing its fund-raising events, introducing new staff members, and publicly praising the hospital's growth and success. 8 The relationship between Zakrzewska and Boston feminists was part of a network of support between women doctors and women in other areas of the woman's movement hospital valuable publicity,
48
1
"This All-Women's Hospital"
around the country. Sarah Josepha Hale, for instance, wrote on behalf of women doctors in her popular women's magazine, Godey's Lady's Book. Within its pages she argued that medicine was the "appropriate sphere for women" and kept her readers up to date on the progress of the New England Hospital as well as the New York Infirmary and the Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania. 9 Sectarian physicians had their advocates as well. Elizabeth Stuart Phelps, a writer and advocate of dress reform, popularized the woman doctor in her novel, Dr. Zay, about a homeopathic physician and her weak male patient. 10 Elizabeth Cady Stanton aided a woman physician, Clemence Lozier, in founding the homeopathic New York Medical College and Hospital for Women. 11 The support women doctors received from the woman's movement was not one-sided. Women doctors participated actively in women's clubs, lecturing on health-related topics such as hygiene, exercise, and dress reform. Some were club organizers. Dr. Harriet Clisby, for example, helped to found the Boston Women's Educational and Industrial Union, and Dr. Eliza Newcomb-McGee of Washington, D.C., helped start the Woman's Anthropological Society of
In
America. 12
many
ways, Zakrzewska's connection to the woman's
movement
She helped found the New England Woman's Club, where she gave frequent lectures on female physiology and health, and she was active in the American Woman Suffrage Association. At the same time, Zakrzewska was tied to the woman's movement in a way that distinguished her from all other women doctors. At the request of her friend, Caroline Dall, a feminist and writer, Zakrzewska wrote a book describing her life up to her initial connection with the New England Female Medical College. This autobiography. .4 Practical Illustration of "Woman's Right to Labor," appeared in i860. Thousands of people read it, though mostly by passing copies among themselves, so that Zakrzewska derived little profit. 13 The book brought her no income, but it made Zakrzewska an important role model for other women and connected her publicly and intimately with the heart of the woman's movement. Equally important. it earned her the respect of influential men in Boston and even persuaded some skeptics that women could be good doctors. was
similar.
1
49
— Hospital with a Heart
Women
provided the backbone of Zakrzewska's support for the
New England
Hospital, but she depended as well on the goodwill, encouragement, and active participation of a group of men who were willing to stand behind an all-women's hospital. Leaders among Boston's inner circle of male reformers William Lloyd Garrison, Frederick W. G. May, and Samuel Sewall, among others eagerly came to the aid of the hospital. Garrison was one of Zakrzewska's first friends in Boston. He had been among those who encour-
—
aged her
to
open
a clinical
department
at the
New England Female
Medical Gollege, and he had announced the intention of creating
such a
clinic
in
his
antislavery newspaper,
Zakrzewska and her supporters
The
Liberator.
again used The Liberator to publicize the founding of the
gland Hospital.
mained her
A
neighbor of Zakrzewska's
close friend
When
Gregory's school, Garrison
left
and an advocate of her
in
New En-
Roxbury, he
re-
hospital throughout
his life. 15
The
abolitionist,
Frederick W. G. May, also loyally supported
May was one of her earliest friends in Boston. In fact, he was the First man to give her money for the New York Infirmary when she visited in 1856. The following year, with his sister, Abby May, he was the first man to visit the Xew York Zakrzewska. Like Garrison,
Infirmary, to which he offered his "sympathy and confidence.
From
the beginning,
tions of the first
fifteen
May
Xew England
played a crucial role in the internal operaHospital, as the hospital's treasurer for
member
years and as a
throughout the centurv. One of the most important Hospital was Samuel
Edmond
men
to
its
of the board of directors
New England
support the
Sewall. Sewall was a faithful backer of
the hospital from the very beginning, serving as
and good friend for almost
" l6
thirty vears.
its
legal counselor
Descended from
a long line of
New England whom he was
notable Bostonians, Sewall brought credibility to the Hospital.
His grandfather, Samuel Sewall, after
named, had been a noted colonial justice and diarist. His father, Joseph Sewall, a respected Boston merchant, had served as treasurer of Massachusetts. The younger Samuel Sewall followed the distinguished tradition of his grandfather and father, studying law at 5°
"This All-Women's Hospital"
Harvard, becoming a leading reformer, and fighting for abolition a senator in the Massachusetts legislature. Sewall's
commitment
reform extended
to
as
17
to the area of
woman's
He was interested in the issue of medical education for womAs a director of the New England Female Medical College, he encouraged Zakrzewska to start a clinic there. When she resigned her position at the college, Sewall, like Cheney, Goddard, and others, left to help Zakrzewska found the New England Hospital. rights.
en.
Sewall's support of
He
women
in
medicine reached into
his
own
family.
strongly encouraged his daughter, Lucy, in her early efforts to
obtain medical training, and she later became the
New England
sician at the
first
resident phy-
Hospital. Sewall's financial contributions,
legal counsel,
and influence among reformers
an invaluable
member
of the hospital's inner
In addition to male reformers,
in
Boston made him
circle.
who supported
the
New England
Hospital because of their ideological commitment to woman's rights, Zakrzewska also had the help of a number of male physicians in
Boston who were willing
to
put their professional reputations be-
women doctors. Drs. Henry BowSamuel Cabot, James Chadwick, Walter Channing, Benjamin Jeffries, Francis Minot, Maurice Richardson, and James Putnam were among a group of twenty-six men who served as consulting physicians to the New England Hospital in the nineteenth centurv. Educated at Harvard, leaders in the Massachusetts Medical Societv, staff members of the Massachusetts General Hospital, and facultv members at Harvard Medical College, these doctors were part of Boston's medical elite. They dominated the city's medical profession just as members of their respective families had done for hind a separate institution for
ditch,
generations.
Not
all
but they
18
these prominent medical all
men supported woman's
shared a professional interest
England Hospital. regular physicians
in the success
rights,
of the
New
When still
other sectarian doctors
Zakrzewska founded the hospital in 18(12. competed with homeopathic, eclectic, and
who had become popular
in the first half
of
the nineteenth century. Although the appeal of sectarian doctors
began
to decline
by the 1860s, they
still
threatened the prestige and
Hospital with a Heart
pocketbooks of regular physicians. As a
result,
many
leaders
among
the regular wing of the profession supported Zakrzewska's hospital
because of her identification with regular medicine. 19
Of
many male
course,
tors, regardless
physicians strongly opposed female doc-
of women's allegiance to regular medicine. They
women from their own medical institutions, including Harvard Medical College, the Massachusetts Medical Society, and
excluded
the Massachusetts General Hospital. Moreover, they shared the pop-
women were physically and mentally inferior to men women's proper place was in the home as wives and moth-
ular view that
and
that
ers.
Many
women
believed that
should not
—
in fact, could not
—be
good doctors. They agreed with the prominent Dr. Charles Meigs of Jefferson Medical College in Philadelphia that a woman's head was "almost too small for intellect but just big enough for love." 20 The consulting physicians at the New England Hospital did not share this point of view. Their affiliation with the hospital stood as
proof that not en doctors.
all
Still,
nineteenth-century male physicians opposed with
some motivated
wom-
exclusively by professional
concerns and others interested in the rights of
women
as well, the
commitment of the hospital's consulting physicians ranged along a spectrum from ardent supporters to fair-weather friends. Drs. Henry Bowditch and Samuel Cabot were two of the hospital's most loyal
New England blended professional sympathy for woman's rights. Both Cabot and Bowditch had known Zakrzewska since her early years in Boston when she worked at the New England Female Medical College. Though they supported the idea of women in medicine, they had little refriends.
Their support of the
interests with
spect for Gregory,
who
lacked their regular medical training as well
as their social standing.
As
a result, despite their admiration
and
respect for Zakrzewska, they refused to support her clinical efforts
while she "was connected with such an inferior school as they consid-
ered the
New England Female
cause they recognized her to
regular
medicine,
skill as
they
Medical College to be." 21
Still,
be-
a physician as well as her allegiance
willingly
offered
their
help
when
Zakrzewska severed ties with Gregory and started her own hospital. Moreover, as testimony to Zakrzewska's professional accomplish52
"This All-Women's Hospital"
ments, they supported her application to the Massachusetts Medical Society even before she left Gregory's school.
Dr. Cabot was the staff.
He
first
man
to join the
finding a
woman surgeon
operated
Of all est
when Zakrzewska had
for her staff, Cabot not only consulted but
the consulting physicians,
women
women
in
Henry Bowditch was
doctors. His interest in
medicine grew out of
tions.
especially to help
He
women gain
favored opening the
and Boston City
hospitals to
the strong-
championing the
commitment to reform, Throughout his life he
his
particularly to the abolition of slavery.
worked
in
trouble
at the hospital.
advocate of
cause of
Hospital
served as consulting surgeon from 1863 until his death
1885. In the hospital's earliest years,
also
New England
access to
clinics at the
male medical
institu-
Massachusetts General
women, and he worked
to
open the
Massachusetts Medical Society to women as well. As far back as 1852, Bowditch had supported the first request from a woman, Nancy Talbot Clark, for examination by the Massachusetts Medical Society. Several years later, after meeting Zakrzewska, he, along with Cabot and others, encouraged her to apply for membership as well. After Zakrzewska's petition was denied, Bowditch worked for the next two decades to change the society's exclusionary rules. In 1884 he put forth the motion that finally opened the Massachusetts Medical Society to men and women on an equal basis. Bowditch joined the staff of consulting physicians at the New England Hospital in 1865 and served the hospital until his death in 1892. 22
Not all the consulting physicians to the New England Hospital were as aggressive as Bowditch in their support of women doctors.
Some did not even support the general concept of women in mediThey saw Zakrzewska and a few other women doctors as excep-
cine.
Zakrzewska explained that Dr. John Ware, for example, 'accepted me as an exceptional women [and] laughed heartily when I told him that the exceptions would multiply by the huntions.
.
.
.
Henry E. Clark "could not sanction the study of medicine by women," but helped Zakrzewska in her private practice. sending her patients and recommending her to others. 23 dred." Similarly, Dr.
Nor did
all
the hospital's consulting physicians share Bowditch's
53
Hospital with a Heart
commitment
to
opening the all-male medical
Instead, most supported the idea of
women
women
studied and worked apart from men.
institutions to in
women.
medicine as long as
They threw
their sup-
port behind the New England Hospital in order to encourage the advancement of women in medicine apart from men. Dr. Edward H. Clarke most clearly represented those physicians who willingly
supported
women
fessor of materia
doctors in separate all-female institutions.
medica
at
A
pro-
Harvard Medical College, Clarke had
been one of Zakrzewska's earliest friends when she first came to Boston in the 1850s. He even considered briefly the idea of integration on her behalf, joining Bowditch and Cabot in supporting her application to the Massachusetts Medical Society. In the 1860s, however, Clarke began to modify his position on women doctors. While he continued publicly to support women in medicine, he expressed deep reservations about women's physical ability to be doctors and serious concern about the propriety of women doctors working with men. In 1873, ne published Sex in Education; or, A Fair Chance for the Girls, which elaborated his new ideas about women. In Sex in Education, Clarke argued against all coeducation, explaining that women's reproductive physiology made it unsafe for them to undertake any intellectual activity with the same rigor as men. Excessive study, he explained, diverted energy from the female reproductive organs to the brain, causing a breakdown in women's health and threatening the health of future generations. 24 Clarke's
book was widely read, going through seventeen
in thirteen years. Its success
editions
placed advocates of education for
wom-
en on the defensive. His dire warnings about the deterioration of women's health aroused concern among even the most ardent supporters of women's education. The president of Smith College, for example, anxiously defended the school against Clarke's arguments. In both 1876 and 1877, ne began his report to the trustees with a description of the excellent health of the Smith students. 25 Even M.
Carey Thomas, the first female president of Bryn Mawr, acknowledged decades after the school's founding that she did not know
when Bryn Mawr
first
opened "whether woman's health could stand We were haunted in those days by the clang-
the strain of education.
54
"This All-Women's Hospital"
ing chains of that gloomy
little
specter, Dr.
Edward H.
Clarke's Sex in
Education." 26
Many women were outraged by Clarke's book, seeing it as a dangerous attack on the movement for women's education and a threat to women's autonomy. They responded with an outpouring of counterattacks challenging Clarke and his ideas. Ednah Dow Cheney, Lucy Stone, Olympia Brown, and Julia Ward Howe were among the women who contributed to this literary campaign to discredit Sex in Education. 27 The most significant challenge was Mary Putnam Jacobi's The Question of Rest for Women During Menstruation. Jacobi had been a student at the Philadelphia Medical College for Women and an intern at the New England Hospital before she went to Paris, where she became the first woman to enter the Ecole Medecine. Graduating in 1871 with high honors, she returned to New York, where she joined the staff of the New York Infirmary and the Woman's Medical College. In response to Sex in Education, she sent a
questionnaire about menstruation to over 250
women. The
re-
sponses she received provided evidence that for most women, rest
during menstruation was neither desirable nor necessary. Jacobi's essay won Harvard's prestigious Boylston Medical Prize in 1877, the year the Harvard physicians decided to focus their annual competi-
on the controversy evoked by their own Dr. Clarke. 28 Clarke's book represented a serious attack on coeducation for women, but it was not a wholesale assault on women's higher education
tion.
Clarke insisted that he favored education for
not interfere with their health and
if
it
women
if
it
did
was conducted separately
from men's. His ideas complemented the separatist ideals of educawoman's movement, such as Catherine Beecher and Emma Willard, who believed that women needed special education
tors in the
in separate all-women's schools. 29
Perhaps to prove
his
commitment
to education for
women
as long
was apart from men, Clarke joined the consulting staff of the New England Hospital in 1873, precisely the year Sex in Education
as
it
first
appeared, and he maintained
through 1878. Despite the
his affiliation with the hospital
conflict Clarke's
book aroused. Zakrzew-
ska did not join the feminist attack against him.
To
be sure, she 3 3
Hospital with a Heart
looked toward a day
when women would
gain admission to the male
medical schools and hospitals. Yet her pragmatism superseded her
She quietly welcomed Clarke's support and that of all other influential physicians who came to her aid, even if simply to preserve the separation of men and women in medicine. 30 idealism.
Among
the
men who
joined Zakrzewska's consulting
staff,
Dr.
Horatio Storer stands out as the only real traitor to the hospital. Storer was an attending physician at the Boston Lying-in Hospital until
it
closed in 1856.
When Zakrzewska founded
the
New England
Hospital, he joined the consulting staff, simultaneously his general practice
and making the
diseases of
women
abandoning his specialty.
In 1866, however, he severed his connection with the hospital, angry
about a new resolution that restricted the doctors' surgical freedom. 31 Storer expressed his anger in his letter of resignation. While his "highest respect and esteem" for Zakrzewska and several other women doctors at the hospital, he claimed that women were physically and emotionally incapable of being good doctors. Storer's letter was a deep insult to the women doctors with whom he had worked for several years, and it took on far graver implications when he published it in the Boston Medical and Surgical Journal. As she had done in the case of Clarke, Zakrzewska avoided controversy and declined to defend her hospital and medical staff against Storer's accusations. Instead, the Annual Report for 1866 publicly thanked Storer for his service to the hospital and wished him well. 32 Storer's antagonistic relationship to the New England Hospital was certainly the exception. For the most part, the consulting physicians and female staff of the hospital worked well together. Indeed,
he acknowledged
the support of the consulting staff was critical to the success of the
These men gave valuable medical advice and help in diffiThey also encouraged and praised Zakrzewska and her staff, who were starved for words of support. Zakrzewska never forgot the praise she received from Walter Channing in 1864 after her performance of a difficult surgical procedure. "It was a very difficult operation and ... I do not think it could have been done better," he told her. 33 Finally, as influential members of Boston's
hospital.
cult cases.
56
"This
medical
imacy
the consulting physicians brought dignity and
elite,
to the
All-Womens Hospital"
New England
legit-
Hospital.
Zakrzewska placed high value on the support she received from her consulting staff. She had learned the importance of powerful male allies when she was a young midwife in Berlin. She well understood that the tal
of her consulting staff protected her hospi-
elite status
from public opposition. Reflecting
on the
early resistance to the
hospital, she explained that while "the profession at large
ed
to find fault,
[it]
three professional
.
.
.
want-
did not dare to do so openly so long as the two or
men
stood as a moral force behind me." 34
The
names of Cabot and Bowditch, she explained, were "sufficient guarto the public for the honor and usefulness of our
antee
institution." 35
The
prestigious consulting staff and the influential board of direc-
brought more than legitimacy and respectability to the New England Hospital. From the beginning, Dr. Zakrzewska relied on them to help her raise much-needed money. Fund raising on behalf of the hospital was extremely difficult in 1862. With the nation in the midst of the Civil War, many potential subscribers had committed their resources to the Union cause and were unable to make even the smallest financial donation to the hospital. "Everyone here is absorbed in the war and so busy working for the hospitals that I cannot interest them in your excellent hospital," explained one Springfield, Massachusetts, woman to director Louisa Bond. "So I can only send you my mite," she continued, "and regret the failure of my efforts." 36 Others, whose personal finances were severely restricted by the wartime economy, were also unable to help. "I cannot tell you how sorry I am that I cannot say yes at once to all you tors
"The war has
woman
Bond in done what occasionally a money
propose," wrote another
to
the
summer
of 1862.
pressure would do for
a passing time before." 37
Despite the obstacles before them, the directors and consulting doctors persisted. In 1864, Drs. Cabot, Bowditch, Channing, and
Putnam endorsed
a public appeal, written ironically by Storer. re-
questing financial contributions to the hospital. 38 Meanwhile, the directors busily collected donations.
Some, such
as
Lucy Goddard 5 7
Hospital with a Heart
sums up to $120 from came from contribuIn letter a to Cheney, a director, John H. tors outside the hospital. Stephenson, proudly reported the sums he and other directors collected in 1864. "The battle for the hospital goes bravely on, I have some money, Mr. May has some, Miss Goddard has some and with the $1,000 we expect you will get, we shall come off with flying and Samuel their
own
Sewall, gave substantial annual
pockets. But most of the donations
colors." 39
While everyone participated in fund raising, it was the women of New England Hospital who played the crucial role. The families
the
of several
made
substantial contributions. In the hospital's first five
years alone, Goddard's relatives gave $805, Louisa Bond's family
donated $320, and Abby May's family contributed an impressive $2,2 4 1. 40
^
Of course, tions
the
women
They wooed
circles.
directors reached
beyond their own family and attracted dona-
a wider female audience
from hundreds of women who were unattached
In appealing for contributions, the ately articulated the hospital's
particular, they
tunity
it
women
to the hospital.
of the hospital deliber-
unique commitment
to
women. In
emphasized the charity and professional oppor-
offered to
women. Linking
sisterhood with charity, for ex-
ample, Dr. Zakrzewska concluded her report as attending physician in
1865 "with the wish and hope that some rich lady may remember sisters in suffering, and give her name and means to an
her poorer
institution so useful first
secretary's report
of a comfortable
and
much needed." 41 Similarly, Cheney's appealed to "all women who know the value
and
home
so
what it is to be homeless At the same time, the found-
in sickness to think
friendless in the day of sorrow." 42
emphasized the professional advantages the hospital offered women doctors, explaining that it was the only hospital in New England where women could receive clinical training. 43 The women of New England took up the banner of the hospital. Leading advocates of reform for women such as Elizabeth Peabody and Lucretia Crocker, wives of well-known male reformers including Mrs. James Freeman Clarke and Mrs. Theodore Parker, and lesser-known women joined hands to donate money, gifts, time, and energy to the hospital. A few contributed substantial sums, but most ers also
58
"This All-Women's Hospital"
of the donations ranged between five and ten dollars.
Some
support-
annual Roxbury Ladies' Fair on behalf of the hospital; others gave miscellaneous items ranging from sheets and linens to ers ran the
soap and matches. With the hospital surviving on a shoestring budget,
gift, large and small, counted. "One, out of ample wealth, hundreds and thousands," explained Cheney. "Another
every
gives us
drips in her mite, rich with the wealth of self-sacrificing love." 44
Sharing the belief of most nineteenth-century of separatism, the
women
New England women only.
of
they could to a hospital for
women
in the benefits
gave as generously as
Despite the hard financial times brought on by the Civil War, Zakrzewska and her supporters raised enough money to sustain the New England Hospital in its early years. Though the budget fluctu-
grew steadily throughout the hospital's first decade. When the New England Hospital first opened at 60 Pleasant Street, it had only ten beds and assets amounting to a meager $150 worth of hospital furniture from the clinic at the New England Female Medical College. In 1863, the year of its incorporation, the hospital had a budget of $6,700. By 1864, when it moved to a nearby estate on Warrenton Street, the budget was over $21,000. In 1871, it was $47,000, and in the hospital's tenth year, when it moved into new and larger quarters in Roxbury, the budget had climbed to over $1 46,000. 45 Though the hospital never had the resources of larger Boston hospitals such as Massachusetts General and Children's, its steadily growing purse and the diversity of its financial support were testimony to the faith of many in Zakrzewska and in her vision of a separate all-women's hospital. Separatism in medicine also shaped Zakrzewska's commitment to the people she sought to serve female patients and female physicians. In her concern for poor, sick women, Zakrzewska modeled ated from year to year,
it
—
New England Hospital on other voluntary hospitals that offered poor but "deserving" patients a respectable alternative to the public almshouse. Laborers from poor and immigrant neighborhoods of Boston could go to Massachusetts General, and their children could go to the Children's Hospital, to receive medical care at a nominal the
charge or for
free. Similarly,
poor
women
with no other institutional
59
Hospital with a Heart
option but the almshouse could get free or low-cost medical care for themselves and their children at the
New England
Hospital.
The women who went to the New England came from the same economic and ethnic groups as patients at other voluntary hospitals in Boston. In the New England Hospital's first ten years, the majority of patients were foreign-born. Irish women made up between a third and a half of all the patients at the hospital. 46 By the 1880s the numbers of American-born patients surpassed foreign-born ones, while at the Boston Lying-in foreign-born patients outnumbered American-born women throughout the 1880s. Although proportionately fewer immigrant women went to the New England than to the Boston Lying-in, the patients at the New England Hospital came from the bottom of the economic ladder. Throughout the last quarter
of the nineteenth century, almost half the patients treated
at the
hospital labored in typically female working-class jobs such as do-
and factory worker, and another Most were charity cases.
mestic, seamstress,
housewives. 47
As
a charity institution the
hospitals of the time, ential citizens to
had
New
a strong
England,
like
third
other voluntary
moral component. Wealthy,
supported voluntary hospitals
in part
were
influ-
out of their desire
maintain a social order threatened by growing numbers of immi-
At the Children's Hospital, for example, the directors sought poor and immigrant children to the traditional American values of cleanliness, order, virtue, and hard work. 48 The founders of the New England Hospital had similar concerns. "We are deeply interested in every effort to dispel ignorance, promote temperance, banish licentiousness and other vices," they explained. 49 As at other voluntary hospitals, the process of admission to the New England reinforced this commitment to morality and virtue. For example, Zakrzewska and the directors always encouraged some sort of payment from patients, believing that it reinforced the "self-respect of the patient to pay if she possibly can." 50 Those who could, paid the full rate of eight dollars per week. Others paid a reduced weekly fee grants.
to socialize
of four dollars; the poorest received free treatment. last
Women
in this
group, however, did not gain admission to the hospital indis-
criminately. In keeping with the strong concern for moral guardianship, hospital rules required that every
60
nonpaying patient have a
"This All-Women's Hospital"
letter
from an
established, reputable individual attesting to her
worthiness for medical charity. 51
The same charity
prerequisite of morality for the benefits of medical
shaped policy
provided medicines to Initially,
women
The
in the hospital's dispensary.
women who
dispensary
did not require hospitalization.
received these medicines free. Gradually, however,
the founders grew uneasy with this lenient extension of charity.
Though
they continued to justify
they feared in fact,
it
for truly impoverished
women,
among women who
could,
pay for medicine. In 1868, they decided to "draw the
They charged women who were cents for each prescription. solute
it
discouraged responsibility
line."
"able to pay something" twenty-five
Women who could
prove that their "ab-
need required gratuitous service" continued
to receive
medi-
cines free. 52
The on
link
between charity and morality
at the
New England
Hospi-
while similar to that at other voluntary hospitals of the day, took
tal,
a particular character because the patients
en. ple,
A man who might have
sought charity to
at
were exclusively wom-
Massachusetts General, for exam-
prove he was an honest worker.
applied for charity at the
New England
A woman who
demonstrated her worthi-
ness by her marital status, piety, or appearance.
This particular measure of respectability was especially important for
women
seeking admission to the hospital's maternity ward.
Throughout in the lives
its first
decade, the
New England
played a crucial role
of pregnant women. With the Boston Lying-in Hospital
closed between 1856
and 1872, the New England was the only
pri-
women in childbirth. A woman unable to home could deliver her baby at the New poor woman who wanted a free maternity bed first
vate hospital in the city for
arrange for confinement
at
England. But a had to establish her worthiness, usually by proving she was married. Wives often brought their husbands with them; widows provided death
certificates.
simple.
One
For some, however, proof of marriage was not so woman who had been
nineteen-year-old pregnant
abandoned by her husband sought the help of an overseer of
the
poor. "I have seen her marriage certificate," he wrote to the board of directors. "I think she is very honest in all her statements.*' 5
Marriage was not an invariable prerequisite for admission 61
to a
Hospital with a Heart
free maternity bed, however, Zakrzewska
had learned from her
mother's lying-in patients in Germany, as well as from the
New
she exmployed in her tenement apartment in
married pregnant
women were
depraved sinners. Hoping
women
York, that un-
often innocent victims rather than
to save
them from
the public disgrace of
the almshouse, she often accepted unmarried pregnant
women
into
her hospital as charity patients. However, she admitted only unmar-
women who were
ried
deemed nant tal's
to
pregnant for the
time, for they
first
were
be innocent victims. She rejected unmarried but preg-
women who had
children already as "unworthy" of the hospi-
charity.
for unmarried women pregnant for the first time, admission was not automatic. They still had to demonstrate their worthiness. In these cases, where marriage could not be the standard, piety was often the measure of respectability. One typical woman sought the
Even
aid of her clergyman. In a letter requesting "kindness
and charity"
on her
have seen
it,
in the discharge
of
behalf, he wrote that "her conduct, so far as
has been praiseworthy, and she has been exact
I
her religious duties." 54 Dr. Zakrzewska and her supporters demanded a particular standard of morality and respectability from their female patients, and they provided special services designed to preserve and protect the patients' virtue. A board of lady visitors, composed of volunteers among the directors, visited patients twice a week in an effort to "exert a good influence over them." This was similar to the moral
persuasion directors exerted at other voluntary hospitals, but the lady visitors at the
New England combined
it
with a particular brand
of practicality suited especially to the needs of women. They found safe shelters for single, homeless
unmarried mothers.
When
women and
possible,
respectable
work
for
unmarried mothers were pro-
vided with jobs in rural areas, where they brought their babies and often married sons of farmers. 55 Dr. Zakrzewska and her supporters provided a unique atmo-
sphere
at the hospital that
clientele.
They were quick
was especially suited to its all-female out that whereas male patients
to point
often played cards or swore on the wards of other hospitals in the city,
the
62
New England
offered
women
a quiet, homelike environ-
"This All-Women's Hospital"
ment. "The husband and father can be cared for Hospital," explained
one
director, "but
the General
at
we have testimony of experi-
enced physicians that the wife in her hour of sickness needs a retirement and isolation not to be had there." 56 Male physicians referred their
own female
patients to the
New England
Hospital for these
A
Boston physician, Dr. Francis Starkey, for example, sent one of his married female patients there, hoping that "the very reasons.
and the regular treatment she will receive good health and to her family." 57 With even more confidence, Zakrzewska and her co-workers claimed that women went to the New England Hospital precisely because of its separateness from men. They argued that because it was the only hospital in New England to provide women with medical care from doctors of their own sex, it could best protect women's modesty and virtue. Moreover, they claimed that many women, out quietness of [the] hospital will
restore her to
of a "delicacy of feeling," preferred to suffer privately than to seek
medical care from a man. As one doctor explained
many I
a case of long-standing
and great
suffering,
1867: "In
in
my colleagues and
have inquired how the patient could have so long remained with-
out treatment and have been answered, 'Oh,
I
could not go to a
from consulting physicians even when the women doctors recommended them. "Some have objected much against our will," explained one doctor, "to the presence of medical gentlemen whose occasional visits we ourselves were man.'
"
Sometimes patients refused
visits
glad to welcome." 58
According
to Dr.
Zakrzewska and her supporters, the concern
women sufA twenty-two-year-old German
about preserving propriety was particularly acute when fered from gynecological problems.
immigrant, for example, suffered privately for months before she finally
entered the
New England
Hospital. In the early
months of
her pregnancy, she had taken "a violent cold, which finally settled in her genital organs. From a delicacy of feeling as well as ignorance of consequences, she concealed her suffering until near confinement" when she finally sought treatment at the hospital. 59 Sometimes
women
sacrificed
medicine for morality with tragic
owed English immigrant endured
results.
A
wid-
"sufferings inexpressible" from
uterine cancer and neglected the malignancy until the
last
stages of
63
"
Hospital with a Heart
When she finally sought help at the New England Hoswas too late. She "died after a fortnight grateful for the care and sympathy afforded her." 60 the disease. pital,
it
The appeal of a
separate all-women's hospital spread throughout
to Massachusetts and beyond. Over 80 percent of the mediand surgical patients admitted throughout the century came from within the state; 50 percent lived in Suffolk County, where the hospital was located, but only 7 percent came from its immediate vicinity of Roxbury. The overwhelming majority of local patients lived in other parts of Boston. They traveled up to seven miles to reach the hospital and were testimony that the New England was not simply a "neighborhood" hospital. In fact, patients came from every county in the state, and one-fifth of the women traveled twenty to eighty miles. Women from other New England states sought out the hospital as well, and about 5 percent came from other parts of the country or Canada. 61 As one ex-patient explained: "We had patients from the West as well as from the East, from Michigan and from
Boston
cal
Maine." 62 Just as separatism shaped hospital policy toward sick also defined the professional opportunities available to tors.
As an all-women's
training to
women
only.
hospital, the
New England
For Dr. Zakrzewska, the
women,
women
provided
doc-
clinical
clinical training
offered was the backbone of a sound medical education. "It possible," she asserted, "to
it
is
she
im-
have a thorough medical education with-
out actual experience at the bedside of the patients. 63 Zakrzewska
derived her model for quality medical education from Europe,
where "the lecture room for the study of medicine had become secondary to the hospital." 64 To her, American medical education was inferior to its European counterpart precisely because so few hospitals in America offered clinical training to young physicians. Zakrzewska's own experience at the New England Female Medical College, where Gregory had refused to recognize the value of her clinical efforts, reinforced her criticism of American medical education. In fact, clinical experience was not a standard part of American medical training throughout most of the nineteenth century. The typical medical student spent most of his time in lectures, with only a 64
"This All-Women's Hospital"
rare
visit to
the laboratory or dissecting room. Most would-be doc-
experience through an apprenticeship. 05
tors received practical
In deciding to open a hospital rather than a school for
Zakrzewska made tors.
clinical
Her emphasis on
Throughout
first
women,
women
doc-
practical experience placed her in the fore-
front of contemporary
the
experience her priority for
American thought on medical pedagogy.
half of the century, a minority of physicians
argued that medical schools should include their standard curriculum.
Still,
practical training in
by the early 1860s, when Zakrzew-
opened the New England Hospital, most schools continued to resist this innovation. Only a few, such as Harvard and the University of Pennsylvania, had implemented the idea by affiliating with hospitals where students could gain clinical experience. In doing so, they initiated a trend away from apprenticeship and toward schoolska
centered
clinical
training.
University-affiliated
hospitals such
as
Massachusetts General and Pennsylvania Hospital became educational institutions for
young
doctors, offering the clinical experience
individual practicing physicians once provided. Doctors
nated their services to these hospitals reaped vantages.
Young
many
who
do-
professional ad-
physicians gained valuable clinical training. Older,
found a volume and range of cases unavailthem in private practice. All enjoyed a reputation for clinical expertise and benevolence that distinguished them from most doctors, brought them respect and prestige, and ultimately expanded established practitioners able to
their private practices. 66
Zakrzewska opened the New England Hospital to make these professional advantages available to women doctors. Indeed, to Zakrzewska, this was the most important aspect of her hospital, tran-
scending even the medical charity
it
offered
women
patients.
"The
most striking feature in its character," she explained of the hospital, "is, that it is designed to give to educated women-physicians, an equal chance of proving their capacity as hospital attendants, with
and to admit only female students to its wards as all other hospitals close their doors to women students."'" With clinical experience so difficult for aspiring medical women to their medical brethren,
find,
Zakrzewska had no trouble attracting interns
to
her hospital. 68
6*
Hospital with a Heart
In
its first
year alone, five
women
Gregory's school to take ad-
left
vantage of the practical training Zakrzewska offered
England Hospital. Between the
hospital's
New
at the
founding and
its
move
in
women trained at the hospital. Fifteen were from the Northeast: six from New York and New Jersey, and nine from Massachusetts and other states in New England. Of the latter group, six were residents of Boston. The other fourteen women traveled significantly further to work at the New England Hospital. Twelve 1872, twenty-nine
left
homes
in states
throughout the country, including Michigan, came from overseas, one
Indiana, Missouri, and California; two
from England and the other from
India.
For these early interns, separatism shaped almost every aspect of
New
their professional lives, not simply their clinical training at the
England Hospital. Ten interns had been students
at the
gland Female Medical College before they worked
New
En-
at the hospital;
another one enrolled there directly after leaving the hospital. these eleven, six went
on for further study
at
Of
other medical schools,
perhaps out of dissatisfaction with their education
at
Gregory's
Three attended the separate Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania, which had been founded in Philadelphia in 1850 because male medical colleges did not accept women. The other three studied among men. Two went to Switzerland, where the medical schools in Zurich and Bern admitted women; one graduated from Chicago Medical College just before it closed its doors to women. Only one additional intern, who never went to Gregory's school, received her medical education with men. She attended the medical school.
department of the University of Michigan, which began
women
in 1870. It
is
likely that the other,
to accept
seventeen interns never
graduated from any medical school. This was not unusual even for
male physicians of the day. The absence of regulations standardizing medical training around the country meant that ticed
many men
medicine without any medical school experience.
of medical education
among
Still,
the seventeen interns at the
prac-
the lack
New
En-
gland Hospital probably also reflected the dearth of medical schools
open
to
women
in the 1860s.
Separatism continued to define the interns' professional they completed their training at the
66
New England
lives after
Hospital.
The
"This
All-Womens Hospital"
twelve whose career paths remain visible chose one of two options:
they
left
tions,
the
New England and worked in other all-women's instituNew England for the rest of their
or they remained at the
professional walls. Drs.
lives.
Anita
Six forged their careers
beyond the
Tyng and Mary DeHart opened
hospital's
dispensaries for
in Rhode Island and New Jersey, respectively. Helen B. W. Webster worked briefly at the New England Hospital and eventually went to Vassar College. Mary Thompson pioneered in opening medicine to women in Chicago. In 1865 she founded the Chicago Hospital for Women and Children, and in 1870 the Woman's Hospi69 Sophia Jex-Blake became a champion of womtal Medical College. en doctors in Great Britain. Only Eliza Mosher deviated from an
women
exclusively separatist career path.
of hygiene
at the University
As dean of women and professor
of Michigan from 1896 to 1902, she
became the first woman to join the previously all-male medical faculty. Even so, separatism defined much of her professional life, for she spent most of her career working exclusively among women. She was a resident physician and associate professor of physiology and hygiene at Vassar College from 1883 to 1887, president of the Women's Medical Society of New York, and senior editor of the Medical Woman's Journal from 1905 to 1928. 70 The other six interns Lucy Sewall, Helen Morton, Susan Dimock, Emma Call, and sisters Emily and C. Augusta Pope devoted their careers to the New England Hospital. They were a highly qualified group. Dimock graduated with honors from the medical
—
—
school at the University of Zurich in 1871. Call graduated
among
first
eighty students in her medical school class at the University
of Michigan in 1873.
New England
They
all
went
to
Europe
to get additional clinical
after training at the
experience
in hospitals in
London, or Zurich. When manent members of Zakrzewska's medical staff. With two other phvsicians, Elizabeth Keller and Mary Smith, who joined the staff in Paris,
71
they returned, they became per-
1875 an d 1880, respectively, they led the hospital for the next quarter century.
For these women who spent their professional lives at the New England, the hospital served as a center for their social lives as well. Zakrzewska's home was a meeting place where they gathered to
Hospital with a Heart
enjoy each other's company. Sometimes they took picnics or outings
1878 they created a formal group, the New England Hospital Medical Society, which provided them with a way to in the country. In
on a regular
socialize
The
friendships
basis as they discussed their professional lives.
among
the
women
doctors at the
New England
Hospital were similar to the relationships in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries lives
were
among many women whose
closely linked. 72 Zakrzewska, for
of one of her
public
and private
example, became
inti-
Lucy Sewall, Samuel Sewall's daughter. Zakrzewska and Lucy Sewall first met when Zakrzewska visited Boston in 1856 to raise money for the New York Infirmary. When Zakrzewska began to work at the New England Female Medical College, Lucy Sewall enrolled as a student. She stayed throughout the three years of Zakrzewska's affiliation, workmately involved in the
life
staff,
ing closely as her assistant in the clinical department.
zewska
left
When
Zakr-
Gregory's school, she urged Sewall to go to Europe for
further clinical training.
Zakrzewska wrote frequently
London and
to Sewall
during the
Some of her
latter's
year of
letters
focused on the
goings-on at the hospital or the status and future of
women in mediown "domestic
study in
cine. In others, she affairs," discussing
Paris.
shared some of the details of her
her health, plans for
social events,
or her stock of
and vegetables for canning. 73 Other letters, however, were far more intimate and revealed the intensity of Zakrzewska's feelings toward Sewall. "I am sure I never missed any person more than I do you," she confessed in one letter. "I never before have felt such strong attachment for a woman, that is, so 'tenderly' strong." 74 Such uninhibited expressions of affection between women were not unfruits
common
in the nineteenth century.
women's
lives
women
encouraged
The
separatism that informed
close female relationships
to express their feelings to
Zakrzewska's case, her love for Sewall was
her daughter. "You are feelings of love
and
my
and permitted
each other without reserve. In like that
of a mother for
child," she explained, clarifying her
loneliness for Sewall. In a motherly
manner,
Zakrzewska advised Sewall to marry, but only a man with whom she was compatible, and looked forward to the "grandchild" she would then have for herself. 75 While Zakrzewska's relationship with Sewall
68
"This All-Women's Hospital"
was probably unique
among
the medical staff at the
New England
and support all the women doctors derived from each other was an important component of their lives at the Hospital, the friendship
hospital.
Under spite the
New England grew and thrived deBy the end of the i8Gos it was no longer
their leadership, the
odds against
it.
accommodate all the women who sought medical care or to accept the growing numbers of women doctors who sought clinical training. The pressing need for new and larger facilities coincided with a growing desire among the hospital's supporters to move the hospital to a more remote section of Boston. Throughout the 1860s the immediate neighborhood around Warrenton and Pleasant streets grew increasingly crowded and commercialized. As the neighborhood changed, it became less desirable as a location for a hospital, and more appealing as a business site. As Cheney explained: "By alterations in the streets and increase of business in that part of the city, our lot of land has become of more pecuniary value, and yet less desirable for use. The noise and dust and crowded able to
condition of the street
make our
present place quite unfit for ner-
patients." 76
vous chronic
In 1869, Zakrzewska, Cheney, and the other doctors and directors
inaugurated a building campaign. In
less
than three years, they
enough money to purchase a new home for the hospital. when Zakrzewska moved the New England Hospital into
In
new, larger, specially designed quarters on Columbus Avenue
in
raised
1872,
its
Roxbury, she had reason to be proud and optimistic. Her all-women's hospital
The
had survived and thrived
key to the early success of the
in
its first
ten years.
New England
was
its
embodi-
ment of both the separatism of the nineteenth-centurv woman's movement and the professional standards of Boston's leading male physicians. In
its
early years the hospital's separation
from the male-
dominated profession and its simultaneous identification with it were complementary. At a time when women in other areas of the woman's movement met apart from men in separate clubs, reform societies, and colleges, women doctors eagerly supported a hospital of their own. For similar reasons, the hospital's separatism found favor among influential male reformers and physicians. Drawing 6g
Hospital with a Heart
the line at integration,
many
willingly
helped
women
doctors in this
separate professional venture.
At the same time, as a medical institution in the 1860s, the New England Hospital embraced the professional standards of Boston's most prestigious male doctors. Zakrzewska's emphasis on clinical training and her connection with influential male physicians in the city meant that women doctors, even as they worked apart from men, could retain their professional identification with Boston's medical elite. Moreover, the support they received from leading male physicians represented a professional alliance among regular physicians against irregulars.
On
the tenth anniversay of the hospital's founding, Dr. Zakrzew-
ska could proudly review her accomplishments of the
last
decade.
She had brought the New England Hospital through its earliest, most tenuous years and had won public acceptance for her allwomen's venture. As the doors to the new hospital building opened in 1872, a ers.
new
challenge confronted Zakrzewska and her co-work-
They faced
interns,
the task of treating their patients, training their
and sustaining the
medical institution for
70
hospital's reputation as
women
only.
an important
3
"The Sick
We Would
We would bless with our gifts, The
Heal"
lo the givers
were
blest.
we would heal; we were healed with the rest Great truths we would teach; ourselves too were taught While for women, with women, as women we wrought. sick
—Julia Sprague, for
The women of meeting
the
in their
Women
New England
"The New England Hospital and Children," 1896
Hospital held their tenth annual
newly completed building
With
in the fall of 1872.
the patients comfortably settled and medical services in
full
opera-
Zakrzewska and her co-workers proudly announced that their hospital stood "like a beacon set on a hill where all may see it." Run by women for women, the New England Hospital publicly symtion,
1
bolized
the
success
of
separatism
Zakrzewska and her colleagues
now
women
for
in
medicine.
faced the challenge of putting
their principles into practice.
women doctors emphasized the adwomen patients of medical care from doctors of their own sex. Dr. Ann Preston, for example, dean of the Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania, told her students that women brought Typically, nineteenth-century
vantages for
"womanly tact and inand "quick sympathies." 2 Other female doctors said that women, with their special "instinct for reform," were better suited than men to caring for poor, sick women. W hile there was a "great gulf between the "poor woman of the tenements and the busv
special qualities to the practice of medicine,
sight"
r
medical man," explained Dr. Louise Bryson. "maternity [made]
women
sisters." 3
7i
all
Hospital with a Heart
Zakrzewska and her medical staff endorsed the claim that, as women, they were uniquely suited to treat women patients. But
gender alone did not define
daily life within the hospital walls. In
every aspect of hospital affairs
—architecture, the medical hierarchy, —concerns for women
the nursing program, and care of patients
were very strong. These concerns influenced rather than replaced the prevailing scientific and professional standards of the day. Indeed, the women doctors of the New England Hospital strongly believed in the compatibility of their moral and political views with their medical practice. Given the aspirations of Zakrzewska and her co-workers to create a regular medical hospital equal to the best their
male counterparts had produced, the
that at times contradicted
women's
and
and the functions of the
interests
result
was a relationship
times complemented the ideals of
at
hospital.
Zakrzewska and her co-workers played an important role in denew hospital. Their active involvement in the archictec-
signing the
new building was not unusual
tural planning of the
for nineteenth-
century women. During the second half of the century, some
began
to
tions of
women
design structures that would improve the material condi-
women's
Catherine Beecher, Melusina Fay Pierce,
lives.
Charlotte Perkins Oilman, and others proposed alternatives to the
They designed
traditional use of domestic space.
public kitchens, facilities.
community dining
In doing
so,
space and domestic
facilities,
kitchenless homes,
and public child-care
they demonstrated the link between domestic
life
and made
a
unique contribution
to
Ameri-
can architecture. 4
The women
at the
New England
Hospital shared this concern for
creating an environment that would suit women's special needs. At the
same
time, they
had
their
ideal medical workplace.
own
With
particular goal: the building of an
this in
mind, they carefully tried
to
balance comfort and esthetics with economy, efficiency, and the
most up-to-date medical theories. To implement their vision of the ideal hospital for women, they turned to experts the prominent Boston architects, Charles Amos Cummings and Willard T. Sears. The Cummings and Sears partner-
—
and in their more than thirty number of noteworthy Massachu-
ship dated back to the early 1860s, years together, they designed a
72
We Would Hear
"The Sick
new Old South Church on Boylston Church in Lynn, and the library and chapel at Phillips Exeter Academy in Andover. In the 1890s after Cummings retired from professional practice, Sears went on to design both the chapel in Mount Auburn Cemetery in Cambridge and his most noteworthy achievement, the home of Mrs. Isabel Cardner setts
buildings including the
Street, the First Unitarian
in the
The
Boston Fenway. 5
Cummings and From the choice of
doctors and directors worked closely with
Sears in planning their
new
hospital building.
location to the final details in the patients' rooms, the building was
testimony to their desire to construct an ideal hospital for women.
The new
building was purposefully situated in Roxbury, away from
the expensive at the
and congested business center of Boston. Remaining
periphery of the
city limits, the
new
hospital enjoyed the
urban conveniences of gas and water as well as the countrylike benefits of fresh air and quiet. Sited on several acres of wooded grounds, the New England Hospital offered sick women a bucolic retreat within the
The
city.
brick structure was typical of the Victorian architecture of
its
end of the building, reflecting the contemporary Gothic revival. A Dutch gambrel dormer in the center gave the building a point of focus, enhancing its symmetry and bestowing an eclectic quality. 6
day. Turrets flanked either
The new
building followed the popular pavilion plan that domi-
The pavilion plan was the commonly accepted miasmic theory of
nated nineteenth-century hospital design. architectural response to the disease.
According
to this theory of contagion, the air
harbored and
transmitted disease particles. Based on this notion, a major goal of
nineteenth-century hospital design was to create structures that would permit clean air constantly to replace contaminated air. To encourage this steady circulation of air, architects designed long, low buildings that impeded air movement between floors, but facilitated circulation from one end of a building to the other.' The New England Hospital followed this model. Each feature of the building reflected the concern for maximizing air flow. The three-story structure had spacious halls, numerous large windows throughout, and open porches at one end that wrapped around to 7:
Hospital with a Heart
house that evening, ten shared an affiliation with the hospital. The Drs. Zakrzewska, Sewall, Call, E. Pope, A.
—
entire medical staff
Pope, Morton, Berlin, and Richardson
— was there,
along with Dr.
Mosher, a former intern, and Dr. Sarah Crawford, the incomThe name of the medical organization did more than reflect the composition of its membership, however. FolEliza
ing resident physician. 10
lowing the advice of several male medical supporters, the doctors deliberately
named
women
their society after the hospital. Just "as
New England Hospital set standards for women doctors in New England Hospital Medical Society would be the standard bearer for women doctors' organizational activity. 11 At times the women doctors used their society to perpetuate their the
Boston," so the
professional separation
from men. In 1893, for example, they
jected an opportunity for integration by turning
down an
merge with the predominantly male Gynecological
to
re-
invitation
Society of
Boston. Recognizing that such a merger could signal the demise of their
the
of
own
society, they
New England
esprit de corps
chose to preserve the all-female character of
Hospital Medical Society and the "strong feeling
among women
The New England
physicians." 12
Hospital Medical Society also preserved
wom-
from their male colleagues. Like many nineteenth-century women's clubs, it provided women with valuable opportunities to meet and socialize apart from men. Gathering monthly in a member's home, the women spent friendly, informal evenings together. As Emily Pope recalled several decades later: "There was a feeling of home-iness about the meetings as most of en doctors'
the
social distance
members saw each other
teenth-century club so the doctors as they carried
women
frequently."
made bandages and on
just as
many
nine-
their business.
other supplies for their hospital
"Hands used
often busied themselves making tampons,
At the same time that the
And
knitted or sewed during their meetings,
New England
took on a distinctly female character,
it
being employed, Pope explained. 13
to
etc.,"
Hospital Medical Society
also purposefully sought to
duplicate the standards of the prestigious, exclusively male MasIt excluded sectarian doctors and accepted only women "of good moral character holding a legal diploma from a regular medical college." 14 "We mean to be as careful and as
sachusetts Medical Society.
1
26
"We Must Get Them and Keep Them" stringent as possible," Dr. Zakrzewska explained about the society's
admission
policies. 15
This exclusion of sectarian doctors was important, designed to preserve the respect and credibility of both the society and the hospital.
Indeed, the doctors
defended
at the
New England
sectarians. In the fall of 1877, the
medical school at Boston University pital ... as
dents." 16
a place
open for the
Though Boston
program
to accept
its
yearbook of the homeopathic
named
"the
New England
instruction of
University was the
Massachusetts to admit both ical
Hospital had recently
their status as regular physicians against the claims of
first
its
Hos-
medical stu-
medical school in
women and men, its homeopathic medNew England Hospital to refuse
led the doctors at the
graduates. Like their policies regarding patient admis-
and professional hierarchy, their Boston University demonstrated the
sion
policy regarding graduates of limit
of their commitment to
female solidarity as well as their ultimate allegiance to the regular
wing of the medical profession. Initially Zakrzewska and her medical staff concluded that little could be done about the fact that Boston University had "wrongfully used" their name. 17 The problem deepened, however, when they learned that the Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania, from which they drew their largest number of interns, accepted students who had done part of their training at Boston University. 18 Communication with the Pennsylvania institution became one of the first orders of business for the doctors in the New England Hospital Medical Society. After a discussion of the matter in their October 1878 meeting, Emily Pope wrote to Rachel Bodley, dean of the college to communicate Bodley's "mistake." She explained that the Boston University faculty were members of the Massachusetts Homeopathic Medical Society, that some had been expelled from the Massachusetts Medical Society, and that the New England Hospital refused to accept any of their students "in spite of all that their catalogue implies." Finally, Pope reminded Bodley of the importance of maintaining professional standards equal to those of the
male medical institutions. "We know that time spent there would not count in Harvard Medical College, nor we believe in any elite
first class
college in the country." 19 1
27
Hospital with a Heart
While Bodley supported the
New
England's exclusion "of stu-
dents from irregular schools," she explained that the ical
Woman's Med-
College of Pennsylvania accepted one year of study
University just as ary institution." 20
it
The
doctors at the
New England
Bodley's policy unacceptable. After discussing
meeting of the
Boston
at
accepted "a college year in any respectable
New England
it
liter-
Hospital found
January
at the
Hospital Medical Society and again in
the board of physicians' meeting later that week, they "unanimouslv
voted that students of Philadelphia
who count
in their
ing time spent in the Boston University (unless extra time in
it
medical train-
was made up by
some regular school of medicine) could not be accepted
as students in the
New England
Hospital." 21
The consistent rejection of homeopathic physicians illustrated the women doctors' attempts to emulate regular male doctors; they also used the New England Hospital Medical Society to further professional integration with their male colleagues. One of their early concerns was the discriminatory policies of the Medical Register of Mashile the Register listed male physicians under the
sachusetts. 22
W
T
headings of their respective medical society distinguish
among women
doctors. Instead,
affiliations,
it
it
failed to
either omitted
women
doctors entirely or listed
them under the heading "female
Under this system, found their names next to
the doctors at the
cians."
but nurses, midwives,
England,
New England
women who were not physicians, and phrenologists. To the doctors at the New those of
this failure to distinguish
them from other "female
cians" was a professional insult that threatened their
and
physi-
Hospital
own
phvsi-
respect
With the creation of the New England Hospital Medical Society, they persuaded the editors of the Register to list them under the heading of their organization, thereby achieving equal professional status with regular male credibility as well as those of the hospital.
physicians within the pages of the Register. 2:
The
doctors used the
New England
*
Hospital Medical Societv to
further their quest for professional integration in other ways as well.
For example, they petitioned the Boston Board of Health
women
doctors as well as
schools. 24
Throughout the
tors in Philadelphia,
128
New
men
to
appoint
as medical inspectors in the
1880s, they cooperated with
women
city's
doc-
York, and Baltimore to persuade a large
"We Must Get Them and Keep Them" university to admit
women
into
its
medical school. They continued
work toward this goal until the Johns Hopkins Medical School opened in 1893, welcoming men and women on an equal basis. 25 to
One of the primary professional goals of the dctors at the England Hospital was admission to the Massachusetts Medical ety.
Despite the existence of their
own medical
New Soci-
organization, exclu-
sion
from
The
Massachusetts Medical Society included the most respected and
influential
the all-male association was a major professional
male physicians
in Boston. Its
members enjoyed
professional advantages as well as significant respect
Members could count on
referrals
Directory of Greater Boston, the official city, listed
their
Women
names.
were denied these
privileges.
from each
certain
prestige.
The
Medical
doctors, excluded
from the
in the
society,
At the same time, by a process of
women
doctors identified the
whom the society also New England Hospital, as the benefits of mem-
erroneously with sectarian physicians
denied membership. therefore, the
bership
other.
and
annual medical directory
association, the society's exclusion of
women
liability.
made
To
liabilities
the doctors at the
of exclusion as well
the society an important institution to open. 26
Women doctors' attempts to enter the Massachusetts Medical Socifounding of the New England Hospital. In 1852 Nancy Talbot Clark, a graduate of Dr. Zakrzewska's alma mater, the medical school of Western Reserve, became the first woman to peti-
ety predated the
tion the society for examination. Its
and
members
for decades thereafter, the prestigious
tion refused entrance to
New England
women. For
rejected her request,
and powerful organiza-
thirty-two years, doctors at the
Hospital persistently sought to break into the Mas-
sachusetts Medical Society. Dr. Zakrzewska sought eral times. In 1859,
York, she
made her
having recently arrived first
in
membership
Boston from
sev-
New
unsuccessful attempt. In 1864, encouraged
by several of her male supporters, including Drs. Bowditch, Cabot,
and Channing, she reapplied for admission. Though her supporters were prominent members of the Massachusetts Medical Societv, they were in the minority on this issue. The society once again turned down her petition because of her sex, though she recalled years later that she "was not so decidedly refused." Because the
opposition seemed to have declined, Zakrzewska once again pre1
29
Hospital with a Heart
pared for the examination, hoping the society would reverse
its
decision. "But," she explained, "I again received a refusal." After
her third unsuccessful attempt, Zakrzewska gave up her campaign, resolving that this Society
.
.
"when the time comes this
.
for
women
to
venerable Society cannot have
be received into
me
as a
candidate
for examination." 27
Although Zakrzewska abandoned her campaign refusal, other
1872, Susan
women
at
after this third
the hospital continued to seek entry. In
Dimock applied for membership. Her petition revived membership among the doctors in the Mas-
the debate over female
sachusetts Medical Society.
mock and other
Some supported
women
the admission of Di-
on the men." Others, led by Dr. George C. Shattuck, opposed such a step, arguing that it was impossible for men and women to discuss medical matters together. 28 For over a decade after Dimock sought membership, Shattuck and his supporters successfully thwarted efforts to admit women to the society. 29 In the early 1880s, however, the tide began to turn in favor of women's admission. A survey conducted by Dr. James Chadwick in 1880 showed that seventeen state medical societies around the coun-
same terms
try
"well-qualified
... to fellowship
as
accepted a
total
men. Published
of 115
in 1882,
women
doctors as equal
members
with
Chadwick's survey pointed out the striking
conservatism of the Massachusetts Medical Society. 30 In 1883, the to push for reform. An article in the Boston acknowledged that women doctors were "here to stay" and argued that the issue was no longer "one of sex, but of capacity." 31 Most of the members of the Massachusetts Medical Society agreed, claiming their society had a duty to the profession and to the public to regulate women doctors just as it regulated men. By 1883, 709 members supported the admission of women and 400 did not. Even more striking, 939 did not object to consulting with women doctors, and only 146 were opposed. 32 On June 10, 1884, Bowditch, Chadwick, and other proponents of female membership overcame the opposition and, by a vote of 63 to 47, opened the Massachusetts Medical Societv to women doctors on an equal basis with men. 33 The women at the New England Hospital, who had worked over
Boston press began
Herald, for example,
130
"We Must Get Them and Keep Them" thirty years for this
women
for
reform, hailed the decision as a major advance
doctors that symbolized their final acceptance into
Boston's male-dominated medical establishment.
announced the
event. "It
is
Cheney joyously we
with amazement," she wrote, "that
look back over our past history and see what progress has been in
.
.
.
the recognition [of the
the community.
.
.
broken down the
.
to
made
physician] by the best classes in
This year the Massachusetts Medical Society has
last
ing her admission to
True
woman
barrier against her equal recognition by offerits
ranks on the same terms as men." 34
her word, Zakrzewska did not seek membership when the
opportunity finally opened to her. Drs. Sewall and Morton joined
her in refusing to seek membership; together, the three oldest doctors at the
New England
Hospital chose not to submit themselves to
competence "after their long years of activity." 35 Zakrzewska spoke for all three when she called the society's invitaa test of their
tion for her examination in her twenty-seventh year of practice a
"condescending proposal." She explained emphatically: "This ven-
must give me an honorary membership if it wants me and Morton concurred, and the rest of the New England Hospital staff supported their stand. 37 While Zakrzewska turned down the opportunity for membership for herself, she recognized its importance as a step forward in the integration of women and men doctors. She advised "young beginners," with their professional careers ahead of them, to seek "this
erable Society
.
.
.
at all." 36 Drs. Sewall
privilege." 38
Though
firmly established in their professional work,
Augusta and Emily Pope and Emma Call were young enough to from membership, and they became the first doctors at the New England Hospital and the first members of the New England
Drs.
benefit
— —
Hospital Medical Society
to seize the opportunity.
Preparation for the examination was no simple matter. Having been out of school well over a decade, the candidates not only had to relearn much they had forgotten, but faced a new body of scientific knowledge as well. And as full-time physicians, they had to squeeze study time around their busy schedules. In 1928 Dr. Emily Pope looked back on the challenge they had faced forty-four years before.
in
"It
took
much
to
years of practice.
prepare for such exams after more than a dozen .
.
.
Nomenclature of Chemistry had changed, J3
1
Hospital with a Heart
Physiology and allied subjects [were] almost
new
Adding
sciences."
were well aware that their performances would on themseh es as indi\iduals but would stand as a test
to the pressure, thev
not onlv reflect
of the capabilities of
women
They knew
doctors as a group.
the
doctors at the hospital were counting on them. 'The knowledge that
we had worked with were looking to us indiyidualh was try39 ing."' Emih Pope remembered. The studying and preparation, difficult as they were, "were soon of the past." 40 On September 25. 1884, Dr. Call became the first those
woman
to
be accepted into the Massachusetts Medical Society, and
within two years eight other
women
doctors, including
Emih and
Augusta Pope, joined her. Throughout the 1880s and 1890,
women
membership in the Massachusetts Medical Society. In Suffolk County where the New England Hospital was situated and most of its staff resided, a total of twenty-four women doctors joined in the first ten years after the society opened to womdoctors increasingly sought
en.
Twice
as
many joined
in the next ten years, bringing the total
female membership in Suffolk County 1903.
to seventy
by the end of
41
Despite the appeal of the Massachusetts Medical Society to the
women
at
the
New England
Hospital, the
Medical Society continued to grow
New England
as well. In
its
membership of twehe more than doubled
initial
first
Hospital
decade, the
to twenty-eight.
B\
1891 membership expanded to forty-four, and b\ 1908 there were sixty ety. 42
both
women doctors in the New England Hospital Medical SociTo most of the women doctors at the hospital, membership in the Xew England Hospital Medical Society and the Mas-
sachusetts Medical Society was the most desirable professional option. 43 It
permitted them to reap the benefits of separation as well as
of integration. With dual membership, they could preser\e their
female solidarity and simultaneously enjoy the colleagueship of Boston's most influential male physicians.
Xew England Hospital Medical Society, spurt at the Xew England Hospital in the
Like the building
the century represented a gration. logical
On
and
132
commitment
the one hand, the building financial
imestment
to
the impressi\e last
decades of
both separation and
program
inte-
reflected an ideo-
in the all-women's hospital.
On
the
"We Must Get Them and Keep Them" other hand, expansion of the hospital demonstrated a commitment to preparing women doctors to work effectively within the maledominated medical profession. The building program at the New England coincided with an era of expansion at other voluntary hos-
Boston. By the 1880s, the
facilities at the Boston Lying-in, were no longer sufficient. With an eye to expansion, that hospital's trustees purchased three neighboring houses in the last years of the decade. A fund-raising drive in 1889 brought in $100,000 in just a few months, enabling construction to begin. 44 In 1892, a new, significantly larger hospital building opened, encompassing the three recently purchased houses and the original hospital structure. The new Boston Lying-in could accommodate seventy patients. It had six large wards; three medium-sized wards; two
pitals in
for example,
an operating room; offices for trustees, visiting phy-k sicians, and house officers; as well as waiting rooms, store rooms, and sitting rooms. 45 Expansion at the Lying-in and other hospitals in the late nineteenth century was not without growing pains, however. The transformation of American hospitals from institutions of charity to institutions of modern medicine often brought conflict between doctors and directors. Before the end of the century, when patients had gone to hospitals for medical charity, food, and shelter, directors had exercised final authority over a range of hospital procedures from patient admissions to medical purchases. As hospitals evolved into more scientific and professional workplaces, directors encountered growing resistance from doctors, whose scientific and professional priorities conflicted with the directors' social and finanisolation wards;
cial
concerns. 46
This clash of values shaped the course of the building program the
New England
Hospital as well.
The
at
doctors had to fight for
expansion, and the price they paid for success was a deterioration of
between themselves and the directors. The conflict between the doctors and directors at the New England assumed greatrelations
from the dissension at other New England was inseparable from the hospital's dual commitment to separation and integration and made its building program unique.
er meaning, however, distinguishing hospitals.
The impetus
it
for expansion at the
133
regardless of race or creed."
affair revealed the extent to
New England were
compromise
willing to
the twentieth century to save the hospital. dissatisfaction
among
interns
and doctors
overt rejection of the hospital nationwide,
doctors beyond their
limit.
which the doctors
at
in the early years
of
Coming
alike it
at a
time
was escalating
when to
an
threatened to push the
Faced with the threat of rebellion by
and patients, they seriously considered sacrificing the hospital's founding principle of equal opportunity for women in medicine simply to keep the institution going. The doctors ultimately resolved interns
the
Thompson
affair in favor of "equal opportunity for all." Yet
difficult as this decision was,
by the hospitals
easier for the doctors to treat
women
all
women
fiftieth year,
it
was
equally than to provide
with equal professional opportunity with men. Zakrzewska
once imagined what
it
would be
after a twenty-year sleep." 106
like to
Had
she died, she would have found that the years after
its
wake
"like
Rip van Winkle
she awoken only ten years after
New England
Hospital,
founding, had become a very different place.
/
/
fifty
7
"We
Tor is
Will Lose
Our
Hospital"
compromise on the principle that this Hospital women, by women, to train women would mean
us to
for
complete annihilation
in the future
and treachery
to the
founders.
— Blanche Ames to Dr. Amelia Brown, November
Ames
On
9,
1951, box
1,
folder 10,
Collection
"a glorious October day" in 1912
all
the doctors and directors
New England Hospital on its fiftieth anniverwas a happy day of celebrating and reminiscing. Everyone wore a boutonniere of yellow rosebuds and a badge of white satin ribbon with "1862-1912 New England Hospital for Women and gathered to honor the sary. It
Children, October 29" printed in gold.
The
doctors hosted a
luncheon for the directors and the consulting physicians
room of
Goddard Home
in the rec-
and plants decorated each of the twelve tables. A large panel with the names of the hospital's founders, Marie E. Zakrzewska, Lucy Goddard, and Ednah D. Cheney, printed in gilded letters, adorned one wall. After lunch, the festivities continued in the Cheney Surgical Pavilion, where doctors and directors filled the upper and lower halls and the long, winding staircase to capacity. reation
the
for Nurses. Flags
1
Amid
all
the
festivities, a
the hospital in the it
to a point
of
first
sadness pricked the
air,
crisis in its fiftieth year.
doctors and directors tried to recoup
moment, the They used Zakrzewska and
Seizing the
some of their
the fiftieth anniversary to praise the legacy of Dr.
178
for the decline of
decade of the twentieth century had brought losses.
"We
Will Lose
Our
Hospital"
her loyal co-workers who had built the New England Hospital. Helen Kimball, the hospital's third president, set the nostalgic theme. Speaking to the familiar faces crowded into the surgical building,
remember
the founders of the
well," she continued, "to look
back with gratitude
she invited them "to join the past and Hospital. ...
It is
what has been accomplished." 2 One by one, the doctors and directors followed her lead. They took each other on a journey through the hospital's history, starting with its humble beginnings. "It began with struggle," spoke one of the directors; "it has
and
rejoicing to
achieved success." 3
They remembered
women" who founded
with pride the "noble trio of
the hospital, the "pioneer doctors"
who
dedi-
and the " 'grand old men' of Boston who stood behind them and made it possible for the women to do things." 4 They applauded the hospital's impressive growth, its excellent medical record, and its reputation among the women and men of Boston and beyond. Most of all, they remembered Dr. Zakrzewska and the principles for which she stood: "loyalty to this Hospital .. and to the wider cause of the education of women cated their lives to
it,
.
.
.
.
physicians." 5
Even
as they
dwelled on the glories of their past, they looked
ahead, challenging the younger Zakrzewska's work. Smith.
"We
women among them
"And now what of
on Mary
to carry
the future?" asked Dr.
shall leave this task to [our successors] in the confident
hope and assurance that the record of the next fifty years may be one of even greater prosperity and achievement, and that the Hospital
may
ever stand as a
monument
to
Women
Physicians." 6 Dr. Eliza
Mosher spoke with greater urgency and less optimism "to you younger Doctors." Zakrzewska and her co-workers, she told them, have left you a great heritage, and with it a great responsibility. You cannot afford to let this work fall which was established and perfected at such a cost. It must go forward," she asserted, "and, if you continue to minister to its needs with zeal and fidelity, to you also will come success and the high praise that we today have awarded its founders." 7
But the
New England
Hospital did not "go forward" as Mosher
— unresolved over —confronted the women who remained
hoped. Instead, a bittersweet legacy gration and separation
conflict
inte-
179
at
Hospital with a Heart
the hospital through the twentieth century. As the century progressed, this tension led to a
lenge
—the
new and
hospital in the twentieth century.
women
more
ultimately
task of justifying the very existence of
New England
By
serious chal-
an all-women's
the hospital's centennial year,
were
at odds over the purpose most devoted supporters seriously considered closing the New England Hospital forever. The second half-century of the New England illustrated the trans-
the
at the
many of
of their institution, and
still
its
formation of the meaning of separatism for 1860s
when
Zakrzewska had no choice but
By turn of the century,
women
women
separatism defined the contours of
doctors, the
to establish
as integration
doctors. In the
all
women's
an all-women's
became
younger and older women
lives,
institution.
a viable option for at the
New England
debated the merits of separation and integration for their medical careers. Fifty years later, integration
more
was the preferable, indeed the
respectable, route. Separatism, once the only acceptable ave-
nue for women doctors
—and
for
all
American women
— repre-
sented either a reversion to the past or a radical path into the future.
This transformation of separatism at the New England Hospital had its roots in the ideal of a science of society that had permeated American culture by the second decade of the twentieth century. 8 The advocates of a science of society sought to replace the moralism of Victorian American culture with a value-free concept of society. This faith in objectivity and empirical study changed the self-image and behavior of many women. 9 Whereas nineteenth-century women took pride in their moral superiority over men, women in the 1910s and 1920s began to discard this notion of sexual difference to claim equality with men. Some joined the ranks of the new social scientists. In the best scientific tradition of the times, they conducted studies of women's attitudes and behavior to disprove the notion of sexual differences. The research of Helen Thompson Woolley and Leta Hollingworth, for example, challenged the belief in female intellectual inferiority; the studies
Bement Davis demonstrated behavior.
of Clelia Mosher and Katherine
the similarity in male and female sexual
10
Other women took the ideal of a science of society beyond the academe. Settlement-house workers began to lose interest in
walls of
180
"We
Will Lose
The women
at
Hospital"
embraced the
the moral imperative of social reform and
notion of research.
Our
scientific
Hull House in the 1890s, for
example, went "to do something about the
social disorder." Their Jane Addams observed, went "to investigate something." 11 Other young women rejected the virtuous behavior of their mothers and emulating men, began to smoke, drink, and engage freely in sex. 12 In the wake of the woman suffrage victory, many veterans of the suffrage movement seized the banner of objec13 tivity to campaign for an equal rights amendment. Of course, not all women were so enthusiastic about the implica-
successors,
tions of a science of society for their lives.
Many
ism and absolutism of the nineteenth century.
clung to the moral-
The proponents
of
protective labor legislation, for example, clashed bitterly with equal rights advocates as they harnessed the notion of sexual differences to fight for special protections for
club
women
working women.
Similarly,
many
held fast to their commitment to social reform and in
particular to their special concerns for the family.
But even club
women began
to
14
adopt the ideals of science. For
example, they accepted the new idea of a science of child development,
first
childhood.
suggested by G. Stanley Hall's theories on the stages of
Through
the National Congress of Mothers, the anteced-
ent of the Parent-Teachers' Association, hundreds of thousands of
women women in
advocated university chairs in child study and courses for in
domestic science. 15 Club
women
also played a
major role
supporting the establishment of a juvenile court system. While
their
concern for the delinquent child stemmed from their
tradi-
tional role as mothers, their interest in juvenile courts revealed their
agreement with Hall that only systematic and skilled attention could adequately help young delinquents. Louise Stanwood, president of the Illinois Federation of Women's clubs, for example, argued that the juvenile court would move "away from the old ideas of a mere surface charity which relieves distress for the moment, to a deeper and more scientific interest in doing away with the sources of poverty and crime." 16 By the 1910s the new emphasis on objectivity, equality, and science was firmly embedded in the minds of women doctors as well. Integration of the medical profession, specialization, membership in 18]
Hospital with a Heart
male-dominated medical societies, and affiliation at male-dominated hospitals, as well as the growing tendency among women doctors to marrv, represented
women
doctors' attempts to shed the traditions
of their past and to achieve professional equality with men.
At the same time, many distinctiveness even as thev
women
doctors strove to preserve their
embraced the new professional
values.
They continued to organize professional institutions for women onlv. The Woman Medical Journal for example, encouraged women doctors to work for "higher scientific standards'" by publishing in Similarly, the American Medical their own professional journal. Women's Association brought women together into their own na's
1
'
tional medical society. Its founding in 1915. the same vear American Medical Association first opened its membership
en,
that the to
wom-
was a vivid svmbol of the persistence of female separatism in an
when women sought sexual equality. The tension between separatism and integration, and more
era
gener-
between moralism and objectivity, shaped the history of the women at the New England Hospital throughout its second halfcenturv. Thev divided into two groups: those who sought to accommodate the nineteenth-centurv tradition of female virtue and morality to the new objective and scientific values in the medical profession, and those who believed that objectivity should totally replace politics and moralism in their professional work. The former group sought to preserve separatism at the New England: the latter group was willing, even anxious, to integrate the hospital. From the hospital's fiftieth anniversary through the 1940s the advocates of separatism at the hospital managed to retain the upper ally
hand. In 1913, for example, thev voted not to extend full consulting privileges to male doctors, even though some patients wanted to call in their private physicians.
While some of the
women
ported the patients' requests, longtime physicians
Emma
doctors sup-
Stella
Tavlor and
Culbertson persuaded the majority against the idea.
"It
may
not be wise," Tavlor argued, "to jeopardize the onlv hospital run entirely by
women, bv
ticipation by
182
men
too often." 18 Just
agreed to continue their policv of limited parmale physicians, thev voted to extend their facilities to doctors, inviting all women who belonged to the Mas-
five vears after thev
women
the habit of calling in
"We
Will Lose
Our
Hospital"
sachusetts Medical Society to bring their private patients to the hospital. 19
Even
as the doctors held fast to their separatist tradition, they
strove to keep
up with new
professional standards. In 1913, for
example, Drs. Culbertson and Smith joined the newly organized College of Surgeons and urged their colleagues to do the same. 20
That same
year, the doctors negotiated a formal relationship with
the medical school at Tufts. In return for salaries equal to those of
Tufts instructors of obstetrics, they agreed to Tufts's request to struct
the
its
New England sounded
They pointed to their represented more than half of the
integration.
women
in
New
at
a familiar theme: their hospital's separa-
tism was successfully contributing to
to
in-
female students in obstetrics. 21 In the 1920s the doctors
women
doctors' professional
eight hospital internships, which fifteen rotating internships
open
England. Similarly, they singled out their friendly
relationships with their consulting staff,
who
in
sending many
pri-
New England brought the hospital "nearer the men and women working together." 22 Moreover,
vate patients to the
modern
ideal of
from the 1910s through the 1930s, the doctors employed their separatism to expand the hospital. Twice during this period they called on the public to support women doctors' special efforts on behalf of women and children. In 1917 and again in 1931 they raised enough
money
to enlarge the hospital, constructing first a
wing and later a new pediatric building. The earned important professional legitimization
new maternitv
New England in
the
also
1930s and
American Medical Association instituted boards and monitor specialty training programs in the 1930s, the New England received approval for .its residencv programs in obstetrics, surgery, and anesthesiology; approval for its pediatric program was granted in the i940s. 2; Despite these signs of progress and growth, other evidence suggested that the New England was in serious trouble. As early as 1913, Dr. Taylor privately acknowledged that the hospital was "practically at a standstill." Patient usage, for example, had declined steadily since 1908. The "empty beds so continually in evidence" created an "embarrassing" public relations problem for the doctors, who had "to explain the why of it to visitors." 21 A modest rise in the 1940s. Just after the
to standardize
*
183
Hospital with a Heart
numbers of
patients in subsequent years did not solve the problem. At a physicians' meeting in 1920, Dr. Margaret Kleinert addressed
"the distressing condition of the Hospital. " She explained that while
Boston hospitals were
six private
week, "we had
filled to capacity in
the previous
30 to 40 idle beds." One source of the probKleinert, was the decline of hospital management
at least
lem, according to
and housekeeping standards, despite the efficiency campaign of 1915. Rooms were so dirty "that patients [were] ashamed to receive their friends." In addition, patients often did not receive
any lunch,
and when they did, their trays often had no cups or were set with mixed patterns of china. "Why shouldn't china be bought in large quantities, all of one pattern?" Kleinert asked, revealing the inadequacy of the hospital's recent efficiency campaign. "That
is
surely
the cheapest and most efficient way of buving for an institution." 25
Others, however, believed that the problem lay in the hospital's tradition of separatism. sibility
Some even began
to investigate the pos-
of integration. In 1926, the treasurer of the hospital sought
advice to determine
if
the
Xew England and
could legally admit
men
as
According to one lawyer, a simple revision of the by-laws would permit male phvsifull-time staff physicians, interns,
cians
on the
patients.
but a change in the act of incorporation was
staff,
necessary before male interns and patients could legally be accepted. 26
Though
there were no policy changes in the next five years, in
1931 a public relations pamphlet announced the hospital's break
"The trees are about all that remain of the old regime the trees and the tradition. All else has kept abreast of the times." Making the most of the hospital's limited integration its male consulting staff and the male doctors who sent private physiwith past traditions. .
.
.
—
cians to the hospital
—the pamphlet boasted that "the old rule which
restricted practice in the hospital solely to
women
phvsicians has
gone the way of Marie Zakrzewska's horse and buggy. Both have outlived their usefulness; both have been modified and improved upon to suit the needs of a newer age." 27 Neither this new emphasis on integration nor the persistence of separation
stemmed
the hospital's decline. Instead,
its
problems
es-
and 1940s. Expansion stopped in 1932, after the construction of the children's building. By the end of the 1940s, all
calated in the 1930s
184
"We
Our
Will Lose
Hospital"
the buildings, including the newest ones, were sorely inadequate in
desperate need of replacement or repair.
situation
grew
steadily worse.
hospital exhausted
1949,
it
had a net
its
Through
working
The
and
hospital's financial
the 1930s
capital simply to
and 1940s the keep going. By
$79,000 and bills of almost $150,000 tradespeople. 28 Moreover, in the 1940s the probdeficit of
were owed to local lem of patient disuse, which first emerged in the 1910s, became particularly acute as fewer patients entered the hospital and for shorter stays. 29
The
hospital's
of the sudden increase in professional options
The
entry of
that
women
War II as a result for women doctors.
problems escalated during World
men
into the
armed
services left a
readily filled. In industry
and
gap
in the
workforce
in the professions,
women
found opportunities that had been unavailable to them only a few years before. The doors of medical schools and hospitals opened suddenly to women. In 1934, 28 percent of the medical schools in the country had never graduated a woman; by the war's end, all but 30 As women gained entry into 9 percent had graduated a woman. more medical schools, they began to constitute a larger proportion of the nation's medical students. Whereas in 1941, they represented 5.4 percent of the medical students in the country, in 1945, they
accounted for 8 percent. In each successive year of the war,
women
made up a larger proportion of the entering classes at medical schools. They represented 4.5 percent of the students beginning medical school in 1942, and 8 percent of the students who entered in 1945.
31
In Boston alone, Tufts, Boston University, and Harvard
increased significantly their
numbers of women medical
The proportion of women
entering medical school
all
students.
at Tufts, for
example, rose from 4 percent in 1942 to 15 percent in 1945. The increase was even more dramatic at Boston University: from per1
cent in 1942 to 19 percent in 1945. 32 Perhaps the most vivid symbol of women's wartime inroads into the Boston medical establishment
occurred in 1945, when Harvard's medical school finally broke its all-male tradition and accepted twelve women into its freshman class. 33
Women
also
found greater opportunities for hospital work as a were avilable to women in
result of the war. In 1941, internships
185
Hospital with a Heart
only 105 hospitals. By the end of 1942, 358 additional hospitals had accepted women as interns. 34 An article in the New York Tunes sum-
marized the trend: "Hospitals are hanging out the welcome signs to women physicians these days. Fledgling women doctors, once excluded
.
.
.
now being snapped up
are
as fast as the ink dries
on
their diplomas." 35 In Boston, the Massachusetts General Hospital,
which had accepted a total of only seven women interns between 1917 and 1940, appointed nine women between 1942 and 1945. 36 This change had a serious impact on the New England Hospital, which had previously provided available to
thirteen
them
women
women
with most of the internships
in Boston. In 1941, for
example, eleven of the
interns in that city were at the
New
England. Dur-
when such hospitals as Massachusetts General readily welcomed women, the New England had trouble attracting appliing the war,
cants
had only two interns instead of the usual ten or became so desperate that the hospital temoffered honorariums to attract women to train there. 37 Ul-
and
at times
The
twelve.
porarily
situation
wartime trend intensified the growing feeling among women as well as men that women no longer needed the
timately, the
many
—
—
New England
Hospital.
number The advice
In the immediate postwar years, the hospital underwent a of studies to determine the best strategy for
its
survival.
New England Hospital should abandon its tradition of separatism, accept men on its active staff, and redefine itself as a community hospital. The recommendations brought to a head the unresolved debate over the benefits of separatism and integration for women doctors. As the debate unfolded, however, it became clear that below the arguments on behalf of of each was essentially the same: the
either separatism or integration lay an even deeper cleavage
women
among
doctors. Supporters of separatism sought to preserve the
moral principle of the nineteenth century that
women had
right to medical training simply because they
were women. Advo-
a special
on the other hand, embraced the twentiethcentury notion of ethical neutrality and sought to abolish special cates of integration,
considerations for
women
in
medicine.
Of course,
neither stand was
value-free, but within the context of twentieth-century objectivity
186
"We and empiricism, the
integrationists
Will Lose
Our
appeared neutral
Hospital"
in contrast to
the supposedly idealistic separatists.
The United Community and
Services, Boston's
"community
chest"
major financial supporter of the hospital, rekindled the dereforms brought on by the war, it asserted that the "changed attitude of 1948 on the subject of women in medicine raises a serious question of the wisdom of continuing separate and designated hospitals for women in training and medical practice." 38 a
bate. Referring to the
Making the twentieth-century argument for equality rather than women and men, it defined the New England as an "unnaturally exclusive institution" and called for "open competition between men and women." 39 To demonstrate the seriousdifferences between
ness of
its
reduced
recommendation, in 1950 the United Community Services annual allotment to the hospital from approximately
its
$60,000 to $34,000. In response to the United Community Services' pressure, the hospital's
directors willingly adopted
changed the
institution's official
one of
recommendations and New England HosEngland Hospital. This
its
name from
the
pital for Women and Children to the New change indicated their willingness to accept men as patients, a reform they had adopted with little fanfare years before. Yet disagreement was still strong over the recommendation to change officially the hospital's policy regarding male doctors. Those in favor of such a change found their opportunity in 1950: the chief of surgery suddenly resigned, and a longtime courtesy physician, Dr. Edward Young, was appointed as her temporary replacement. Not since Horatio Storer had served as the hospital's surgeon in the 1860s had a man been on the active staff of the New England Hospital. While Young, like Storer, assumed his position as chief of surgery as a "temporary expedient," a group among the doctors and directors seized the moment to turn Young's appointment into a new policy of integration at the hospital. 40 Within a year, Young added fourteen men to the eight-woman surgical staff, and by the end of 1951 at least thirty men were on the hospital's active staff. 41 Doctors and directors supported this change as one that would pull the New England Hospital out of its past. One staff surgeon,
187
Hospital with a Heart
Rosemary Nelson, warned that women doctors could no longer "remain isolated and maintain the necessary high standards of professional efficiency." Arguing against the nineteenth-century tradition of separatism, she charged:
am
"I
wholeheartedly resent segregation
woman." Impatient with those who
"fail to comprehend the end of struggle," she asserted vehemently that the "battle for equality of the sexes has been fought and won." Nelson's faith in integration stemmed from her personal experience in medical school. A graduate of the coeducational Rush Medical College, she claimed she had competed on equal terms with her "brother students" and never experienced any discrimination. Based on her medical school experience, she looked forward to working at the New England Hospital with men who, she believed, would "definitely" improve her professional ability and attract women doctors away from other hospitals. 42 Nelson was not alone in her views. At least two other doctors, Annella Brown and Grace Rockford, shared her enthusiasm for working with men. Rockford argued that integration would "save" the hospital for women doctors. Similarly, a group of directors believed that male physicians would offer women doctors the "best teaching" and attract more patients to the hospital. 43 Pragmatic support for integrating the New England came from influential people outside the hospital as well. The assistant dean of Harvard Medical School, for example, argued that since women could train at male-dominated hospitals, the demand for internships in women's hospitals like the New England "cannot be great." In September 1951, an editorial in the New England Journal of Medicine echoed this support. Likening the New England Hospital's tradition of separatism to the Indian custom of secluding women from men, it applauded the end of the hospital's "self-imposed purdah." But beneath the editor's support of equal opportunity for women and men at the hospital lay a new version of inequality that
because
I
a
*
threatened to lock the hospital into the outdated practice of
medicine and specialization.
isolate it from the twentieth-century trend toward While larger hospitals accommodated to medical spe-
cialization, the small
New England would
succeed, according to the
editor, as "the hospital that trains family doctors.'
188
holistic
13
"We
Will Lose
Our
Hospital"
more
Despite the hopes of Young's supporters, integration created
problems than
men
it
solved at the
to the active staff, for
New England
Hospital.
The addition of
example, did not increase significantly the
hospital's patient population. From January through May 1951, they brought only eighty-nine patients, increasing the total number by barely 5.5 percent. 46 At the same time, the tripling of the surgical
reduced the
staff drastically
Whereas each of the
women
doctors' surgical opportunities.
original staff of eight
women had performed
approximately forty-one operations a year, Young's expanded surgical staff
reduced their operating load
many men
to the surgical staff
to fifteen. 47
The addition of so
women
doctors feel "anx-
made
the
and "unrest" intensified when Dr. Young, with several sympathetic directors and women physicians, including Drs. Grace Rockford and Marjorie Woodman, made a blacklist of uncooperative doctors. 48 "They tried to travel to victory as the 'four horsemen' fear, ignorance, bigotry and smear," recalled one woman doctor. As a result, "firm supporters" of the hospital left. 49 Esther ious."
Their
feeling"
"ill
—
the
Bartlett,
"dropped
as
hospital's
anesthesiologist
1939,
was simply
an example," while Dr. Rockford made other older
women doctors most valuable
"feel
unwelcome." As a
staff
members
Blanche Atwood, for example,
result, several
resigned.
left after
service. 50 Sixty-two-year-old Dr.
two years
since
Dr.
twenty-nine years of surgical
Bernadette Ryder
in the hospital's obstetrical
of the hospital's
Fifty-nine-year-old
left after thirty-
department. Sixty-two-year-old
Dr. Eliza Melkon, one of the hospital's most active surgeons with over
150 patients a year, resigned after thirty-three years
England five
to
women
work
at
Mount Auburn
doctors resigned or
was chief of surgery. ing. Dr. Bartlett's
dency approval
lost their positions
The implications
surgery,
approval, only the surgical
New
the
for the hospital
Of
were devastat-
the four departments
—which
and anesthesiology department retained
its
all,
Young
while Dr.
departure, for example, cost the hospital
in anesthesiology.
obstetrics,
atrics,
at
Hospital in Cambridge. 51 In
its
resi-
—
pedi-
had
AMA
rating after
men
52
joined the active staff in 1950. To make matters worse, Young's policies also created
among staff,
patients. In the 1860s,
when Horatio
Zakrzewska encouraged her
ill-will
Storer was on the active
patients' female
modesty by per-
189
Hospital with a Heart
mining them
to request a
woman
doctor
at
any time. Young,
reflect-
ing the twentieth-century belief in the objectivity of medical practice,
"whoever is on duty [or] get out." 53 His intolerance of many women's preference for a female physician cost the New England significant numbers of patients, as, increasingly, would-be clients left the hospital without seeing any doctor at all. 54 As a result, the patient census began to drop an average of ten per month. By the end of December 1950, there were only fifty patients and one hundred empty beds. 55
demanded
that his patients see
In response to the hospital's general decline, a majority of the
women
doctors began to speak out on behalf of the hospital's tradi-
tion of separatism.
of the
"Reasons for maintaining the original purposes
New England
Hospital are as cogent today as they were in
1863," they argued. Referring to the postwar reemergence of dis-
crimination against
women
in
male-dominated
hospitals, they con-
"More women need the opportunities here than ever before. Nowhere else in New England can women rise to the top appointments." 56 As an example, they complained that in some Boston hospitals women surgeons had to sign "an agreement" that they
tinued:
understood that they would never receive an appointment above the level
of junior visiting surgeon. 57 Moreover,
tunities simply for staff positions at
New England. In New England
the
hospitals
hospitals
women
lacked oppor-
Boston hospitals other than the
women were active staff physicians at Of the 723 staff physicians at nine other in the city, only 27 were women. The situation in Boston was not unique. An article in the Journal of the American 1952—53, 66 Hospital.
Medical Women's Association complained that there were "few
in-
where a women could even hope to become chief of staff in a male-run hospital. 58 Another article, in the New England Journal of Medicine, acknowledged that women's opportunities for hospital training and postgraduate work were fewer than for men "all along the line." 59 This resurgence of discrimination extended from hospistances"
tals
into medical schools.
While
women
constituted 12 percent of the
nation's medical school graduates in 1949, they represented barely 5 percent in 1955. The decline at Tufts was even sharper than the
national decline.
Whereas women made up
15 percent of
ing medical class in 1945, they represented only
190
1
its
enter-
percent of
its
"We
Will Lose
Our
Hospital"
medical graduates in 1955. 60 A three-year study by research experts at the prestigious Brookings Institute summed up the situation, reporting simply that
women
doctors
still
"face discriminations." 61
New England Hosgroup of directors was passionately committed to returning the hospital to its historical commitment to women. The leader of this group was seventy-five-yearold Blanche Ames, a longtime advocate of woman's rights, who had worked for suffrage and birth control and had actively supported the New England Hospital since the 1920s. 62 Ames quickly emerged The
doctors were not alone in denouncing the
pital's policy
of integration.
as the leading ist
past. "It
An
active
spokesperson for returning the hospital to
is
no good trying
to
compromise
its
separat-
sex," she wrote in a
passionate defense of the hospital's original purpose. 63 Challenging the
modern notion
that
open competition between men and women
doctors was "the road to progress," she praised the hospital's eighty-
seven-year tradition of "cooperation" where women doctors only were on the active staff and men doctors aided them as consultants and referring physicians. 64 With a majority of the doctors and directors, Ames called for a new executive committee sympathetic to the "old traditions of the hospital." 65
committee resigned
Under
pressure, the entire execu-
January 1952, ending temporarily the New England Hospital's experiment with integration. 66 The new regime, under Ames's direction, promised to "preserve
tive
in
the [hospital's] heritage for future physicians." 67 Yet saving separa-
suddenly became even more difficult, for new problems emerged almost immediately. First, another study, conducted this tism
time by Dr. Philip Bonnet, director of the Massachusetts Memorial Hospital, concluded that the hospital's depleted treasury, deteriorat-
ed physical plant, and state
loss
of credit standing had created a "tragic
of affairs." Arguing that the hospital's historical commitment to
women had "ceased to have widespread public appeal," Bonnet recommended that it merge with a larger teaching hospital. 68 Ames and her allies voted to reject Bonnet's report. 69 Still, they could not so easily dismiss the new threat by the United Community Services to exclude the
campaign and $8,io3. 70
its
New England
Hospital from
its
"final allotment" to the hospital in
Ames immediately
assailed the
Red Feather 1953 of only
United Community Ser1
9
i
Hospital with a Heart
women doctors, which She was not alone in her outrage. The United Community Services' announcement provoked vices for
"resurgence of prejudice against
its
years." 71
would turn the clock back 100 a public outcry. Ex-patients
came
to the hospital's defense.
wrote to the Boston Herald that the doctors saved her
life.
72
Heart," another,
at the
One
New England had
In a letter to the editor entitled "Hospital with a
who had been
a patient at five hospitals,
ranked the
New England as best. 73 Others argued that women still preferred to see women doctors and that women doctors still needed a hospital of own. 74 Male physicians echoed this support. Twenty-five wrote letters to the United Community Services on the hospital's behalf. 75 One longtime courtesy physician publicly accused the United Community Services of being "woefully misinformed" on the opportheir
tunities for
women doctors
in hospitals other
than the
New England.
Another courtesy doctor publicly praised the hospital for its excellent record of medical care and for its dedication to the "entire community" not just to women. 76 Joining the hospital's defense, the ministers of Roxbury expressed their collective "distress" to the United Community Services, and wealthy Bostonians spoke with
—
their pocketbooks, withholding their annual contributions to the
Red Feather campaign. 77 Despite the impressive public support for the
United Community Services decided
New
England, the
December 1953 to exclude the hospital from its Red Feather campaign. Whereas Ames had cast the controversy in political terms, charging the United Community Services with "antifeminism," the United Community Services characterized its position as purely neutral. "It makes its decision on facts and not on rumors," asserted its president, Philip Theopold. 78 Brushing off charges that it had taken the "heart" out of charity, the United Community Services defended its decision on objective criteria: deteriorating buildings, declining patient census, and unresolvain
ble financial difficulties. 79 Ironically,
Ames and
they did not take
her supporters had an opportunity
—to find a middle ground between these polarized
views. In early 1953, just after the United
nounced
its
Community
Services an-
intentions regarding the hospital, they hired a public
relations consultant, Mrs.
192
—which
Hugh
Cabot, to help them regain United
"We
Community
Services support.
Will Lose
Our
Hospital"
On the surface, Cabot appeared to agree
Community Services that politics no hospital. The "feminist element," she ar-
wholeheartedly with the United longer had a place at the
gued, "couldn't guarantee any future." 80 Moreover, she concluded its very commitment around the all-woman staff," she explained, "not the most competent women." 81 Cabot's evaluation was not as one-sided as it appeared, however. She proposed to modify rather than to destroy the hospital's historical commitment to women and to "translate it into terms of contem-
that the root of the hospital's current crisis was to
women. The "standards were
built
porary society." Ironically, she suggested a new version of separatism that was strikingly similar to that of the nineteenth century.
Zakrzewska had based her all-women's hospital on the argument
women
patients had special needs and women doctors had speCabot proposed a modern variation of this theme. Adolescence, marriage, menopause, and old age still caused unique probthat
cial skills.
lems for women, she explained, but within a different
social context.
The
"protected woman" of the nineteenth century had become the working woman of the twentieth. Work, according to Cabot, created a range of unique health problems for women of all ages. With this in mind, Cabot proposed that the New England Hospital become a "woman's medical center" dedicated to the special needs of the twentieth-century working woman from adolescence through old age. 82
A
few doctors and directors were enthusiastic about Cabot's pro-
new direction. Most, however, were more upset by her critique of the hospital's "tenacious clinging to past glories" and rejected the plan to build a "woman's medical posal to lead the hospital in a
center." In doing so, they lost the opportunity to turn the
New
—
England once again into a pioneer medical institution this time for what Cabot called "today's woman" of the twentieth century. 83 Instead, they tried to resurrect the female solidarity of Zakrzewska's
day.
Ames
called for "a revival of the feminist
She drew up a
them
to give
list
of "friend[s] of
money
women" and sought to "rouse" women doctors ap-
to the hospital. 81 Several
pealed to other medical sisters in
Group Movement."
women
"to take a stand in defense of
your
the profession." 83
193
Hospital with a Heart
Some responded to this renewed effort. who worked for the important 'causes'
lies
In particular, the "fami.
.
.
[such as] anti-slavery
and women suffrage were the very generous supporters" of the hospital. 86 But they could not support the hospital on their own, and most women in the 1950s did not respond to the call for renewed sisterhood. Indeed, in an era when the "feminine mystique" defined the parameters of most women's lives, Ames and her allies could not resurrect the female solidarity that had once sustained the hospital. 87
way to despair, and the morale among the women doctors plummeted to an all-time low. Dr. Ilia Galleani, staff surgeon for thirty-two years, spoke with deep feeling about the hosFrustration soon gave
pital's decline:
very badly about my hospital because it is my hospital. I call it it is my professional home. It had a wonderful atmosphere. It has become cold. People are insecure. Nobody knows I
feel
mine because
when there is a change here and wrong somewhere. 88
a
change
there.
There
is
something
Dr. Elizabeth Kleinman, on the staff for twenty-seven years, echoed
her colleague's sentiments even more dramatically. Describing the hospital as "very dear" to her, she explained that she
had "watched
it
go down for a number of years, but the last year," she emphasized, "I would say 'this hospital is in a state of coma and gasping for breath.'
" 89
As the
situation worsened,
many grew
increasingly impatient with
the attempts to preserve the hospital's separatism.
When
the chief of
and gynecology resigned suddenly in 1958, the advocates of integration were able to appoint a consulting physician, Dr. Harold Rubin, to replace her. 90 Though Ames, Kleinert, and others obstetrics
tried to block Rubin's
appointment, by 1958 they were an aging
minority at the hospital. As Kleinert acknowledged: "Some of us
defend the hospital for women will not be here to defend it much longer." 91 Their waning influence was part of a larger trend that extended beyond the New England Hospital. By i960, there was a consensus among the women at the New York Infirmary and the Woman's Hospital of Philadelphia that the all-
who want
194
to
"We women's
hospitals "were
three hospitals appointed
Will Lose
men
New England
forever as a women's hospital and became a
England Hospital did not symbolize us
it
closed
community
who hold
One
its
failure. Rather,
it
fast to tradition
women, could not
mitment
to
Yet
moral commitment
sustained the
New England
separatists to find
it
doors
health cen-
New
was their only
longtime supporter explained that "those of
would
like to see the hospital close
rather than go over to the men." 93 Separatism, with
this
Hospital;
the point of view of the separatists, the closing of the
remaining option.
all
to their staffs.
continued to decline through the 1960s. In 1969
From
Hospital"
no longer necessary." 92 In the 1960s,
Integration, however, could not save the
ter.
Our
meaning
prevail at the
to
its
moral com-
New England
Hospital.
women, which had conceived and
for a century, ultimately helped the
in the hospital's final demise.
l
95
Conclusion
The women
doctors at the
New England
Hospital did not shake the
world. But for over a century they shook free from the constraints
imposed upon the women of their day to forge proGuided by the opportunities of nineteenth-century separatism, their path to professionalism in modern America led them ultimately to confront the paradox of that very separatism. In the nineteenth century, the women doctors at the New England Hospital dared to defy the conventional wisdom that the home was the center of a woman's life. They gave up the comfort of confor-
and
limitations
fessional careers.
mity to
make
own home
their
professional careers. Faced with the choice
between a life at or a life in the world outside, most chose medicine over marriage and motherhood. In this way, the doctors at the New England were a unique and special group among women in nineteenth-century America. All the women at the New England Hospital and all nineteenth-century women doctors were pi-
—
oneers.
women
They stood
—
as proof, against the skeptics of the day, that
could be doctors and could practice medicine competently. Most outstanding among this impressive group of women was Dr. Marie Zakrzewska, the founder and leader of the -New England Hospital for Women and Children. Dr. Zakrzewska did not have the popular following of temperance leader Frances Willard or the po-
196
Conclusion
impact of suffrage activists Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton; she belongs, nevertheless, among these pioneer advocates of woman's rights. She shared their ambition to expand woman's rights and to improve the conditions of women's lives; and her accomplishments measured up to theirs. Her own particular commitment was to professional opportunity for women in medicine. In her lifetime of work at the New England Hospital, she expanded the nineteenth-century woman's movement beyond its focus on such political and social causes as suffrage and temperance into the arena of the professions. Not only did Zakrzewska help bring women doclitical
tors into the nineteenth-century medical profession.
make medicine
the
first
male profession open
to
She helped to in a mean-
women
ingful way.
The tal,
passion of Dr. Zakrzewska's
life
was the
one of the most important all-women's
New England
institutions
Hospi-
and one of
the most unique medical institutions in nineteenth-century America.
Zakrzewska founded the hospital in 1862 as a medical workplace modeled after the prestigious male-run hospitals of the day but for women only. The New England Hospital belonged both to women
—
and
to the medical profession.
From
the
start,
it
successfully fused
the interests of these divergent groups.
The women
went there
separatism, the linchpin of
almost
all
in
its
early years sought out
its
nineteenth-century women's
the thousands of other middle-class
lives.
women
doctors
who
They were not unlike who founded
of the day
separate all-women's organizations to work for temperance, moral purity, sanitation,
New England
woman's
rights,
and other
social reforms.
The
Hospital was part of this network of women's groups
and institutions. It duplicated the all-female dimension of other contemporary women's organizations and gave women doctors a place to practice medicine apart from men. But even as the New England Hospital fit comfortably into the nineteenth-century woman's movement, it was part of the medical profession of the day. Like other voluntary hospitals, the
New
En-
gland provided medical charity to the sick poor and professional
To be sure, by most contemporary stanwas not a major medical showplace. It did not compare with
opportunity to physicians. dards,
it
large, influential hospitals
such as Massachusetts General or Chil-
197
Hospital with a Heart
dren's in Boston.
These other
hospitals, staffed bv the leaders in the
medical profession and supported bv society's for
all
elite, set
nineteenth-centur\ hospitals. In contrast, the
the standards
New England
was a small hospital with a tight budget, modest prestige, and an allfemale staff which was never among the profession's inner circle. But viewed through the lens of the nineteenth-century woman's
movement, the New England Hospital was an extremelv important medical institution. For almost a centurv.
New England
it
was the onlv hospital
in
women doctors with hard-toand sick women with medical care
dedicated to providing
find professional opportunities
from doctors of
their
own
sex.
With
a
handful of other all-women's
New York Infirmary and the of Pennsylvania, the New England Hospi-
medical institutions, including the
Woman's Medical College tal
formed
a separate inner circle
teenth-centurv America.
Its
of women's medicine
in nine-
existence assured that the nineteenth-
centurv regular medical profession, though male-controlled,
in-
cluded women.
Under Zakrzewska's firm leadership, the New England Hospital maintained its commitment to providing women with medical training equal to that enjoved bv the regular male medical profession, but in
an all-female environment. This combination of separatism and
equality provided the
the verv start.
It
backbone of the New England Hospital from
represented a uniquely successful blend of the two
divergent strains of the nineteenth-centurv woman's movement.
Most advocates of woman's rights agreed that women, because of their unique female nature, deserved a separate, though equally important place in the world with men. Others shared the opinion that women, as human beings, should have equal and identical rights w ith men. Thus. Catherine Beecher devoted her life to elevating and professionalizing the duties of domesticity, while Susan B. Anthonv and Elizabeth Cady Stanton sought equality for women in the public arena through suffrage. For years women debated the merits of these respective positions; Dr. Zakrzewska did not participate in this dialogue. Rather, her importance to the nineteenthcenturv woman's movement was her ability to bring these divergent visions of woman's rights together successfully at the New England Hospital. At the same time that her hospital was a separate, alli
98
Conclusion
had close connections with men among and was committed to opening the medical profession to women on an equal basis with men. Indeed, the key to the New England Hospital's early success was its position simultaneously apart from, and yet a part of, the mainstream of American
women's
institution,
Boston's medical
it
elite
medicine.
embraced the spectrum of concerns of most nineteenth-century woman's rights advocates, Zakrzewska hoped to turn the New England Hospital into a lasting monument to women in medicine. Throughout the four decades of her leadership, her hospital held a central place in the lives of women doctors in America. Its very existence turned any woman's idealistic dream of a career in medicine into at least a possibility. At the more concrete Having
level,
it
skillfully
provided
women
with important clinical training in general
medicine, obstetrics, gynecology, surgery, and pediatrics. This expe-
them
rience prepared
work.
own
And
for private practice or for other professional
the hospital did even more.
It
gave
women
doctors their
where they could find the colleagueship and support most male doctors denied them. As a result, the hospital had a special, symbolic place in nineteenth-century American culture, standing as proof of women's impressive capabilities and professional workplace
accomplishments
in medicine.
But the New England was not simply a symbol of success for women in medicine. In the 1870s, "whisperings of discontent" among younger doctors shattered the spirit of cooperation Zakrzewska and her colleagues had nurtured since the hospitals founding.
By the end of the century,
dissatisfaction
had
filtered into all levels
Many doctors openly rebelled or young medical women were hard to attract.
of the hospital's medical heirarchy. left
the hospital; bright
To
a large extent, the
problems
at
the
New England Hospital were women doctors began to
the product of the professional advances
make
in the last
quarter of the nineteenth century.
all-male hospitals, medical schools,
encouraged younger
and medical
women doctors women in
the discrimination against
The opening of women
societies to
to believe thev
had overcome
medicine. Enticed bv the pro-
fessional opportunities they envisioned
in
these male-controlled
medical institutions, thev turned away from the separate all-wom-
1QQ
Hospital with a Heart
en's institutions such as the
New England Hospital. By the end of the New England Hospital reached its
nineteenth century, even as the
peak of popularity and prestige, it became clear that a younger group of women doctors was no longer willing to accept the hospital's once successful, though delicate, balance between separatism and equality for women in medicine.
The
professional aspirations of younger
women
doctors for total
equality with male physicians sparked a debate at the
over the place of separatism in
women
New England
doctors' professional lives.
While Zakrzewska and her contemporaries did not question the ultimate importance of integration, they believed that a strong separate institution such as the New England Hospital was the best strategy
women
and survival, and ultimatemen. Convinced that the surest path to integration was through separation, Zakrzewska and her supporters worked to save the New England Hospital for women doctors. An ambitious building program, careful selection of interns, and a commitment to active professional involvement in both separate and integrated medical societies were all part of the strategy for saving for
ly
doctors' professional stability
for their integration with
the hospital.
But there were
limits to this plan.
nineteenth century
—
The
given way by the end of the century to a
and improving
women
in the
profession
— had
task of
breaking into the medical
new
their professional position.
challenge: sustaining
The
solutions of the
nineteenth century could not answer the problems of the twentieth. separate world Zakrzewska built at the New England Hospital no longer met the needs of younger women doctors at the turn of the century as they prepared to enter an era of integration in medical training and practice. In the last years of her life, Zakrzewska began to see the limits of
The
her strategy for
women
doctors in the twentieth century.
Still,
she
dawn of the new century, holding tightly to her longtime convictions and unable to comprehend fully the ways of younger died
at
the
women
doctors. Symbolically, Zakrzewska's death in 1902
turning point in the history of the
New England
Hospital.
out the twentieth century, the hospital never regained or central position in the professional
200
lives
of
women
its
marked a Throughpopularity
doctors.
Conclusion
Nevertheless, the decline of the
twentieth century was
due
nineteenth-century leader.
to
New England
more than
the death of
Hospital in the its
founder and
The opening of male-dominated
medical
women doctors gave them the luxury of professional To many younger women, the larger, better-equipped, and
institutions to
options.
more
prestigious male-dominated hospitals offered greater oppor-
tunities for clinical
experience and professional advancement than
the smaller all-women's hospitals. The irony is inescapable. Embedded within the New England Hospital's foundation of separatism were the seeds of its own decline. The closer women doctors came to attaining professional equality with
men — the
goal for which Zakr-
—
zewska founded the New England Hospital the more they turned away from the hospital and chose the path of professional integration. Once the symbol of success for women doctors, the New England Hospital became for many an obstacle to professional advancement. Whereas separatism and professional opportunity originally reinforced each other at the hospital, by the end of the nineteenth century, many younger women doctors believed that the separatism upon which the hospital depended was incompatible with their professional goals.
While male-dominated medical institutions represented formidable competition for the
New England
Hospital,
its
decline was also a
consequence of the new notion of a science of society that blossomed at the
dawn of
the twentieth century. In the quest for a value-free
Americans rejected the moralism that informed Victorian American culture and sought to rebuild American society on a foundation of empiricism and objectivity. This search for a science of society was all-encompassing, transforming institutions, professions, even women's lives. In medicine, the focus on objectivity, combined with the development of the germ theory of disease and the concept of asepsis, transformed medical practice from the holistic art of healing to the reductionist science of diagnosis and treatment. Hospitals, once havens of medical charity, became monuments to medical science. Within this changing world, women began to reject the notion of sexual differences. The early advocates of an equal rights amendment, women social scientists, even club women began to seize the banner of sexual equality. society,
20
1
Hospital with a Heart
Set against this in the
background of scientific
New
medical profession, the
became an insurmountable
obstacle for
twentieth century. Nevertheless,
who
ultimately
tion,
they closed
had the it,
final say.
it
objectivity
and integration
England's tradition of separatism
many women
was the separatists
doctors in the at
the hospital
Rather than integrate their
proudly invoking the
institu-
historical tradition of sepa-
ratism and idealism that were the heart of the
New England
Hospital.
In the
last analvsis,
the
women
doctors of the
New England never women doc-
balanced separation with integration. While the pioneer tors
made
their professional lives apart
teenth century
many women
from men, by the
late nine-
doctors courageously strove to weave a
and the opportunities of integration. began to unravel. A century of separatism at the New England Hospital tells a storv of struggle, success, and eclipse but most poignantly it depicts the paradox of separatism that confronted all professional women in tapestrv of the old traditions
By the twentieth century,
this delicate tapestry
—
modern America.
202
Abbreviations
The Ames
following short forms are used for often-cited material: Collection
Blanche
Ames
Papers, Arthur and Eliz-
abeth Schlesinger Library on the History
of
Women
in
America, Radcliffe College
Annual Report of the New England Hospital
Annual Report(s) of the New England Hospital for Women and Children, 1862—1967
Blackwell Family Papers
Blackwell Family Papers, Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History
of Dall Collection
Women
in
America, Radcliffe College
Caroline Healey Dall Papers, Massachusetts Historical Society,
Hamilton Collection
Alice
Boston
Hamilton Papers, Arthur and
Eliz-
abeth Schlesinger Library on the History
of
Women
in
America, Radcliffe College
Kleinert Collection
Margaret Noyes Kleinert Collection, Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America,
NEH
New England
Radcliffe College
Collection/Countway
A.
Hospital Collection, Francis
Countway Library of Medicine, Har-
vard University
203
Abbreviations
NEH
Collection/Schlesinger
New England Hospital Collection, Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of
Women
in
America, Radcliffe
College
NEH
Collection/Smith
Notable American
Women
New England Hospital Collection, Sophia Smith Collection, Smith College Notable American
Women, 1607—1950: A
Biographical Dictionary, 3 vols., ed.
T. James (Cambridge, University Press, 1973)
204
Mass.:
Edward Harvard
Notes
Preface
The
example of the sexual discrimination interpretation is Mary ''Doctors Wanted: No Women Need Apply": Sexual Barriers in the Medical Profession, 183 5-197 5 (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1977). This is the first major history of women doctors in modern America. While Walsh devotes chapter three, entitled "Feminist Showplace," to the New Enclearest
Roth Walsh,
gland Hospital, she depicts it solely within the discrimination perspective. Richard Shryock suggested the importance of the woman's movement to women doctors in "Women in American Medicine," in Richard Harrison Shryock, Medicine in America: Historical Essays (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1966), pp.
177-199. Regina Markell Morantz argues that women doctors employed the popular notion of female nurturance, modesty, and domesticity to justify their professional careers. See "The 'Connecting Link': The Case for the Woman Doc tor in igth-Century America," in Sickness and Health in America: Readings in the History of Medicine and Public Health, ed. Judith Walzer Leavitt and Ronald L. Numbers (Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1978), pp. 17-28. In an earlier work I examined the ways in which these qualities of nurturance, modesty and domesticity shaped women doc tors' medical ideas and practice. See Virginia Ci. Drachman, "Women Doctors and the Women's Medical Movement: Feminism and Medicine, 1850-1895." (unpublished Ph. 1). dissertation, SUNY Buffalo. 1976). Laurie Crumpacker argues that women doctors' medical therapeutics were safer and more sensitise to women's special needs than the medical practice of male physicians. See Laurie Crumpacker, 1
2
o
5
Notes
to
pages
"Female Patients
13-14 in
Four Boston Hospitals of the 1890's" (paper presented at on the History of Women, Radcliffe College,
the Berkshire Conference
Cambridge, Mass., October, 1974).
Some
women were the "vicand ideas of male doctors. See Ann Douglas Fashionable Diseases': Women's Complaints and Their Treat-
historians take a different tack, arguing that
tims" of the medical practices
Wood, "The ment in Nineteenth-Century America," Journal of Interdisciplinary History, 4 (1973), 25-52; Carroll Smith-Rosenberg, "The Cycle of Femininity: Puberty and Menopause in 19th Century America," Feminist Studies, (1973), 58-72; Carroll Smith-Rosenberg, "The Hysterical Woman: Sex Roles and Role Conflict in 19th-century America," Social Research, 39 (1972), 652-678 and G.J. 1
Barker-Benfield, The Horrors of
Women and
the
Half-Known
Sexuality in Nineteenth-Century America
Life:
Male
Attitudes toward
(New York: Harper & Row,
1976).
Morantz disagrees, defining male physicians' medical practice toward wommen as shaped primarily by the limits of medical science. "The Lady and Her Physician," in Clio's Consciousness Raised: New Perspectives on the History of Women, ed. Mary Hartman and Lois W. Banner (New York: Harper & Row, 1974), pp. 38-53; see also Regina Markell Morantz and Sue Zschoche, "Professionalism, Feminism, and Gender Roles: A Comparative Study of en and
Nineteenth-Century Medical Therapeutics," Journal of American
History,
67
(1980), 568-588.
See Morantz and Zschoche, "Professionalism, Feminism, and Gender Roles: A Comparative Study of Nineteenth-Century Medical Therapeutics". Despite the emphasis on professionalism, Morantz and Zschoche, acknowledge the dimension of female uniqueness at the New England Hospital. For an earlier statement of this synthesis, see Virginia G. Drachman, "Female Solidarity and Professional Success: The Dilemma of Women Doctors in Late Nineteenth-Century America," Journal of Social Histoiy, 15 (1982), 607-619. While each essay by Regina Morantz focuses on a single category of analysis, taken together they combine the various approaches to the history of women doctors and provide us with a much fuller picture of women doctors in modern America. Morantz fuses these interpretations in a recent essay which provides a general overview of the history of women doctors. See In Her Own Words: Oral Histories of Women Physicians, edited by Regina Markell Morantz, Cynthia Stodola Pomerleau, and Carol Hanses Fenichel (Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1982), pp. 3-44. See also Regina Markell Morantz, "Feminism, Professionalism, and Germs: The Thought of Mary Putnam Jacobi and Elizabeth Blackwell," American Quarterly, 34 (1982), 459-478. On the impact of the doctrine of separate spheres on the lives of women in nineteenth-century America see Nancy F. Cott, The Bonds of Womanhood: "Woman s Sphere" in New England, 1780-1835 (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1977) and Carroll Smith-Rosenberg, "The Female World of Love and Ritual: Relations between Women in Nineteenth-Century America," Signs, I (1975), 1-30. For an analysis of the phenomenon of women's institution building, see Estelle Freedman, "Separatism as Strategy: Female Institution Building and American Feminism, 1870-1930," Feminist Studies, 5 (1979), 512-29. There have been several important studies of the woman's move-
206
Notes
to
pages
15—23
merit in the late nineteenth century. See, for example, Karen J. Blair, The Clubwoman as Feminist: True Womanhood Redefined, 1868—1914 (New York: Holmes and Meier, 1980); Ruth Bordin, Woman and Temperance: The Quest for Power and Liberty, 1873-1920 (Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1981); and Marijo Buhle, Women and American Socialism, 1870—1920 (Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1981). For an insightful study of the quest for integration
among
professional
women
see Rosalind Rosenberg, Beyond Separate
(New Haven: Yale University Press, Margaret W. Rossiter, Women Scientists in America: Struggles and Strategies to 1940 (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1982). On the transformation of the hospital in America, see: Morris J. Vogel, The Invention of the Modern Hospital: Boston, 1870-1930 (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1980); Charles E. Rosenberg "Inward Vision and Outward Glance: The Shaping of the American Hospital, 1880-1914," Bulletin of the History of Medicine, 53 (Fall, 1979), 346-391; Charles E. Rosenberg, "And Heal the Sick: The Hospital and Patient in 19th-century America, "Journal of Social History 10 (1977), 428-477; David Rosner, A Once Charitable Enterprise: Hospitals and Health Care in Brooklyn and New York, 1890-1914 (New York: Spheres: Intellectual Roots of Feminism
1982). Also
Cambridge University Press, 1982). On the rise of the modern medical profession in America see: William G. Rothstein, American Physicians in the Nineteenth Century: From Sects to Science (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1976), Paul Starr, The Social Transformation of American Medicine: The Rise of a Sovereign Profession and the Making of a Vast Industry (New York: Basic Books, 1982) and Rosemary Stevens, American Medicine and the Public Interest
(New Haven: Yale tion of medicine in
Chapter 1.
University Press, 1971). The literature on the transformaAmerica pays little attention to the role of women doctors.
'The Mother of Us All"
1
Though Marie Zakrzewska was known Zak,
I
refer to her throughout the
to many on an informal basis as Dr. book by her formal surname, Zakrzew-
ska. 2.
Boston Globe, October 30, 1902, p. 1 1, and Boston Herald, October 30, 1902, p. 9. For a description of Dr. Zakrzewska's funeral, see Boston Herald, May 19,
1902, p. 10. For a description of both the funeral Marie Flizabeth Zakrzewska: A Memoir (Boston:
service, see
Hos-
Women
and Children, 1903), pp. 26—30. Following the custom of the day, Marie Zakrzewska used the feminine version of her family name. There are several sources for information on Zakrzewska's life. The most accessible include an autobiography of her early pital for
3.
and the memorial
New England
life
in
Labor";
A Practical Illustration of "Woman's Right to a Letter from Marie Elizabeth Zakrzewska (Boston: Walker, Wise.
Caroline H. Dall, ed., or,
i860). This autobiography was written in the form of a letter to Zakrzewska's friend Mary L. Booth. "Woman's Right to Labor" is reprinted along with Zakrzewska's later letters in Agnes C. Vietor, ed., -4 Woman's Quest: The Life of Marie E. Zakrzewska, M.D. (New York: Arno Press, 1972). Agnes C. Vietor joined the staff of the New England Hospital in 1897. Her
207
Notes
to
pages
23-32
"biography" of Zakrzewska is based on letters and materials given her by Zakrzewska. It is the most complete and accessible source of information about the life of Marie Zakrzewska, but must be understood as a sympathetic portrait. For other sympathetic accounts, see Marie Elizabeth Zakrzewska: A Memoir, and [Dorothy B. Seccomb], The Sew England Hospital, 1862-1962: Ojie Hundred Years (Boston: privately published, [1962]), ch. 1. For a biographical sketch of Marie Zakrzewska, see John B. Blake, "Marie Elizabeth Zakrzewska," in Notable American Women, III, 702-704. See also Mary Roth Walsh, "Doctors Wanted: No Women Need Apply": Sexual Barriers in the Medical Profession, 1835-1975 (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1977), ch. 3. 4.
Vietor, Woman's Quest, p.
6. 7.
Ibid., p. 24.
8.
Ibid., p. 25.
9.
Ibid., p. 22.
10.
Ibid., p. 36.
1
7.
Marie Zakrzewska to Caroline Dall, March Woman's Quest, pp. 8, 22. Vietor, Woman's Quest, pp. 20, 21,9.
5.
1.
12.
Ibid., p.
1869, Dall Collection; Vietor,
15.
Ibid., p. 19.
13.
Ibid., p. 28.
14.
Ibid., p. 34.
15.
6,
Harvey Graham, Eternal Eve: The
History of Gynecology
16.
Doubleday, 1951), pp. 238-241. Vietor, Woman's Quest, p. 52.
17.
Ibid., p. 62.
18.
Ibid., p. 67.
19.
Ibid., p. 72.
20.
Ibid., p. 71.
21.
Ibid., p. 93.
and
Obstetrics
(Garden
City, N.Y.:
22.
Ibid., pp. 105, 70.
23.
The most
recent full-length biography of Elizabeth Blackwell
is
Nancy Ann
M.D., 1821-1910: A Biography" (unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, University of Pennsylvania, 1974). See also Elizabeth H. Thompson, "Elizabeth Blackwell," in Notable American Women, I, 161—165. Older, more anecdotal biographies include Ishbel Ross, Child of Destiny (New York: Harper, 1949), and Peggy Chambers, A Doctor Alone (London: Bodley Head, 1956). Margo Horn has studied Elizabeth Blackwell within the context of the Blackwell family in "Family Ties: The Blackwells; A Study of the Dynamics of Family Life in Nineteenth-Centui v America" (unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, Tufts University, 1979). 24. Vietor, Woman's Quest, pp. 108, 109-110. 25. Elizabeth Blackwell to Emily Blackwell, May 12, l8[54], reprinted in Pioneer Work in Opening the Medical Profession to Women: Autobiographical Sketches by Elizabeth Blackwell (New York: Schocken Books, 1977), p. 201. See also Vietor, Woman's Quest, p. 109. 26. The medical department of Western Reserve College was popularly known as Cleveland Medical College. Elizabeth Blackwells sister, Emily Blackwell, Sahli, "Elizabeth Blackwell,
208
Notes
to
pages
33—39
graduated from there in 1854. The relationship between Elizabeth Blackwell and Marie Zakrzewska was not without strain. Nancy Sahli suggests that Blackwell was relieved when Zakrzewska finally left the New York Infirmary, that she was jealous of Zakrzewska's successes in Boston, and that she disliked what she saw as Zakrzewska's "egoisms'' ("Elizabeth Blackwell," pp. 184, 190, 413). 27.
For a biographical sketch of Caroline Severance, see Joan M. Jensen, "Caroline Severance," in Notable American Women, III, 265-268.
28.
Vietor,
29.
Ibid., p.
159.
30.
Ibid., p.
147.
31.
Ibid., p.
140.
32.
33.
Woman's
Quest, p. 135.
179-180. On Madame Restelle and on abortion in general, see James C. Mohr, Abortion i)i America: The Origins and Evolution of National Policy (New York: Oxford University Press, 1978), esp. ch. 3. Ibid., pp.
Vietor, Woman's Quest, p. 186.
34.
Ibid., p.
35.
Marie Zakrzewska to Pauline Pope, October 28, 1901, box
190. 1,
folder
2,
NEH
Collection/Smith. 36.
The discussion of Samuel Gregory is drawn from a number of sources. See Jane B. Donegan, Women and Men Midwifes: Medicine, Morality, and Misogyny in America (Westport: Greenwood Press, 1978), and Richard W. Wertz and Dorothy C. Wertz, Lying-in: A History of Childbirth in America (New York: Free Press, 1977). Both Donegan and Wertz and Wertz place Gregory in the context of the history of obstetrics. For a history of the New England Female Medical College, see Frederick C. Waite, History of the New England Female Medical College (Boston: Boston University School of Medicine, 1950). See also,
Walsh, "Doctors Wanted," ch.
2.
Gregory's
own
writings include
Man-
Midunfery Exposed and Corrected: The Employment of Men to Attend Women in Childbirth (Boston: Samuel G. Gregory, 1848); Medical Morals, Illustrated .
.
.
and Extracts from Medical Works; Designed to Show the Pernicious Social and Moral Influence of the Present System of Medical Practice, and the Importance of Establishing Female Medical Colleges, and Educating and Employing Female Physicians for Their Own Sex (New York: published by the author, 1853); and Letter to Ladies in Favor of Female Physicians (New York: Fowler with Plates
37.
and Wells, 1850). Vietor, Woman's Quest, pp. 268—269.
38.
Ibid., p. 251.
39.
Mr. Delano to Mrs. Bond
[c.
spring 1862], box
9,
folder 28,
NEH
Collection/
Smith.
For a discussion among the directors of the Medical College about the impending split between Gregory and Zakrzewska, see Mr. Delano to Mrs. Bond, July 1, [1862], and
40. Vietor,
Woman's
Quest, p. 285.
New England Female
1
December 41. Vietor, 42.
15, [1862],
Woman's
box
9,
folder 28,
NEH
Collection/Smith.
Quest, p. 291.
Ibid., p. 292.
43.
Ibid., p. 293.
44.
Zakrzewska
to Pope,
October
28, 1901.
209
.
Notes
to
pages
39—45
Woman s Quest, p. 303. discussion of Karl Heinzen
45.
Vietor,
46.
The
is
drawn from the following
sources: Carl
Wittke, Against the Current: The Life of Karl Heinzen, 1809-80 (Chicago: Uni-
Chicago Press, 1945), pp. 102-104, 107-108, 112-114, 134-138, 214, 220, 225, 310-311, 317-318, 320; Carl Wittke, Refugees of Revolution: The German Forty-Eighters in America (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvaversity of
nia Press, 1952), pp. 47.
1
16,
164-165, 275-276, 310, 363; and Vietor, Woman's
Quest, pp. 297, 300, 303, 304, 458, 459, 460, 477, 487, 488. Zakrzewska to Pope, October 28, 1901.
48. Wittke, Refugees of Revolution, pp. 275-276. 49. For a brief description of Zakrzewska's social activities at her
home, see The
Anniversary of the New England Hospital for Women and Children (Boston: Geo. H. Ellis, 1913), p. 48. 50. Marie Elizabeth Zakrzewska: A Memoir, p. 22. 51. Annual Report of the New England Hospital, 1899, p. 22. Fiftieth
52. Vietor, 53.
Woman's
Quest, p. 459.
Ednah Dow Cheney,
Reminiscences of
Ednah Dow Cheney (Born
Littlehale)
(Boston: Lee and Shepard, 1902), p. 60. 54. Marie Zakrzewska to Caroline H. Dall, March 6, 1869, Dall Collection. 55. Vietor, Woman's Quest, pp. 474—478. Also Marie Elizabeth Zakrzewska:
A
Memoir, pp. 29—30. 56. Boston Herald,
Chapter 2 1.
May
16, 1901, p. 10.
"This All-Women's Hospital"
Recent studies of the hospital in America by social historians include Morris Vogel, The Invention of the Modern Hospital: Boston, 1870-1930 (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1980); Charles E. Rosenberg, "Inward Vision and Outward Glance: The Shaping of the American Hospital, 1880-1914," Bulletin of the History of Medicine, 53 (Fall 1979), 346—391; Charles E. Rosenberg, "And Heal the Sick: The Hospital and Patient in 19th-century America," Journal of Social History, 10 (1977), 428—477; and David Rosner, A Once Charitable Enterprise: Health Care in Brooklyn, 1885— 1915 (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1982). See also William H. Williams, America's First Hospital: The Pennsylvania Hospital, 1J51-1841 (Wayne, Pa.: Haverford House, 1976), and Leonard K. Eaton, New England Hospitals, 1790-1830 (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1957). For useful data on hospitals in the early twentieth century, see E. H. L. Corwin, Ph.D., The American Hospital (New York: Commonwealth Fund, 1946). Annual Report of the New England Hospital, 1863, p. 2 For a discussion of female institution building, see Estelle Freedman, "Separatism as Strategy: Female Institution Building and American Feminism, 1870-1930," Feminist Studies. 5 (Fall 1979), 512-529. On the emergence of separate spheres and its impact on women's lives, see Nancy F. Cott, The Bonds of Womanhood: "Woman's Sphere" in New England, 1780-183^ (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1977); Carroll Smith-Rosenberg, "Beauty, the Beast and the Militant Woman: A Case Study in Sex Roles and Social Stress
J.
2.
3.
1
2
1
o
Notes
to
pages
46—49
injacksonian America," American Quarterly, 23 (1971), 562-584; and Gerda Lerner, "The Lady and the Mill Girl: Ghanges in the Status of Women in the Age of Jackson, 1800-1840," Mid-Continent American Studies Journal, 10 (Spring 1969), 5-15. On the importance of female friendship in the lives of nineteenth- and early twentieth-century women, see Garroll Smith-Rosenberg, "Female World of Love and Ritual: Relations between Women in Nineteenth-Gentury America," Signs: A Journal of Women in Culture and Society, 1 (1975), 1-29, and Blanche Wiesen Gook, "Female Support Networks and Political Activism: Lillian Wald, Grystal Eastman, Emma Goldman," Chrysallis, 3 (1977), 4.
On
43-61.
woman's movement in the Gilded Age, see Karen J. Blair, The Clubwoman as Feminist: True Womanhood Redefined, 1868-1914 (New York: Holmes and Meier, 1980); Ruth Bordin, Woman and Temperance: The Quest for Power and Liberty, 1873-1920 (Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1981); and Mari Jo Buhle, Women and American Socialism, 1870-1920 (Ghicago: University of Illinois Press, 1981). On the early suffrage movement, the
see Ellen Garol DuBois, Feminism and Suffrage: The Emergence of an IndepenWomen's Movement in America, 1848-1869 (Ithaca, N.Y.: Gornell Univer-
dent
On
feminist-abolitionists, see Blanche Glassman Hersh, The 1978). Slavery of Sex: Feminist- Abolitionists in America (Ghicago: University of Illinois women and prison reform, see Estelle B. Freedman, Their Press, 1978). sity Press,
On
Sisters'
5.
Keepers: Women's Prison Reform in America,
1830—1930 (Ann Arbor:
University of Michigan Press, 1981). A brief study of the New England Hospital's early years
is
in
No Women Need Apply": Sexual Barriers
Mary Roth
Medical 1835-19'] 5 (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1977), ch. 3. See also Agnes C. Vietor, ed., A Woman's Quest: The Life of Marie E. Zakrzewska, M.D. (New York: Arno Press, 1972). Though my overall interpretation of the hospital and women doctors differs from Walsh's, there are obviously points of agreement, and I have relied on her book where appropriate. For biographical information on Ednah Dow Cheney, see her autobiography, Reminiscences of Ednah Dow Cheney (Born Littlehale) (Boston: Lee and Shepard, 1902); Shirley Phillips Ingebritsen, "Ednah Dow Littlehale Cheney," in Notable American Women, I, 325-327. For information on Lucy Goddard, see Cheney, Reminiscences, and The Souvenir (n.p.: Committee on the Fair Paper, 1896), in NEH Collection/Smith. On Abby May, see Shirley Phillips Ingebritsen, "Abigail Williams May," Notable American Women, II, 513-515, and Vietor, Woman's Quest, pp. 186, 244, 245. On Caroline Severance, see Joan M.Jensen, "Carolina Maria Seymour Severance," in Notable
Walsh's "Doctors Wanted:
in the
Profession,
6.
American Women, 7. 8.
III, 265—268. Cheney, Reminiscences, p. 62. For articles on women doctors, see Woman's Journal, 17
18 (October 29, 1887), 345; 2 (July 29, 1871), 235; 10
(July 7. 1886), 252;
(November
8, 1879).
356; and 5 (December 12, 1874), 348. For articles specifically relating to the New England Hospital, see Woman's Journal, 18 (December 3, 1887), 386: 8 9.
(April 14, 1877). 113; and 14 (May 26, Quoted from Thomas Woody, History
1883), 165.
of Women'* Education in the United States, 2 vols. (Lancaster. Pa.: Science Press, 1929), II, 344.
2
1 1
Notes 10.
to
pages
49—33
Houghton Mifflin, 1886). For a Douglas Wood, "The Fashionable Diseases: Women's Complaints and Their Treatment in Nineteenth-Century America," Journal of Interdisciplinary History, 4 (Summer 1973), 25—52. For a biographical sketch of Clemence Lozier, see Milton Cantor, "Clemence Sophia Harned Lozier," Notable American Women, II, 440—442. See also Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Susan B. Anthony, and Matilda Joslyn Cage, eds., History of Woman Suffrage, 4 vols. (Rochester: Susan B. Anthony, 1886), III, pp. 68, 1 17, 41 1, 415—416. For Elizabeth Blackwell's response to the founding of Lozier's school, see Elizabeth Blackwell, Address on Medical Education of Women (New York: Baptist and Taysor, 1864), p. 8. For other examples of the participation of women doctors in the woman's movement, see Blair, Clubwoman as Feminist. Marie Zakrzewska to Caroline Dall, October 16, 1866, Dall Collection. Zakrzewska's autobiography was published as Caroline H. Dall, ed., A Practical Illustration of "Woman's Right to Labor"; or, a Letter from Marie Elizabeth Zakrzewska, M.D. (Boston: Walker, Wise, i860). John Ware to Marie Zakrzewska, December 15, i860, reprinted in Vietor, Woman's Quest, pp. 255—256. See also Mr. Delano to Mrs. Bond, December Elizabeth Stuart Phelps, Dr. Zay (Boston:
discussion of Phelps's Dr. Zay, see
11.
12.
13.
14.
15, i86[2], 15.
box
9,
folder 24,
The Liberator, 29 (July
1,
NEH
Ann
Collection/Smith.
1859); 32 (October 3, 1862);
and 32 (November
14,
1862). 16.
Marie Zakrzewska
May— Goddard
17.
to F.
W. G. May, Jamaica
Plain,
December
4,
1901,
Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America, Radcliffe College. On Samuel E. Sewall and the Sewall family, see Shirley Phillips Ingebritsen, "Lucy Ellen Sewall," in Notable American Women, III, 268-269. Collection,
Vogel, Invention of the Modem Hospital, esp. ch. 1. For a discussion of sectarian medicine in the nineteenth century, see Martin Kaufman, Homeopathy in America: Rise and Fall of a Medical Heresy (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1971), and William G. Rothstein, American Physicians in the Nineteenth Century: From Sects to Science (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1976). 20. Charles Meigs, Lecture on Some of the Distinctive Characteristics of the Female, delivered before the class ofJefferson Medical College, January 184J (Philadelphia: Blanchard and Lea, 1847), p. 67. For a discussion of male doctors' opposition to women doctors, see Walsh, "Doctors Wanted," esp. ch. 4, and Virginia G. Drachman, "Women Doctors and the Women's Medical Movement: Feminism and Medicine, 1850-1895'' (unpublished Ph.D. dissertation. State University of New York, Buffalo, 1976). For discussion of the relationship between the female reproductive cycle and women's sexual role, see Carroll Smith-Rosenberg and Charles Rosenberg, "The Female Animal: Medical and Biological Views of Women in Nineteenth-Century America." Journal of American History, 55 (1973), 325—356. 18.
19.
21. 22.
Vietor, Woman's Quest, p. 256. Annual Report of the New England
Hospital.
1892, p. 8;
II.
I.
Bovvditch,
A
of the Bowditch Fund, 1872); Vincent Y. Bowditch, Life and Correspondence of Henry IngersoU
History of the Massachusetts General Hospital (Boston: Trustees
2
1
2
Notes Bowditch, 2 vols. (Boston:
ed" 23. 24.
p.
26.
Mifflin, 1902),
I;
pages 53 — 57
Walsh, "Doctors Want-
149-
Vietor, Woman's Quest, p. 254. Edward H. Clarke, Sex in Education;
James 25.
Houghton
to
R.
or,
a Fair Chance for the Girls (Boston:
Osgood, 1873).
Annual Report of Smith College, 1877, p. 3. M. Carey Thomas, "Present Tendencies in Women's Colleges and UniverEducation," Educational Review, 25 (1908), 68. In 1874, the year after Sex in Education was originally published, four books challenging Clarke appeared: Anna C. Brackett, ed., The Education of Amerisity
27.
can Girls Considered in a Series of Essays (New York: G. P. Putnam, 1874); Julia Ward Howe, ed., Sex in Education: A Reply to Dr. E. H. Clarke's "Sex in Educa1874); George Fisk Comfort and A. M. Comfort, Woman's Education and Woman's Health: Chiefly in Reply to "Sex in Education" (Syracuse: Thomas W. Durston, 1874); and Eliza Bisbee Duffey, No Sex in Education; or, an Equal Chance for Both Boys and Girls (Philadelphia: J. M. Stoddart, 1874). The outrage of many nineteenth-century women at Sex in Education has been echoed by historians who have interpreted Clarke's book as a dangerous threat to woman's rights. See, for example, Walsh, "Doctors tion" (Boston: Roberts,
Wanted," ch. 28.
4.
Woman's Medical
Association of
New York
City, ed.,
Mary Putnam
J acobi,
from Her Autobiography and a Complete Bibliography (New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons, Knickerbocker Press, 1925); Mary Putnam J acobi, The Question of Rest for Women During Menstruation (New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons, 1877). Roy Lubove, "Mary Corinna Putnam Jacobi," in Notable American Women, II, 263-265. 29. On Catherine Beecher, see Kathryn Kish Sklar, Catherine Beecher: A Study in American Domesticity (New York: W. W. Norton, 1973). On Emma Willard, see Alma Lutz, Emma Willard, Daughter of Democracy (Boston: Houghton
M.D., a Pathfinder
in Medicine, with Selections
Mifflin, 1929).
Woman's Journal, 5 (February 21, 1874), 59; and Annual Report of the New England Hospital, 1876, p. 6. A formal statement of the new resolution is in a hospital report of August 13, 1866, box 6, folder 1, NEH Collection/Smith. For Storer's letter of resignation, see Boston Medical and Surgical Journal, 75 (1866), 191-192. On Storer, see Frederick C. Irving, M.D., Safe Deliverance (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1942), and Walsh, "Doctors Wanted" ch. 4. Storer elaborated on his attack against women in Horatio Robinson Storer and F. F. Head, Criminal Abortion: Its Nature, Its Evidence, and Its Law (Boston: Little, Brown, 1868), and H. Robinson Storer. The Causation, Course and Treatment of Reflex Insanity in Women (Boston: Lee and Shepard, 1871). Storer's resignation from the New England Hospital is referred to in Annual Report of the New England Hospital, 18(H), p. 11. See also Vietor, Woman's
30. See Zakrzewska's letter in
31.
32.
Quest, pp.
338-339. Walter Channing to Marie Zakrzewska, Boston, June Woman's Quest, p. 332. 34. Vietor, Woman's Quest, p. 330. 35. Annual Report of the New England Hospital. 1892. p. 8. 33.
2.
1864. in Vietor,
2
13
Notes 36.
to
pages 5 7- 64
Mrs. E. Farrar to Louisa Bond, September
folder 28,
NEH
1862, box 9, folder 28,
NEH
1862, box
3,
9,
Collection/Smith. 37.
Harriet Holland to Louisa Bond, August
7,
Collection/Smith. 38.
Annual Report of
the
New England
Hospital, 1866, pp. 3-4; Vietor,
Woman 5
Quest, p. 332.
39. J.
H. Stephenson to Ednah D. Cheney,
NEH
May
17, 1864,
DOX
2 6, folder 63,
Collection/Smith.
40.
Annual Report of the New England Hospital, 1863, pp. 16-18; 1864, pp. 13—15; 1865, pp. 23-25; 1866, pp. 19-21; 1867, pp. 23-25.
41.
Ibid., 1865, p. 20.
42.
Ibid., 1863, p. 8.
43.
Ibid., 1868, p. 7.
44. Ibid., 1864, pp. 8-9. 45. Ibid., 1863, p. 14; 1864, p. 12; 1871, p. 17; 1872, p. 21. 46. This evidence is calculated from nationality lists in the annual reports of the
New England
Hospital, 1863-1873.
is calculated from a random sample of 345 patients between 1873 an d !895- For comparisons, see Vogel, Invention of the Modern Hospital, ch. 1, and Rosenberg, "Inward Vision." For data on the ethnicity of patients at the Boston Lying-In, see Annual Reports of the hospital, 1881 — 1890. 48. Vogel, Invention of the Modern Hospital, pp. 23-25. 49. Annual Report of the New England Hospital, 1871, p. 11.
47. This evidence
50.
Ibid., 1865, p. 6.
51.
At times
this
system of charity was a serious financial drain on the hospital.
became so severe that the directors regretfully termiand limited admissions to those patients paying the full eight-dollar weekly charge. The measure was only temporary, however, for by the next year, they had replenished the treasury so that free and halfIn 1866, the drain
nated
52.
all
charitable care
paying patients could once again enter the hospital. Annual Report of the New England Hospital, 1868, p. 4. For a recent history of the dispensary in America, see Charles E. Rosenberg, "Social Class and Medical Care: The Rise and Fall of the Dispensary," Journal of the History of Medicine, 29 (1974), 32—54. For an earlier study, see Michael M. Davis, Jr., and Andrew R. Warner, Dispensaries: Their Management and Development
(New York: Macmillan, 53.
Mr.
Newmarch
NEH 54.
to
26, 1863,
box
9,
folder 28,
Collection/Smith.
Edward Welch
NEH
1918).
board of directors, March
to
board of directors, October
4,
1862, box 9, folder 28,
Collection/Smith.
Ednah Dow Cheney,
Memo
57.
on the duties of the lady visitor, n.d., box 9, Van Hoosen, Petticoat Surgeon (Chicago: Pellegrini and Cudahy, 1947), p. 93. Annual Report of the New England Hospital, 1863, p. 15. Francis Starkey to resident physician [Elizabeth Keller], September 6, 1875,
58.
Annual Report of the New England
59. 60.
Ibid., 1864, p.
55.
folder 28,
56.
NEH
Collection/Smith. Bertha
Collection/Countway.
Ibid., p.
214
NEH
12.
1
1.
Hospital, 1867, p. 12.
Notes
to
pages
64—71
This evidence is calculated from a random sample of records of 2 1 2 surgical and medical patients at the New England Hospital in the years 1872 through 1895. 62. S.L.S., "Life in the N. E. Hospital," The Hospital Visitor, 2 (December 9, 61
.
1887), 2, box 8, folder 15, NEH Collection/Smith. Annual Report of the New England Hospital, 1870, p. 7. 64. Vietor, Woman's Quest, p. 292. 65. On American medical education in the nineteenth century, see Martin Kaufman, American Medical Education: The Formative Years, 1765-1910 (Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1976); Joseph F. Kett, The Formation of the American Medical Profession: The Role of Institutions, ij8o-i86o (New Haven: 63.
Yale University Press, 1968); Rothstein, American Physicians in the 19th Cenand Paul Starr, The Social Transformation of American Medicine: The
tury, ch. 5;
Rise of a Sovereign Profession
and
the
Making of a
Vast Industry
(New York:
Basic
Books, 1982). 66. Vogel, Invention of
the Modern Hospital, ch. 1; Rosenberg, "Inward Vision." Annual Report of the New England Hospital, 1865, p. 12. 68. The following discussion of the interns at the New England Hospital is drawn from the hospital's Annual Reports from 1862 through 1875, an