Ann Preston
Ann was born December 1, 1813 in the Quaker settlement of
West Grove in Pennsylvania near Philadelphia. She attended school but also
helped care for her six younger siblings as her mother’s health was poor. She was also active in the local anti-slavery
society.
When her siblings grew to be more independent she began
teaching. At this time she also became
interested in physiology and recognizing the need for more information on the
subject, she initiated classes in female physiology and hygiene for women and
girls.
In 1847 she embarked on a two year apprenticeship with Dr.
Nathaniel Moseley in Philadelphia. Completing the apprenticeship she applied to
four medical colleges in Pennsylvania but was rejected solely because she was
female. In 1850 a group of Quakers founded the Woman’s Medical College of
Pennsylvania to meet the needs of the many women seeking a career in
medicine. Just shy of her thirty seventh
birthday Ann enrolled in the first class with seven other women.
After graduating she remained at the college as a professor
of physiology and hygiene. In 1858 she
initiated a fundraising campaign to build a woman’s hospital in connection with
the college to provide hands on clinical instruction.
In 1866 Ann was appointed dean of the Woman’s Medical
College, the first woman to hold that position. She applied for permission for
her students to attend general clinics at the Philadelphia Hospital but was met
with demonstrations by male medical students protesting the impropriety of
educating men and women in medicine together.
She fought this narrow-mindedness saying women were patients and it was
“in accordance with the instincts of the truest womanhood for women to appear
as physicians and students.”
Philadelphia newspapers published her comments.
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