- Edinburgh School of Medicine for Women
The Edinburgh School of Medicine for Women was founded by Dr
Sophia Jex-Blake inEdinburgh ,Scotland , in 1886, with support from theNational Association for Promoting the Medical Education of Women .It was only 10 years since the first British women had been licensed to practise as doctors, and female medical education was in its early days; it would be another 6 years before Scottish universities would admit women students. Jex-Blake had friends in
Edinburgh , as well as opponents, from her earlier unsuccessful campaign to persuade theUniversity of Edinburgh to educate women in their Medical School. She arranged for the new women students to gain clinical experience atLeith Hospital .Her uncompromising approach to discipline led to problems. When two sisters won a court case challenging their expulsion, the bad publicity meant that both the School and Jex-Blake herself lost support, and some students moved to
Glasgow ,London andDublin : there were no other places in Great Britain or Ireland where women could study medicine at that timeElsie Inglis left the School and set up an alternative nearby: theMedical College for Women . Jex-Blake wanted to be involved there too, but met resistance, while her relations with Leith Hospital were also becoming strained. Luckily the female students would soon be allowed to gain practical experience at theEdinburgh Royal Infirmary , previously blocked to them.In 1892 Scottish universities opened their doors to women. The ESMW continued for a few more years, advertising "Science Classes for Ladies - separate classes in botany, zoology and practical chemistry . . . Qualify for Arts and Science Graduation . . . " ["Scotsman" 25 April 1896]
The School was never free of financial troubles, and in 1897 Jex-Blake herself was suffering from exhaustion. The following year the School closed, having educated about 80 women from the UK,
India and elsewhere, with 33 of them completing the full course.Jessie Macgregor was one of those who stayed for the whole course, and won distinctions in her examinations. She then practised medicine in partnership with Elsie Inglis, and was a medical officer at the Edinburgh Hospital and Dispensary for Women and Children.
References
Further reading
* [http://www.rcpe.ac.uk/publications/articles/journal_35_3/somerville_jex%20blake.pdf Somerville, JM "Dr Sophia Jex-Blake and the Edinburgh School of Medicine for Women, 1886–1898" (2005)]
* "The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography "(2006)
* [http://archive.scotsman.com/timeline.cfm "The Scotsman" archives]ee also
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Women in medicine
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