- Elsie Inglis
Elsie Inglis (
16 August 1864 –26 November 1917 ) was an innovative Scottish doctor andsuffragist .She was born in the
hill station town ofNaini Tal ,India , to a father who worked in theIndian civil service . She had the good fortune to have relatively enlightened parents for the time who considered the education of a daughter as important as that of the son. After a private education her decision to study medicine was delayed by her mother's death in 1885, when she felt obliged to stay in Edinburgh with her father. However, the next year theEdinburgh School of Medicine for Women was opened by DrSophia Jex-Blake and Inglis started her studies there. After founding her own breakaway medical college as a reaction to Jex-Blake's uncompromising ways, she completed her training under SirWilliam MacEwen at theGlasgow Royal Infirmary .She qualified as a
licentiate of both the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons, Edinburgh, and the Faculty of Physicians and Surgeons of Glasgow in 1892. She was appalled by the general standard of care and lack of specialisation in the needs of female patients, but was able to obtain a post atElizabeth Garrett Anderson 's pioneeringNew Hospital for Women inLondon , and then at the Rotunda inDublin , a leading maternity hospital.She returned to
Edinburgh in 1894 where she set up a medical practice with Jessie MacGregor, who had been a fellow student, and also opened a maternity hospital (The Hospice) for poor women alongside amidwifery resource centre, which was a forerunner of theElsie Inglis Memorial Hospital . Aphilanthropist , she often waived the fees owed to her and would pay for her patients to recuperate by the sea-side. She was a consultant atBruntsfield Hospital for women and children, and despite a disagreement between Inglis and the hospital management, the Hospice joined forces with them in 1910.Her dissatisfaction with the standard of medical care available to women led to her becoming politically active and playing an important role in the early years of the
Scottish Federation of Women's Suffrage Societies .Despite her already notable achievements it was her efforts during the First World War that brought her fame. She was instrumental in setting up the
Scottish Women's Hospitals for Foreign Service Committee, an organisation funded by the women's suffrage movement with the express aim of providing all female staffed relief hospitals for the Allied war effort. The organisation was active in sending teams toFrance ,Serbia andRussia . She herself went with the teams sent toSerbia where her presence and work in improving hygiene reducedtyphus and other epidemics that had been raging there. In 1915 she was captured and repatriated but upon reaching home she began organising funds for a Scottish Women's Hospital team in Russia. She headed the team when it left for Odessa, Russia in 1916 but lasted only a year before she was forced to return to the United Kingdom, suffering fromcancer .She died on 26 November 1917, the day after she arrived back at
Newcastle upon Tyne . Her funeral service atSt Giles Cathedral in Edinburgh on 29 November was "the occasion of an impressive public tribute", according to "The Scotsman ".Winston Churchill said of Inglis and her nurses "they will shine in history".References
*"Oxford Dictionary of National Biography"
* [http://www.firstworldwar.com/bio/inglis.htm Short biography]
* [http://www.lhsa.lib.ed.ac.uk/catalog/pdfs/LHB8.PDF Bruntsfield Hospital and Elsie Inglis Memorial Maternity Hospital (Lothian Health Services Archive)]
* [http://archive.scotsman.com/ "The Scotsman" archives]Further reading
*gutenberg|no=18530|name=Elsie Inglis: The Woman with the Torch
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.