... of the American Board. After six years of very successful teaching she returned to America for the usual vacation of a year. Having, however, been greatly impressed with the extreme need in Turkey of properly qualified woman physicians, Miss Kimball... Medical Record - Page 22edited by - 1904Full view - About this book
| Albert Shaw - 1896 - 814 pages
...of properly qualified woman physicians, Miss Kimball remained in this country, studied medicine, and was graduated from the Woman's Medical College of the New York Infirmary in 1892. In July of that year she returned to Van, meeting cholera on the way, and undergoing quarantine... | |
| Daniel P. Toomey - 1892 - 634 pages
...which, until a few decades ago, was closed to them. Dr. Susan E. Crocker is one of these women. She graduated from the Woman's Medical College of the New York Infirmary, in 1874, and was subsequently one of the founders of the Lawrence (Mass.) General Hospital, its first... | |
| Rossiter Johnson, John Howard Brown - 1904 - 492 pages
...Middleboro, Mass. She was married, Nov. 27, 1856, to Charles F. Crocker of Lawrence, who died July 10, 1881. She was graduated from the Woman's medical college of the New York infirmary in 1874. She was interne of the New York infirmary from April to October, 1874, and then began the practice... | |
| Rossiter Johnson, John Howard Brown - 1904 - 490 pages
...Middleboro, Mass. She was married, Nov. 27, 1856, to Charles F. Crocker of Lawrence, w ho died July 10, 1881. She was graduated from the Woman's medical college of the New York infirmary in 1874. She was interne of the New York infirmary from April to October, 1874, and then began the practice... | |
| Cleveland Abbe, Mrs. Mary Josephine Genung Nichols - 1916 - 584 pages
...Rachel Jane Stephens, b. March 25, 1855 ; m. James H. Stewart. Emma Hila Stephens, b. Feb. 6, 1860, was graduated from the Woman's Medical College of the New York Infirmary in 1893, and is a practicing physician. Married May 18, 1901, Elisha Granger, son of Leveret and Lydia... | |
| William Jamieson Pape - 1918 - 740 pages
...of the Long Hill school, but abandoned that profession in 1892 to take up the study of medicine, and was graduated from the Woman's Medical College of the New York Infirmary in 1895. She afterward spent a year in the Johns Hopkins Hospital of Baltimore and served as interne in... | |
| 1896 - 860 pages
...of properly qualified woman physicians, Miss Kimball remained in this country, studied medicine, and was graduated from the Woman's Medical College of the New York Infirmary in 1892. In July of that year she returned to Van, meeting cholera on the way, and undergoing quarantine... | |
| Pnina G. Abir-Am, Dorinda Outram - 1987 - 388 pages
...the decision exacted its price in loneliness. Anna Wessels Williams, a successful bacteriologist who graduated from the Woman's Medical College of the New York Infirmary in 1891, wrote in her diary of working hard to develop a "detachment from all disturbing longings" that... | |
| Gloria Moldow - 1987 - 264 pages
...Pennsylvania in 1893, interned at Blockley Hospital in Philadelphia; Mabel Cornish, a Washington native who graduated from the Woman's Medical College of the New York Infirmary in 1892, interned at Babies Hospital in New York City; and Carrie Davis, Howard '97, at the Lying-in Hospital... | |
| Arman Dzhonovich Kirakosi︠a︡n - 2004 - 324 pages
...of properly qualified woman physicians, Miss Kimball remained in this country, studied medicine, and was graduated from the Woman's Medical College of the New York Infirmary in 1892. In July of that year she returned to Van, meeting cholera on the way, and undergoing quarantine... | |
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