Quick Facts
Born:
May 31, 1854, probably Ashland, Ohio, U.S.
Died:
Jan. 7, 1927, Pasadena, Calif. (aged 72)

Mary Hannah Fulton (born May 31, 1854, probably Ashland, Ohio, U.S.—died Jan. 7, 1927, Pasadena, Calif.) was an American physician and missionary to China who ministered to many thousands not only through her own practice but by greatly expanding the availability of medical education in that country.

Fulton was educated at Lawrence University in Appleton, Wisconsin, and at Hillsdale (Michigan) College. She graduated from the latter in 1874, took a master’s degree in 1877, and for three years taught in public schools in Indianapolis, Indiana. In 1880 she entered the Woman’s Medical College of Pennsylvania, and on graduating in 1884 she set out for southern China, where her elder brother, a minister, had preceded her. Under the auspices of the Presbyterian Board of Foreign Missions, she began her medical practice in Canton. From September 1885 to the spring of 1886 she practiced in Kwangsi province, but intense antiforeign agitation forced her and her brother to return to Canton. She established two dispensaries there in 1887. While conducting her practice amid tens of thousands needing her services, she taught pediatrics at Canton Hospital, where she also directed the care of women patients. Fund-raising tours of the United States in 1891–93 and 1903–04 helped build and support a church for her brother (in which she took space for a dispensary) and, in 1902, the David Gregg Hospital for Women and Children. The hospital included a training school for nurses.

Later in 1902 the Hackett Medical College for Women opened, providing a three- (shortly afterward four-) year course for Cantonese-speaking Christian women. Fulton directed these institutions and carried on her own medical practice until ill health forced her to seek out the more moderate climate of Shanghai in 1915. By that year the Hackett Medical College had graduated more than 60 physicians. In Shanghai Fulton translated numerous English textbooks on medicine and nursing into Cantonese. She also raised funds to build the Cantonese Union Church of Shanghai to house the congregation she had organized. In 1918 she returned to the United States and settled in Pasadena. In her later years she wrote “Inasmuch”: Extracts from Letters, Journals, Papers, etc., a memoir of her work that also included a strong plea for continued support of missionary work in China.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.
Quick Facts
Born:
February 3, 1821, Counterslip, Bristol, Gloucestershire, England
Died:
May 31, 1910, Hastings, Sussex (aged 89)
Notable Family Members:
sister Emily Blackwell
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Elizabeth Blackwell (born February 3, 1821, Counterslip, Bristol, Gloucestershire, England—died May 31, 1910, Hastings, Sussex) was an Anglo-American physician who is considered the first woman doctor of medicine in modern times.

Elizabeth Blackwell was of a large, prosperous, and cultured family and was well educated by private tutors. Financial reverses and the family’s liberal social and religious views prompted them to immigrate to the United States in the summer of 1832. Soon after taking up residence in New York, her father, Samuel Blackwell, became active in abolitionist activities. The Blackwells moved to Jersey City, New Jersey, in 1835 and to Cincinnati, Ohio, in 1838. Soon afterward Samuel’s death left the family in poverty, and Elizabeth and two sisters opened a private school. Later Elizabeth taught school in Henderson, Kentucky, and in 1845–47 in North and South Carolina.

During the latter period Blackwell undertook the study of medicine privately with sympathetic physicians, and in 1847 she began seeking admission to a medical school. All the leading schools rejected her application, but she was at length admitted, almost by fluke, to Geneva Medical College (a forerunner of Hobart College) in Geneva, New York. Her months there were extremely difficult. Townspeople and much of the male student body ostracized and harassed her, and she was at first even barred from classroom demonstration. She persevered, however, and in January 1849, ranked first in her class, she became the first woman in the United States to graduate from medical school and the first modern-day woman doctor of medicine.

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In April, having become a naturalized U.S. citizen, Blackwell traveled to England to seek further training, and in May she went on to Paris, where in June she entered the midwives’ course at La Maternité. While there she contracted an infectious eye disease that left her blind in one eye and forced her to abandon hope of becoming a surgeon. In October 1850 she returned to England and worked at St. Bartholomew’s Hospital under Dr. (later Sir) James Paget. In the summer of 1851 she returned to New York, where she was refused posts in the city’s hospitals and dispensaries and was even unable to rent private consulting quarters. Her private practice was very slow to develop, and in the meantime she wrote a series of lectures, published in 1852 as The Laws of Life, with Special Reference to the Physical Education of Girls.

In 1853 Blackwell opened a small dispensary in a slum district. Within a few years she was joined by her younger sister, Dr. Emily Blackwell, and by Dr. Marie E. Zakrzewska, and in May 1857 the dispensary, greatly enlarged, was incorporated as the New York Infirmary for Women and Children. In January 1859, during a year-long lecture tour of Great Britain, she became the first woman to have her name placed on the British medical register. At the outbreak of the American Civil War in 1861, she helped organize the Woman’s Central Association of Relief and the U.S. Sanitary Commission and worked mainly through the former to select and train nurses for war service.

In November 1868 a plan long in the perfecting, developed in large part in consultation with Florence Nightingale in England, bore fruit in the opening of the Woman’s Medical College at the infirmary. Elizabeth Blackwell set very high standards for admission, academic and clinical training, and certification for the school, which continued in operation for 31 years; she herself occupied the chair of hygiene. In 1869 Blackwell moved permanently to England. She established a successful private practice, helped organize the National Health Society in 1871, and in 1875 was appointed professor of gynecology at the London School of Medicine for Women. She retained the latter position until 1907, when an injury forced her to retire. Among her other writings are The Religion of Health (1871), Counsel to Parents on the Moral Education of Their Children (1878), The Human Element in Sex (1884), her autobiographical Pioneer Work in Opening the Medical Profession to Women (1895), and Essays in Medical Sociology (1902).

The Editors of Encyclopaedia BritannicaThis article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.