Episode Details
Back to EpisodesThe first female doctor hated medicine
Description
The first female physician in the United States initially found medicine repulsive. Elizabeth Blackwell couldn't stand the sight of disease, but when a dying friend told her that her suffering would have been more bearable under a female doctor's care, Blackwell's moral-crusade upbringing overrode her distaste, and she set out to break open a profession whose gatekeepers refused to hand her, in their words, "a stick to break our heads with."
This episode follows the admission that happened as a frat-house joke, when 150 male students unanimously voted her in assuming she'd never show, through the typhus wards of Blockley Almshouse and a graduation where the dean bowed. It also confronts the messy contradictions: her rejection of germ theory, the strange and controlling household she kept, and the book about female desire so threatening that a publisher physically destroyed the proofs.
- A crusade, not a calling: the dying friend's words that overrode her disgust for medicine
- The joke vote at Geneva Medical College, and the woman who walked through the door anyway
- Typhus, syphilis wards, and a radical thesis linking health to social conditions
- The imperfect pioneer: germ theory rejected, an adopted daughter kept as servant, allies alienated
- The book they smashed the presses to stop: which ideas the 1800s found truly dangerous