Suffragettes and Surgery
7.00pm Thursday 29th October 2020There are many forgotten, lost or neglected London histories. At this month’s Salon, (OUR 80TH BIRTHDAY!), we celebrate one - the story of some of the most pioneering London women in medicine in the city -
with writers, WENDY MOORE and CHARLIE FORMAN.
The women who ran the Endell Street hospital in World War 1 owed much to the women in medicine who came before them. In the case of Louisa Garrett Anderson, it was her own mother Elizabeth Garrett Anderson who had done much to lead the way. Becoming the first woman to qualify as a doctor in Britain, she ran her own dispensary and hospital while acting for 20 years as Dean of the first School of Medicine for Women.
CHARLIE FORMAN looks back beyond Elizabeth Garrett Anderson to the earlier and darker times for women in medicine and then explores the monumental barriers that Elizabeth and likeminded women faced in getting anywhere close the mainstream of medical practice in this country.
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WENDY MOORE is a freelance journalist and author of five books on medical and social history. Her latest book, ENDELL STREET, was a BBC Radio 4 Book of the Week.
CHARLIE FORMAN is an Arts Society Lecturer, a Westminster Guide, and part of the guiding team Discover Medical London. His talks and walks highlight the social, architectural and medical history of London focusing on the forces that have shaped and changed the metropolis and the cultural and medical heritage they has left us. His publications include Spitalfields: A battle for Land.