Eliza Walker Dunbar
Eliza Walker Dunbar | |
---|---|
Born |
Eliza Louisa Walker 1845 Bombay, India |
Died |
25 August 1925 (aged 79–80)
|
Residence | Bristol |
Nationality | British |
Occupation | Doctor |
Parent(s) |
|
Eliza Walker Dunbar (1845 – 25 August 1925) was a British physician. Born in Bombay, India, she attended Cheltenham Ladies' College, Cheltenham, England. She studied medicine informally at St. Mary's Dispensary for Women under Elizabeth Garrett, before travelling to study at the University of Zurich, which would accept female students.
Upon qualification, she returned to England and was appointed to the Bristol Royal Hospital for Sick Children. Within weeks of her starting, the entire male medical staff decided to resign in protest, leaving her as the only doctor at the hospital for five days. Over the following years, Walker would set up a number of private practices, including Bristol Private Hospital for Women and Children, as a small hospital focused on providing medical treatment of women by women.
Biography
Eliza Louisa Walker was born in Balarum, Bombay, in 1845. Her father, Alexander Walker, was a doctor from Edinburgh who worked for the Bombay Military Department.[1] Her younger brother, Archibald Dunbar Walker, also trained in the medical profession.[2] Educated at Cheltenham Ladies' College, Eliza was fluent in German, and had a keen interest in medicine which she studied in London.[1] However, as she was unable to enrol in any British medical schools, she instead received training and tuition from St. Mary's Dispensary for Women under Elizabeth Garrett. She managed to join the Society of Apothecaries when they revised their regulations to include those who did not attend medical schools.[3]
Walker travelled to Switzerland and was one of the "Zurich 7" who were the first women to gain a medical degree from the University of Zurich.[1][4] After studying there for four years, she submitted her thesis on blockages of the arteries of the brain (Ueber Verstopfung der Hirnarterien), receiving an MD with distinction in 1872. While at the university she became the first woman assistant in the Zurich canton hospital's women's ward.[5] She carried on to do a year's postgraduate study in Vienna, before returning to England in 1873.[3] It was around this time that she assumed the name of Dunbar.[1]
Medical work
On her return to England in 1873, Walker applied for the position of house surgeon at Bristol Royal Hospital for Sick Children. She was the only female candidate, and the incumbent medical staff informed the hospital's managing committee that they would resign if she were appointed. When she did get the job, two staff immediately left. Five weeks later, a disagreement between Walker and another staff member led to the remainder of the doctors, all male, walking out. Walker remained in post for five days, the only medical practitioner on site, before resigning to save the hospital further embarrassment.[3]
Instead, she set up a private practice in Clifton, Bristol, before establishing the Read Dispensary for Women and Children in Hotwells, Bristol in 1876. She eventually managed to add her name to the medical register through King and Queen's College of Physicians in Ireland in 1877.[3][5]
Walker held a number of roles in subsequent years, including medical officer for educational facilities, then in 1895, she established the Bristol Private Hospital for Women and Children. Originally the private hospital had space for 12 patients, and focused on the treatment of women by women.[3] In 1906 she published an article in the Bristol Medico-Chirurgical Journal on "The new theory and prophylactic treatment of puerperal eclampsia."[1]
She continued her work until her death following a fall at her home in Bristol on 25 August 1925.[1][3]
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 "Eliza Walker Dunbar, M.D., Senior Surgeon, Bristol Private Hospital For Women And Children". The British Medical Journal. 2 (3376): 496–97. 1925. JSTOR 25446277. Registration but no subscription required for limited use.
- ↑ "Dr. Archibald Dunbar Walker". The British Medical Journal. 2 (3534): 590. 1928. JSTOR 25330128. Registration but no subscription required for limited use.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 Elston, M. A. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
- ↑ Ogilvie, Marilyn Bailey; Joy Dorothy Harvey (2000). "Walker, Eliza (c.1845–?)". The Biographical Dictionary of Women in Science: L–Z. Taylor & Francis. p. 1339. ISBN 9780415920407. Retrieved 14 April 2014.
- 1 2 "Eliza Walker Dunbar (1849–1925)". UNC Health Sciences Library. Retrieved 9 August 2016.