Caroline Matilda Dodson

Caroline Matilda Dodson (December 17, 1845 – January 9, 1898) was an American physician.

Caroline Matilda Dodson, "A Woman of the Century"

Early life and education

Caroline Matilda Dodson was born near Keosauqua, Iowa, December 17, 1845. Her father, Stiles Richard Dodson, was the son of Richard Dodson and Hannah Watson, being a descendant of Thomas and Mary Dodson, of whom the doctor's mother was also a descendant. Her mother, Mrs. Caroline Matilda (née Harrison) Dodson, was the daughter of Stephen Harrison, and Mary Dodson. Miss Dodson's father and mother were natives of Huntingdon Valley, Pennsylvania and married in 1836. Her mother was Mrs. C. Matilda Dodson About six weeks after marriage, they left Pennsylvania for the West and settled in Van Buren County, Iowa. Stiles R. Dodson died in 1847, leaving his widow with four daughters, the youngest less than two years of age. Her sisters were named Melvina (d. 1862), Mary, and Susan.[1] That winter, the mother taught school in her own house. In the spring of 1848, she returned with her family to her father's house in Pennsylvania. Caroline was baptized in November, 1857, and thereafter, she was a member of the Baptist church.[2]

Study at home under private teachers and at the district school supplemented the early lessons from the mother. At about twelve, she was sent to an academy and normal institute. She began to teach in the winter of 1861. Returning at intervals to school, she followed the profession of teaching until the fall of 1871 when she matriculated at the Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania, and entered upon the three-year course just inaugurated. Dr. Ann Preston was then Dean. The summer of 1872, she spent in the Nurses' Training School of the Woman's Hospital of Philadelphia. The course required was completed and Dodson received a certificate of the Training School for Nurses. The summer of 1873, she spent in the same hospital as student in the wards and out practice. She received her diploma in March, 1874, and went to Ypsilanti, Michigan, for further study with Dr. Ruth A. Gerry, one of the first women to practice medicine.[2]

Career

After a year spent in hospital and private practice with Gerry, Dodson went to Rochester, New York, and there, in connection with a practice, opened a drug store. In 1877, her mother having gone West again, Dodson started for Iowa, going by the Hudson and Great Lakes. She lost a car load of valuables in the riot at Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. [2]

After her trip West, she returned to Philadelphia and worked at whatever appeared to be profitable. For a time, she depended upon US$5 per week to meet the living expenses of three in her family, but offers came, and among them, unsolicited, one from the Philadelphia Society for Organizing Charity to act as superintendent of one of its districts. Dodson accepted the position, and for eight years, filled it in connection with her private practice of medicine.[3]

National Woman's Health Association of America

As a teacher, she wrote and spoke boldly for better methods of education, and advocated broadening the opportunities for study. She saw that a general movement might help to educate the masses and to spread a knowledge of self-care. To this end, after much deliberation, a call was issued for a public meeting to be held in Association Hall, Philadelphia, July 23, 1890, and an organization was effected under the name of the National Woman's Health Association of America. The association was chartered November 1, 1890. and Dodson was elected first president. The plan of the association was broad and provided for extensive work.[3] Its objective was to bring the medical profession into closer relation with the general public by the discussion of health topics.[4]

Personal life

Dodson read widely on subjects concerning the movements of women, speaking and writing in their interest.[3] In 1888, at the 19th annual convention of the Pennsylvania Woman's Suffrage Association, Dodson's missionary work was noted in laudatory terms.[5]

Dodson founded the Baptist Sisterhood in Philadelphia.[6] She died at her home in Philadelphia, January 9, 1898, of sarcoma.[6]

gollark: If you just have a stream, you often have to handle stuff like figuring out exactly where each bit of it starts and ends, which is annoying when there's an underlying packetized protocol anyway.
gollark: Or possibly some API which lets you mix both somehow, that would be neat.
gollark: Honestly, I think that in many applications arbitrary-size packets map better to what you're doing than streams.
gollark: Apart from the address caching.
gollark: Huh, I checked the Minitel L3 protocol docs and it apparently does rednet-style "routing" too.

References

Citations

  1. Lake City Publishing Company 1890, p. 557.
  2. Willard & Livermore 1893, p. 249.
  3. Willard & Livermore 1893, p. 252.
  4. Medical Publishing Company 1890, p. 116.
  5. "Dr Caroline Dodson". Newspapers.com. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The Times. 27 December 1888. p. 1. Retrieved 5 April 2020.
  6. "Dr Caroline M Dodson, Death Notice". Newspapers.com. The Philadelphia Inquirer. 11 January 1898. p. 10. Retrieved 5 April 2020.

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