

- #Mary eliza mahoney and rebecca lee crumpler install
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“She was an explorer willing to chart a new course, one that had not previously been traveled.”Ĭrumpler was inspired to pursue medicine by her aunt, a caregiver who raised her, McCloud said.Ĭrumpler then moved to Charlestown in 1852, where she worked as a nurse. “She was a Black woman who recognized her potential, took advantage of opportunities, dedicated her life to the well-being of others,” Reede said. Monday’s lecturer Joan Reede, dean for diversity and community partnership at Harvard Medical School, said at the event Crumpler was a “pioneer who used her power for good.”

“Even today, our women, particularly our Black women, are very aware of discrimination in medicine.” “I can’t imagine how hard it was for a Black woman in medicine in the 1800s,” Antman said.
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McCloud worked to install an exhibit in Crumpler’s name at BUSM - which was unveiled in 2016 - encouraged Governor Ralph Northam of Virginia to honor Crumpler for National Doctors Day in 2019 and assisted Friends of the Hyde Park Branch Library’s Vicky Gall in her gravestone project, which reached national attention via NBC Nightly News in July 2020.īUSM is holding a weeklong, online symposium to celebrate Crumpler’s life, which began Monday and goes until Friday.Īt the first event of the week - a Monday afternoon virtual lecture titled “Breaking Ground: Building a Different Future” - BUSM Dean Karen Antman said Crumpler was a “remarkable woman.” There, she discovered the now-defunct Rebecca Lee Society, a “support group for Black female physicians,” she said. McCloud said she first learned of Crumpler’s life and legacy after graduating from BUSM and moving to Atlanta in 1981. “Now, many of us follow in her footsteps.” “She just lived a brave, courageous, trailblazing life,” said Melody McCloud, an obstetrician-gynecologist and the founder and medical director of Atlanta Women’s Health Care. She went on to publish the first medical book written by a Black physician in the country. The city’s observance came on the 190th anniversary of Crumpler’s birth in 1831 in Delaware.Ĭrumpler, an alumna of the New England Female Medical College - which later merged with Boston University School of Medicine - became the first Black woman to receive a medical degree in the United States in 1864. Mayor Marty Walsh announced the day in a proclamation tweeted Sunday afternoon.
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ILLUSTRATION BY HANNAH YOSHINAGA/ DAILY FREE PRESS STAFF Rebecca Lee Crumpler Day Monday to honor the first Black female physician in the U.S. Rebecca Lee Crumpler Day Monday, honoring the first Black woman to receive a medical degree in the United States.
