Doctor or Doctress?

Explore American history through the eyes of women physicians

Eliza Anna Grier was an African American who graduated from Woman’s Medical College of Pennsylvania (WMCP) in 1897. In 1901 Grier was practicing medicine in South Carolina and struggling to maintain her practice while battling her own health issues. On March 7 of that year Grier wrote to Susan B. Anthony, President of the National Woman Suffrage Association, to appeal to her for financial help. Anthony forwarded Grier’s letter to WMCP and wrote that while she sympathized with Grier’s plight, she thought the college may be better able to help Grier than she.

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“She Has Undertaken a Herculean Task”: Early African American Women Physicians

Susan B. Anthony was a renowned activist for temperance, labor rights, educational reform, abolition, and most famously, women’s rights. Her work writing and speaking on behalf of these reforms convinced her that women needed the right to vote to truly influence legislation. She founded the A leader of the woman suffrage movement, Anthony was arrested in Rochester, NY in 1872 for voting in an election. She founded the American Equal Rights Association in 1866, which eventually became the National American Woman Suffrage Association (NAWSA). Anthony was serving as honorary president of NAWSA at the time she wrote this letter in 1901. Eliza Grier was born into the last years of slavery in North Carolina in 1862. She went on work her way through Fisk University in Tennessee and then attended Women’s Medical College of Pennsylvania on scholarship, graduating with her MD in 1897. She eventually set up a practice in Greenville, South Carolina, serving an impoverished community.

In her letter to WMCP, Anthony sympathizes with Grier and her plight, and acknowledges the hardship and difficulty of Grier’s endeavor to practice medicine in adverse circumstances. The fact that Anthony, a prominent white woman and perhaps the most famous women’s rights advocate of the time, responded to the appeal of Grier, an African American woman born into slavery but pursuing a professional demonstrates how women of disparate backgrounds found some common cause and mutual sympathy in the struggle to gain equal rights in all aspects of life, including in careers and the professions.

Creator: Anthony, Susan B. (Susan Brownell)

Contributor: Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania

Language: english

Item Number: a266_056

Pages: 1

Size: 21.1x27.7

Physical Collection: Records of W/MCP: Registrar 1921-1976, ACC-266

Link to OPAC Record: http://innopac.library.drexel.edu/search/c?SEARCH=ACC-267

Cite this source: Title of document, date. Early African-American Woman Physicians: She has undertaken a Herculean task. Doctor or Doctress?: Explore American history through the eyes of women physicians. The Legacy Center, Drexel University College of Medicine Archives & Special Collections. Philadelphia, PA. Date of access. http://lcdc.library.drexel.edu/islandora/object/islandora:1856

African American women physicians

Grier, Eliza Anna

Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania--Alumni and alumnae

Rochester (NY)

Philadelphia (Pa.)