Early women graduates
From Faculty of Medicine Online Museum and Archive
The University of Sydney Medical School was the first to admit women students.[1] In this regard the Dean, Anderson Stuart seems, on the surface at least, to have been rather progressive in his views. In his book The Melbourne Medical School 1862–1962 Kenneth Russell cites a letter of 1885 from Anderson Stuart to David Grant, Lecturer in Materia Medica at Melbourne University, in which Anderson Stuart both rationally and logically advances the right of women to enter on the study of medicine:
I have had a lady [Dagmar Berne]in my classes for over two years, as gentle and modest a lady as I have ever seen, as such she came to us and as such she has remained… As a teacher I have never experienced the slightest difficulty in saying what I have to say in the presence of ladies and I have never attempted to gloss over certain subjects because ladies were present…[2]
The apparent liberalism of these views, however, must be regarded with some reservation as the story of Dagmar Berne, the first woman to begin the study of medicine in Australia, seems to show: Dagmar enrolled in Medicine in 1885 but appears to have failed her First Professional Examination that year, for she is again listed as a second year student in the 1886 Calendar. That year, she passed her First Professional Examination in Medicine entering Medicine III in 1887 and Medicine IV in 1888. She evidently failed the Second Professional Examination in 1888 since she remained in Medicine IV in 1889. At the end of that year she passed Anatomy and Physiology, the first two units of her Second Professional Examinations, but did not pass Materia Medica and Pathology. She was given deferred examinations in these in March 1890 which she failed. After this last failure, Dagmar left Sydney and went to England as she felt that she was being obstructed from passing her examinations at the University of Sydney. At London University she readily qualified in 1893 and began resident work in a hospital in Tottenham, England. When she returned to Sydney in 1895, she set up practice in Macquarie Street in 1895 and was only the second woman to register to practice as a doctor with the Medical Board of New South Wales.[3] Sadly, she died five years later at the young age of thirty-four. She is commemorated at the University of Sydney by a prize for proficiency in the final Barrier Examination.
By making the break into a male stronghold, Dagmar had opened the way for other women to follow. Yet, in the first ten years of its existence, the University of Sydney Medical School produced only two women graduates: Iza Coghlan and Grace Robinson both graduated in 1893. However, once the doors of the Medical School had been opened to admit women, there was a small but steady stream of female enrolments and graduations. In 1898, there were four women graduates: Harriett Biffin, Ada Affleck, Julia Carlisle Thomas and Alice Newton. By 1902 there were 11 women graduates, including Lucy Gullet. The next five years saw the graduation of Constance d’Arcy, Susie O’Reilly, Margaret Harper and Jessie Aspinall. In different ways, each of these women became prominent figures in what proved to be a continuing struggle for the general acceptance of women practitioners.
|
|
Although Dagmar had opened the way for women at the University of Sydney, the doors of medical institutions in New South Wales were still fairly firmly closed to women graduates at the turn of the century. After her graduation in 1905, Susie O’Reilly became a cause célèbre in her attempts to break down these subsequent barriers to women practitioners gaining experience side by side with men in public rather than private practice. Susie’s unsuccessful application to the Royal Prince Alfred, North Shore and Sydney Hospitals led to a public outcry from the press and organisations such as the Women’s Progressive Organisation against discrimination based on sex. Having passed fourth on the merit list in her year, Susie, had she been male, would have automatically qualified to be considered for residency at one of the major hospitals. Yet her application to Sydney Hospital was declined on the grounds that it had no suitable accommodation for women practitioners. As this was the main reason given for refusal, pressure was brought to bear on the Premier of New South Wales. The Premier’s Department promised to look into the matter and, at the end of 1905, the Board of Directors of Sydney
References
References
- ^ This chapter has been edited and revised from Young J A, Sefton A J & Webb N (1984) Centenary Book of the University of Sydney Faculty of Medicine, Chapter Six “Women and the Medical School”.
- ^ Russell, K F (1977). The Melbourne Medical School 1862–1962. Melbourne University Press, Melbourne.
- ^ From Bright Sparcs entry for Dagmar Berne, http://www.asap.unimelb.edu.au/bsparcs/bsparcshome.htm