Rutherford, Frances Armstrong (1842–1922)

views updated

Rutherford, Frances Armstrong (1842–1922)

American physician. Born Oct 8, 1842, in Bath, NY; died May 24, 1922; attended Elmira College in NY, 1855–56; studied medicine with Dr. Rachel Gleason in Elmira (from 1863); graduate of Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania (later Medical College of Pennsylvania and Hahnemann University School of Medicine), 1868; briefly married to a lawyer.

Interned with Elizabeth and Emily Blackwell at New York Infirmary for Women and Children; had further training at New York Woman's Hospital (1873) and at London and Berlin clinics and hospitals (1882–83); established a Grand Rapids, Michigan, practice (1868); appointed the 1st female city physician in America; was the 1st elected woman member of the Michigan State Medical Society (1872) and served as its vice president; established and organized the 1st training school for nurses in Grand Rapids, at Union Benevolent Association Hospital, later Blodgett Memorial Hospital.

About this article

Rutherford, Frances Armstrong (1842–1922)

Updated About encyclopedia.com content Print Article