Zakrzewska, Marie Elizabeth

Zakrzewska, Marie Elizabeth

▪ American physician
born Sept. 6, 1829, Berlin, Ger.
died May 12, 1902, Jamaica Plain [now in Boston], Mass., U.S.

      German-born American physician who founded the New England Hospital for Women and Children and contributed greatly to women's opportunities and acceptance as medical professionals.

      Zakrzewska early developed a strong interest in medicine, and at age 20 she was admitted to the school for midwives at the Charité Hospital in Berlin. She became a teaching assistant in her second year, graduating in 1851. The following year she was appointed chief midwife and professor in the school, but staff opposition to her forced her resignation after six months.

      In 1853 Zakrzewska immigrated to the United States, where she met Elizabeth Blackwell (Blackwell, Elizabeth), who helped her master English and secured her admission to the medical school of Western Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio (M.D., 1856). Zakrzewska moved to New York City, where she opened her practice and helped raise funds for Blackwell's projected New York Infirmary for Women and Children. The infirmary opened in May 1857, and Zakrzewska served as resident physician and general manager from 1857 to 1859. She then served as resident physician and professor of obstetrics and diseases of women and children at the New England Female Medical College in Boston (1859–62). She resigned over a disagreement with the college's founder, who envisioned the college as simply a training course for midwives. (He had founded it because he found the idea of male doctors attending childbirth to be morally repugnant.)

      In 1862 Zakrzewska founded the New England Hospital for Women and Children, which was devoted to clinical care and to the clinical training of women physicians and nurses. She served as resident physician (1862–63), attending physician (1863–87), and advisory physician (1887–99) while also maintaining a growing private practice throughout Boston. Zakrzewska contributed greatly to the eventual acceptance of women physicians. She was also a supporter of woman suffrage.

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Universalium. 2010.

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