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Dr. Rebecca Lee Crumpler: A Doctress of Medicine Against the Odds, Part 1 of 2

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Dr. Rebecca Lee Crumpler stands as a pioneering figure in American medical history. Born in a time when both racial and gender barriers severely limited access to education and professional careers, she overcame these obstacles to become the first African American woman to earn a medical degree in the United States, graduating from the New England Female Medical College in 1864.

Dr. Crumpler dedicated her life to caring for underserved communities, particularly formerly enslaved African Americans in the post-American Civil War South. Her work was not only medical but deeply humanitarian, as she provided essential care to populations who often had little to no access to healthcare.

Despite her groundbreaking achievements, Dr. Crumpler’s name remains relatively unknown. Meanwhile, her contributions to childbirth and infant healthcare, along with her historic accomplishment as the first African American woman physician, mark her as a figure of enduring importance in both medical and social history.

Born in Christiana, Delaware, on February 8, 1831, as Rebecca Davis, the daughter of Absolum Davis and Matilda Webber, Rebecca Lee Crumpler was raised by her aunt. Her aunt regularly cared for sick neighbors who lacked access to affordable healthcare, and young Rebecca often assisted in these acts.

In her only publication, “A Book of Medical Discourses – In Two Parts,” she reflects on the compassionate roots of her path toward becoming a physician, describing with fondness the formative experiences that guided her into medical practice: “Having been reared by a kind aunt in Pennsylvania, whose usefulness with the sick was continually sought, I early conceived a liking for, and sought every opportunity to be in, a position to relieve the sufferings of others.”

She herself reflected on her early career in nursing with humility, noting that although she lacked formal medical training at the time, she fortunately never made any error. As she states: “In my own experience, there was much that to me was obscure, yet, strange to say, I never met with an accident. A kind Father directed every thought in behalf of the helpless.”
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